Friday, April 1, 2011

Vinyl Record News & Music Notes

Devil Wears Prada - Plagues LP Available

Purple Vinyl Limited to 1,000 copies


THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA is already at legacy band status at the ripe age of 22 (ave. age of the band members). Having sold over 500,000 cd's in the US alone, the band is huge. 'Plagues' is their 2nd album and  considered their best. Rise decided to make 1,000 copies on colored vinyl.
Vinyl Color: Purple (LTD 1,000)

Track Listing

Goats On A Boat
Number Three, Never Forget
HTML Rulez D00d
Hey John, What’s Your Name Again?
Don’t Dink And Drance
You Can’t Spell Crap Without “C”
This Song Is Called
Reptar, King Of The Ozone
The Scorpion Deathlock
Nickels Is Money Too

Expected release date is 24th May 2011 but you can preoder it at shopradiocast.com

---------------------------

Eric Johnson's Latest Release to Get Vinyl Treatment

Eric Johnson's latest release, 'Up Close,' was a long time in the making (five and a half years). But as evidenced by its reception and its impressive list of special guests (Sonny Landreth, Steve Miller, Jimmie Vaughan and Jonny Lang), the wait was well worth it.

Fortunately, fans will not have to wait long at all for a vinyl version of 'Up Close,' which is slated for release on April 19th via EMI Records and Vortexan Music.

The album will be issued on 180 gram vinyl and housed in a special double LP gatefold package with printed sleeves. Additionally, Up Close was remastered specially for this vinyl release by Jim Wilson.

---------------------------

a great interview of at nightwatchershouseofrock.blogspot.com, check it out:

Whitesnake's David Coverdale : "Evidently The Snake By Its Nature Has To Change Its Skin Every So Often"

Vocalist David Coverdale needs no introduction to most fans of classic hard rock. From his initial emergence back in the 70's as frontman of British heavy rock legends Deep Purple, through his seminal blues rock with Whitesnake later on in the decade, later enjoying mega platinum success with later versions of the band, through his work with Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page in Coverdale/Page - All the way to the present, the man is rightly regarded as a vocal legend.

Read the rest at nightwatchershouseofrock.blogspot.com

--------------------------

Pink Floyd’s Waters and Gilmour to Reunite

Michael Leonard

Roger Waters has confirmed he is likely to be joined on stage by former Pink Floyd bandmate David Gilmour on his tour of The Wall – but only for one gig. Waters and Gilmour have had a fractious relationship for many years, but did play together in Pink Floyd at 2005’s Live 8 charity show. There now seems to be another chance to see them share a stage.

“I hear the rumors,” Waters says.

Read more at Gibson.com

---------------------------

and in music history for today:

In 1924, the first gramophone to change records automatically went on sale in the US.

In 1957, the Everly Brothers release "Bye Bye Love", a song that was rejected by 30 labels before Cadence Records picked it up. The song went to #2 on the US Pop chart and #1 on the Country & Western chart.

In 1961, The Beatles began a three-month residency at The Top Ten Club, Hamburg, Germany, playing 92 straight nights. The group played for seven hours a night on weekdays and eight hours at weekends with a 15-minute break every hour. It was during this visit that Astrid Kirchherr cut Stuart Sutcliffe’s hair into the style destined to become known as the “Beatle haircut” which The Beatles later adopted themselves.


In 1966, The Troggs recorded (using 45 minutes of spare studio time) “Wild Thing” at Pye Studios in Marble Arch, London, produced by Larry Page, with Mick Jagger present as an observer. The song went on to be a #1 U.S. and #2 U.K. hit in June.

David Bowie's first solo single, "Do Anything You Say," was released in 1966.

The "Woodstock" movie premiered in Hollywood in 1970.

Also in 1970, as an April Fool's joke, John Lennon and Yoko Ono issued a statement to the press that they were having dual sex change operations.  Umm....ok

Jimmy Buffett's "Margaritaville" was released in 1976.

The Who released the album "The Kids Are Alright" in 1979.

In 1984, 44 year-old Marvin Gaye was shot and killed by his father after a heated family argument. Gaye had just received a Grammy for his hit, "Sexual Healing", his first Top 40 single in 5½ years. Remarkably, Gaye's father received only probation after pleading guilty to manslaughter. Charges of first-degree murder were dropped after doctors discovered Marvin Sr. had a brain tumor.

In 2003, Soul singer Edwin Starr, who had hits with "War" (#1), "Agent Double-O Soul" (#21) and "Twenty-five Miles" (#6), died of a heart attack at the age of 61.

In 2004, Paul Atkinson, guitarist with The Zombies, died aged 58 from liver and kidney disease


birthday wishes to brit darling, Susan Boyle (1961), Jeff Porcaro from Toto (1954) and the immortal Reggae singer Jimmy Cliff (1948)

No comments: