| |
|
| |
VR Encyclopedia:
|
| |
|
| |
 |
M |
| |
 |
Magnificent Bastards, The |
| |
The Magnificent Bastards were a band formed by Scott Weiland and drummer Victor Indrizzo in 1995. They recorded two songs, one for the 'Tank Girl' soundtrack and one for the 'Working Class Hero: A Tribute To John Lennon' album. Other members of the band include Zander Schloss on guitar,
Bob Thomson on Bass and
Jeff Nolan also on guitar. Although the band prepared to record an album in 1995, Scott got back with Stone Temple Pilots in the fall of that year to record 'Tiny Music...' The Magnificent Bastards were never heard of again after that.
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
 |
Meeks, Travis |
| |
Travis Meeks (b. 27 April 1979) is the singer of Days Of The New. He tried out the singer spot with Slash, Duff and Matt. Here's a little more information on his band:
Days Of The New: This modern heavy rock outfit from Louisville, Kentucky, USA was signed up to the Outpost Records management team after just three shows, and released their self-titled debut album in June 1997.
Three of the band, Travis Meeks (b. 27 April 1979; singer/songwriter), Jesse Vest (b. 10 May 1977, Jeffersonville, Indiana, USA; bass) and Matt Taul (b. 30 August 1978, Jeffersonville, Indiana, USA; drums), grew up together in Charlestown, Indiana, and previously performed as the Metallica-influenced Dead Reckoning.For Days Of The New they added guitarist Todd Whitener (b. 25 May 1978, Louisville, Kentucky, USA).
Their debut album was produced by Scott Litt, an R.E.M. veteran and the founder of Outpost Records. The first single to be released from the album, "Touch, Peel And Stand', quickly hit the number 1 spot on Billboard's Mainstream Rock chart, and was featured heavily on MTV. They subsequently toured in support of the record with the stylistically sympathetic Veruca Salt, while Meeks" voice was frequently compared to that of Alice In Chains' Layne Staley.
Meeks, having parted company with the others members of the band (who went on to form Tantric), wrote, recorded and produced the second Days Of The New album on his own. Eschewing the somewhat one-dimensional alternative rock thrash of the debut album, he experimented with lush orchestration, Eastern percussion and tape loops to create an impressively mature collection. |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
 |
N
|
| |
 |
Navarro, Dave |
| |
b. David Michael Navarro, 7 June 1967, Santa Monica, California, USA. Guitarist Navarro rose to fame on the alternative rock circuit with his work for two of the scene's most talented but self-destructive bands, Jane's Addiction and the Red Hot Chili Peppers.
Navarro was playing in speed metal band Disaster with drummer Stephen Perkins before they joined singer Perry Farrell in his new venture, Jane's Addiction. His work on landmark albums such as Nothing's Shocking (1988) and Ritual De Lo Habitual (1990) challenged the stylistic limitations of rock guitar, drawing on heavy metal, psychedelic rock and punk to create a daring accompaniment to Farrell's tortured vocals.
Navarro's tense relationship with Farrell, in addition to the band's well-publicised fondness for narcotics, led to their eventual implosion in 1992. Navarro subsequently collaborated with former Jane's Addiction bass player Eric Avery and drummer Mike Murphy on the experimental Deconstruction project, and became an in-demand session player for both alternative and mainstream artists. He turned down a job offer from Guns N'Roses and joined the Red Hot Chili Peppers in time to participate in the recording of 1995's One Hot Minute.
In 1997, Navarro recorded some new tracks and took part in a brief tour with the re-formed Jane's Addiction. He left the Red Hot Chili Peppers in 1998 to concentrate on his Spread project, which over the course of three years mutated into his solo debut, Trust No One. The album was followed by Don't Try This At Home, an entertaining and often shocking journal of a year in Navarro's life as documented by the photo booth installed in his house in the Hollywood Hills.
Jane's Addiction reconvened in 2002 to record a new album, 2003's 'Strays', which they followed with a world tour and a reincarnation of the famous Lollapalooza festival, that they headlined that year.
Dave Kushner played in Dave Navarro's band and was tour director for the Trust No One tour.
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
 |
Nelson, Keith |
| |
Keith Nelson is the guitarist who (together with vocalist Josh Todd) first teamed up with Slash, Duff and Matt after they performed together at the Randy Castillo tribute show in April 2002. They parted ways in July 2002, saying Todd and Nelson "didn't fit the bill". Here's a bit more on Buckcherry:
Los Angeles rockers Buckcherry formed in 1995 when vocalist Joshua Todd met guitarist Keith Nelson through their tattoo artist. The duo began hammering out demos for several down and dirty rock songs and soon fleshed out their lineup with Jonathan "JB" Brightman, drummer Devon Glenn and guitarist Yogi.
Signing with DreamWorks Records, Buckcherry released their self-titled debut album in early 1999. The group contributed the song "Alone" to the Mission Impossible 2 soundtrack in 2000, following with their second album, Time Bomb in 2001. In July 2002, they break up.
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
 |
Neurotic Outsiders |
| |
From AllMusic.com: A supergroup formed in Los Angeles in the mid-'90s consisting of B-list guys from A-list bands, Neurotic Outsiders picked up an unexpected following when a one-time charity concert at the Viper Room led to a house-band engagement. Steve Jones of the Sex Pistols, John Taylor of Duran Duran, Duff McKagan of Guns N' Roses, and Matt Sorum of the Cult and Guns N' Roses spent most of those early gigs playing punk covers.
As enthusiasm for the band increased, they were signed to Maverick Records, releasing one album, the self-titled Neurotic Outsiders, in 1996. Jones wrote most of the songs, while Taylor wrote the remaining songs and the other members collaborated on some tracks. Jones and McKagan shared guitar duties, and all members contributed vocals.
A frenetic, slightly dark blend of punk and pre-grunge Guns N' Roses-style hard rock, the band garnered some radio play with the explicit single "Jerk." After the album's release, they embarked on a national tour of club dates. Upon returning from their tour, Neurotic Outsiders continued to play as a once-a-week house band at the Viper Room for a brief time, taking a hiatus in 1998. The hiatus is likely permanent, as Matt Sorum rejoined the Cult in 1999 and John Taylor rejoined Duran Duran in 2001. ndtrack in 2000, following with their second album, Time Bomb in 2001. In July 2002, they break up.
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
 |
NRG
Recording Services
|
| |
NRG
is a studio in North Hollywood, where
Duff recorded bass tracks for songs
on 'Contraband'.
NRG
has 2 large tracking rooms that feature
custom vintage Neve consoles with Flying
Fader automation, as well as a mix room
equipped with the SSL 9000 J. All rooms
are outfitted with custom Dynaudio main
monitors, an extensive list of outboard
gear, and Studer A827s for the
diehard analog enthusiasts.
NRG Studios recently
made some changes to its facility,
which has been packed with rocking
sessions lately. The private lounge
attached to NRG's Studio A has been
fully remodeled following the completion
of the latest Linkin Park album, Meteora.
Michelle Branch also recently visited
NRG's Studio A with producer Josh
Abraham.
NRG
is leading the way in the Storage
Area Network (SAN) arena with a groundbreaking
system utilizing the latest in fiber
technology. Each room comes fully
equipped with at least 24 tracks of
ProTools linked via fiber wire to
a server consisting of 12 password-protected
36 gig hard drives, and an AIT carousel
which automatically backs up each
session at the end of each night,
eliminating the need for time consuming
back ups by ProTools engineers.
>>> For
more information, visit http://www.nrgrecording.com/
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
 |
O |
| |
 |
O'Brien, Brendan |
| |
Throughout the '90s and beyond, Brendan O'Brien has established himself as one of the premiere rock producers. His distinctive touch, epitomized by guitars that push the needle into the red and a massive drum and bass sound, has helped propel albums by Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Korn, Stone Temple Pilots, the Black Crowes, Matthew Sweet, Train, and Rage Against the Machine (just to name a few) to great success.
He was a member of the band The Georgia Satellites in the 1980s, and went on to head the Epic Records imprint 57 Records, as well as a premier Atlanta recording studio, Southern Tracks. He also played Hammond organ for Bob Dylan's appearance on MTV Unplugged..
In late 2006, Brendan came on board to produce Velvet Revolver's second album. Scott Weiland says: "We were really excited about six months ago, when we first began writing. Then we really kind of flat-lined for a while. We didn't know which way we were going. There was a definite loss of inspiration for a bit there. It has a lot to do with chemistry. Once Brendan came on board, I guess it was kind of like a shot in the arm. It was a new energy." |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
 |
P
|
| |
 |
Project, The |
| |
Matt, Dave, Duff, and Slash were being referred to as The Project. From what Slash remembers, this name was given by fans on the internet, during the time when they were being documented by VH1. VH1 was documenting the band's search for a singer. The documentary has aired in December 2004 under the title '(Inside)Out: The Rise of Velvet Revolver'.
>>> MTV reports on the singer search
>>> Rolling Stone: Scott & Slash Speak |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
 |
Pink
Floyd
|
| |
Velvet
Revolver covered Pink Floyd's 'Money'
for the 'Italian Job' movie.
Here's the Pink Floyd biography from
Allmusic.com. Written by by Richie Unterberger.
Pink
Floyd is the premier space rock band.
Since the mid-'60s, their music relentlessly
tinkered with electronics and all manner
of special effects to push pop formats
to their outer limits. At the same time
they wrestled with lyrical themes and
concepts of such massive scale that
their music has taken on almost classical,
operatic quality, in both sound and
words. Despite their astral image, the
group was brought down to earth in the
1980s by decidedly mundane power struggles
over leadership and, ultimately, ownership
of the band's very name. After that
time, they were little more than a dinosaur
act, capable of filling stadiums and
topping the charts, but offering little
more than a spectacular recreation of
their most successful formulas. Their
latter-day staleness cannot disguise
the fact that, for the first decade
or so of their existence, they were
one of the most innovative groups around,
in concert and (especially) in the studio.
While Pink Floyd are mostly known for
their grandiose concept albums of the
1970s, they started as a very different
sort of psychedelic band. Soon after
they first began playing together in
the mid-'60s, they fell firmly under
the leadership of lead guitarist Syd
Barrett, the gifted genius who would
write and sing most of their early material.
The Cambridge native shared the stage
with Roger Waters (bass), Rick Wright
(keyboards), and Nick Mason (drums).
The name Pink Floyd, seemingly so far-out,
was actually derived from the first
names of two ancient bluesmen (Pink
Anderson and Floyd Council). And at
first, Pink Floyd were much more conventional
than the act into which they would evolve,
concentrating on the rock and R&B
material that were so common to the
repertoires of mid-'60s British bands.
Pink Floyd quickly
began to experiment, however, stretching
out songs with wild instrumental freak-out
passages incorporating feedback; electronic
screeches; and unusual, eerie sounds
created by loud amplification, reverb,
and such tricks as sliding ball bearings
up and down guitar strings. In 1966,
they began to pick up a following
in the London underground; on-stage,
they began to incorporate light shows
to add to the psychedelic effect.
Most importantly, Syd Barrett began
to compose pop-psychedelic gems that
combined unusual psychedelic arrangements
(particularly in the haunting guitar
and celestial organ licks) with catchy
melodies and incisive lyrics that
viewed the world with a sense of poetic,
child-like wonder.
The group landed
a recording contract with EMI in early
1967 and made the Top 20 with a brilliant
debut single, "Arnold Layne,"
a sympathetic, comic vignette about
a transvestite. The follow-up, the
kaleidoscopic "See Emily Play,"
made the Top Ten. The debut album,
The Piper at the Gates of Dawn, also
released in 1967, may have been the
greatest British psychedelic album
other than Sgt. Pepper's. Dominated
almost wholly by Barrett's songs,
the album was a charming fun house
of driving, mysterious rockers ("Lucifer
Sam"); odd character sketches
("The Gnome"); childhood
flashbacks ("Bike," "Matilda
Mother"); and freakier pieces
with lengthy instrumental passages
("Astronomy Domine," "Interstellar
Overdrive," "Pow R Toch")
that mapped out their fascination
with space travel. The record was
not only like no other at the time;
it was like no other that Pink Floyd
would make, colored as it was by a
vision that was far more humorous,
pop-friendly, and lighthearted than
those of their subsequent epics.
The reason Pink Floyd
never made a similar album was that
Piper was the only one to be recorded
under Barrett's leadership. Around
mid-1967, the prodigy began showing
increasingly alarming signs of mental
instability. Barrett would go catatonic
on-stage, playing music that had little
to do with the material, or not playing
at all. An American tour had to be
cut short when he was barely able
to function at all, let alone play
the pop star game. Dependent upon
Barrett for most of their vision and
material, the rest of the group was
nevertheless finding him impossible
to work with, live or in the studio.
Around the beginning
of 1968, guitarist Dave Gilmour, a
friend of the band who was also from
Cambridge, was brought in as a fifth
member. The idea was that Gilmour
would enable the Floyd to continue
as a live outfit; Barrett would still
be able to write and contribute to
the records. That couldn't work either,
and within a few months Barrett was
out of the group. Pink Floyd's management,
looking at the wreckage of a band
that was now without its lead guitarist,
lead singer, and primary songwriter,
decided to abandon the group and manage
Barrett as a solo act.
Such calamities would
have proven insurmountable for 99
out of 100 bands in similar predicaments.
Incredibly, Pink Floyd would regroup
and not only maintain their popularity,
but eventually become even more successful.
It was early in the game yet, after
all; the first album had made the
British Top Ten, but the group were
still virtually unknown in America,
where the loss of Syd Barrett meant
nothing to the media. Gilmour was
an excellent guitarist, and the band
proved capable of writing enough original
material to generate further ambitious
albums, Waters eventually emerging
as the dominant composer. The 1968
follow-up to Piper at the Gates of
Dawn, A Saucerful of Secrets, made
the British Top Ten, using Barrett's
vision as an obvious blueprint, but
taking a more formal, somber, and
quasi-classical tone, especially in
the long instrumental parts. Barrett,
for his part, would go on to make
a couple of interesting solo records
before his mental problems instigated
a retreat into oblivion.
Over the next four
years, Pink Floyd would continue to
polish their brand of experimental
rock, which married psychedelia with
ever-grander arrangements on a Wagnerian
operatic scale. Hidden underneath
the pulsing, reverberant organs and
guitars and insistently restated themes
were subtle blues and pop influences
that kept the material accessible
to a wide audience. Abandoning the
singles market, they concentrated
on album-length works, and built a
huge following in the progressive
rock underground with constant touring
in both Europe and North America.
While LPs like Ummagumma (divided
into live recordings and experimental
outings by each member of the band),
Atom Heart Mother (a collaboration
with composer Ron Geesin), and More...
(a film soundtrack) were erratic,
each contained some extremely effective
music.
By the early '70s,
Syd Barrett was a fading or nonexistent
memory for most of Pink Floyd's fans,
although the group, one could argue,
never did match the brilliance of
that somewhat anomalous 1967 debut.
Meddle (1971) sharpened the band's
sprawling epics into something more
accessible, and polished the science
fiction ambience that the group had
been exploring ever since 1968. Nothing,
however, prepared Pink Floyd or their
audience for the massive mainstream
success of their 1973 album, Dark
Side of the Moon, which made their
brand of cosmic rock even more approachable
with state-of-the-art production;
more focused songwriting; an army
of well-time stereophonic sound effects;
and touches of saxophone and soulful
female backup vocals.
Dark Side of the
Moon finally broke Pink Floyd as superstars
in the United States, where it made
number one. More astonishingly, it
made them one of the biggest-selling
acts of all time. Dark Side of the
Moon spent an incomprehensible 741
weeks on the Billboard album chart.
Additionally, the primarily instrumental
textures of the songs helped make
Dark Side of the Moon easily translatable
on an international level, and the
record became (and still is) one of
the most popular rock albums worldwide.
It was also an extremely
hard act to follow, although the follow-up,
Wish You Were Here (1975), also made
number one, highlighted by a tribute
of sorts to the long-departed Barrett,
"Shine on You Crazy Diamond."
Dark Side of the Moon had been dominated
by lyrical themes of insecurity, fear,
and the cold sterility of modern life;
Wish You Were Here and Animals (1977)
developed these morose themes even
more explicitly. By this time Waters
was taking a firm hand over Pink Floyd's
lyrical and musical vision, which
was consolidated by The Wall (1979).
The bleak, overambitious
double concept album concerned itself
with the material and emotional walls
modern humans build around themselves
for survival. The Wall was a huge
success (even by Pink Floyd's standards),
in part because the music was losing
some of its heavy-duty electronic
textures in favor of more approachable
pop elements. Although Pink Floyd
had rarely even released singles since
the late '60s, one of the tracks,
"Another Brick in the Wall,"
became a transatlantic number one.
The band had been launching increasingly
elaborate stage shows throughout the
'70s, but the touring production of
The Wall, featuring a construction
of an actual wall during the band's
performance, was the most excessive
yet.
In the 1980s, the
group began to unravel. Each of the
four had done some side and solo projects
in the past; more troublingly, Waters
was asserting control of the band's
musical and lyrical identity. That
wouldn't have been such a problem
had The Final Cut (1983) been such
an unimpressive effort, with little
of the electronic innovation so typical
of their previous work. Shortly afterward,
the band split up; for a while. In
1986, Waters was suing Gilmour and
Mason to dissolve the group's partnership
(Wright had lost full membership status
entirely); Waters lost, leaving a
Roger-less Pink Floyd to get a Top
Five album with Momentary Lapse of
Reason in 1987. In an irony that was
nothing less than cosmic, about 20
years after Pink Floyd shed its original
leader to resume its career with great
commercial success, they would do
the same again to his successor. Waters
released ambitious solo albums to
nothing more than moderate sales and
attention, while he watched his former
colleagues (with Wright back in tow)
rescale the charts.
Pink Floyd still
had a huge fan base, but there's little
that's noteworthy about their post-Waters
output. They knew their formula, could
execute it on a grand scale, and could
count on millions of customers
many of them unborn when Dark Side
of the Moon came out, and unaware
that Syd Barrett was ever a member
to buy their records and see
their sporadic tours. The Division
Bell, their first studio album in
seven years, topped the charts in
1994 without making any impact on
the current rock scene, except in
a marketing sense. Ditto for the live
Pulse album, recorded during a typically
elaborately staged 1994 tour, which
included a concert version of The
Dark Side of the Moon in its entirety.
Waters' solo career sputtered along,
highlighted by a solo recreation of
The Wall, performed at the site of
the former Berlin Wall in 1990, and
released as an album. Syd Barrett
continued to be completely removed
from the public eye except as a sort
of archetype for the fallen genius.
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
 |
Pinskyi, Dr. Drew |
| |
Scott's primary recovery specialist and head of Las Encinas Hospital’s Chemical Dependency Program. He is also
co-host of KROQ & MTV's "Loveline".
>>> Dr. Drew |
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
 |
Pulse Studios |
| |
Pulse Studios is one of the Hollywood studios that VR used to track songs for 'Contraband'.
|
| |
|
| |
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|