Sep 05, 2008 | 11:39 AM PST
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Republicans Lack Heart!Posted Sep 5th 2008 8:00AM by TMZ Staff

Ann
and Nancy Wilson are pissed at the Republican Party and have fired off
a cease and desist letter to the McCain/Palin campaign.
Specifically,
the Heart women are upset that the GOP has used their classic
"Barracuda" as a theme song for Sarah Palin. TMZ obtained a statement
from Heart's rep, who says "The Republican campaign did not ask for
permission to use the song, nor would they have been granted that
permission."
The statement goes on: "We have asked the
Republican campaign publicly not to use our music. We hope our wishes
will be honored."
We're told Ann was watching TV today and heard the song at the convention when Palin was touted.
UPDATE: Twenty minutes after we posted this story, the GOP ended the evening after McCain's speech
with the song, "Barracuda."
Sep 04, 2008 | 05:58 AM PST
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TM and her alliance - I call them the Axis Powers - can do and say what they want. I'm done. To any WWE fans out there, I liken my situation on this site to the Chris Jericho - Shawn Michaels storyline. Michaels takes the easy road, does whatever he wants, people still love him. Yet, I, likening myself to Jericho, see past Michaels, which would be the Axis Powers, and realize that I can't win, no matter what I say or whatever logic I bring about, I'll still be p1ssed on. So, I'll do what he does and just forget about trying to please and satisfy an insatiable audience that threw him overboard long ago. Forget about the people I thought were "friends." If they can't see the truth, BLEEP 'EM.
BLEEP 'EM.
Anyway!
I had an advance listen at Metallica's new album, Death Magnetic.
It is absolutely amazing.
It has the atmosphere of the albums from the 80's, but there are a few songs that bring out their newer side, sort of a revival from both the 80's and 90's era...
DEFINITELY an improvement of St. Anus -- I mean -- St. Anger.
I don't care if I've heard it, I will be in line at midnight to get this album on 12 September.
Of course, it is still epically long. 10 songs on a 75 minute album... you do the math. the shortest song is 5:10, the longest song, an epic instrumental, is 9:57. THERE IS ANOTHER CHAPTER TO THE UNFORGIVEN SAGA... there is The Unforgiven III on this album, and I think it is as good as the first two.
And, of course, the legendary Kirk Hammett brought back the GUITAR SOLO! After one long, meandering album without a single one.
Lots of tempo changes, speed, aggression, power and of course, something that lacked from the previous Metallica album - effort.
"How can I blame you, when it's me I can't forgive?"
METALLICA LIVES
Sep 03, 2008 | 09:39 PM PST
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Aug 25, 2008 | 02:28 PM PST
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Aug 24, 2008 | 02:22 PM PST
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What singer or band would you most like to see make a comeback?
Aug 19, 2008 | 07:11 PM PST
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Aug 12, 2008 | 09:28 PM PST
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Since I've posted this on all of my personal blogs, I thought I'd share here too. The band I work for was featured today on the cover of Quick (of which I am an avid reader). Here is the story that accompanied. Finally, this Friday, is the CD release show we've been looking forward to for over a year. It's my second one in the last 3 years with the band, and this one promises to be even more fun.
Exit 380 takes you in a new direction
09:39 AM CDT on Tuesday, August 12, 2008
By HUNTER HAUK / Staff Writer
Dustin Blocker paces the stage of the Lakewood Theater on a recent afternoon. His bandmates in Exit 380 listen to him rattle off ideas about how they could enter, where they'll stand and what they should wear.
JASON JANIK/SPECIAL CONTRIBUTOR Exit 380 is (from left) Aaron Borden, Jon Hutchison, Dustin Blocker and Bobby Tucker.
They're getting ready for the most challenging live show of their nine-year career, and the frontman just wants everything to go smoothly.
"What will work with the live show is dressing the part," Blocker says later. "Yeah, we could come out with rock shirts and spiked hair and do a normal show. But I want this to be more like a play. And if you miss it, you miss out."
Friday's show will debut Exit 380's concept album The Life and Death of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Stone. The new songs -- about the ups and downs of a fictional 1930s couple -- allow Blocker and the guys to move beyond the '90s-influenced alt-rock they've done in the past.
"It's about opening up and expanding. I feel like that's what we're doing. This could blow people's minds or bore them to death, but at least they'll remember it."
Here's more from Blocker, 29, on the album and the concert.
Q: What brought on the need for change?
A: This time last year, we decided to just start from scratch. We didn't want to have rules anymore, because the last record was more on the heavy side, and fast-paced and all that. So we started working, and found that we really liked the weird things that we tried the best. We added keys, organs, maracas ... just whatever we wanted. We'd built our own studio and really had unlimited time to work.
Q: And how did the idea of a concept album come about?
A: All my lyrics are always about death and religion and those kinds of things. I didn't say, "Hey, let's do a concept album." I just went behind everybody's back and wrote songs with lyrics that kind of went with a story line I had in my head. So every time someone would bring in new music, I flowed it into what I had. And after we had 10 songs, I dropped the concept idea on them. They were into it.
Q: Does it scare you that you might be throwing your local fans off a bit?
A: We've always had pretty good things going on. Good crowds, been pretty successful. When I was in college, we would have huge college crowds, but if we went anywhere else we'd have to play the party places that like you to do covers. So after a while we decided to stop the cover thing, focus on rock and just hope that at least some of the party crowds we'd been playing to would stick with us. And they did. But then we ended up playing so much around here that we kind of beat our old material into oblivion. That's why we wanted to start fresh.
Q: What themes appeal to you most when you write lyrics?
A: The themes that occupy me ... well, there's a religious undertone to all the songs. I'm not necessarily religious, though. What I believe and what I don't believe, I don't really know. But I like thinking about it and exploring it. That's kind of why I set the story of the album in the '30s, because nowadays people don't seem to slow down long enough to talk about those kinds of things.
Q: Do you come from a musical family?
A: My brother and sister always sang. My dad was a music minister, and my mom was a music teacher. And we'd do all these concerts as a family. But once they said I didn't have to do it anymore, I gave it up. I didn't do it again until college. And now, what's funny is that I'm the only one in the family who does music for a living.
Q: Were there concept albums that you loved growing up?
A: I'm a late bloomer with everything -- I got into the Beatles and Zeppelin when I was in college. As far as concept albums, The Who's Quadrophenia was one of the first ones I liked. More recently there's a really good one by Richard Buckner called The Hill. Every song is named after a different person in a little village. It's awesome.
Q: How will you bring your concept album to life onstage?
A: Well, we're definitely not planning to do this show every week. We have special guest musicians coming to help us, and we want to play around with the whole "wall of sound" idea. The weirdness of the record has to be reflected in the show.
Q: You probably haven't slept much lately, right?
A: No, not at all. Especially the last few weeks, because we've been getting everything ready. But that's the way I am about things. I obsess over them. If I don't do it, who else will?
Exit 380
* CD release show Friday at 9 p.m. at the Lakewood Theater, 1825 Abrams Parkway. With Energy Williams and Opium Symphony. $10. All ages. 214-821-7469.
* Exit 380 will also play Saturday at Lola's Saloon in Fort Worth, 2736 W. 6th St. $6. 817-877-0666.
* Hear some music at myspace.com/exit380.
Aug 11, 2008 | 11:26 AM PST
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For the last two days when I go into the music section on the blogs my computer automatically starts playing a song. The same song each time.
Is this happening to anyone else or is my computer possessed?
I don't know of any computer exorcists!
Aug 08, 2008 | 01:44 PM PST
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Aug 08, 2008 | 01:43 PM PST
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Beatle. That really something. Oh the memeries of these days that it brings.
Aug 08, 2008 | 11:37 AM PST
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Aug 05, 2008 | 09:51 PM PST
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;-}
Aug 04, 2008 | 09:15 PM PST
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Yep, a Black Flag song. I've even included the lyrics for your perusal! You know you love early-morning "driving tunes!"
Jealous cowards try to control
Rise above
Were gonna rise above
They distort what we say
Rise above
Were gonna rise above
Try and stop what we do
Rise above
When they cant do it themselves
We are tired of your abuse
Try to stop us its no use
Societys arms of control
Rise above
Were gonna rise above
Think theyre smart
Cant think for themselves
Rise above
Were gonna rise above
Laugh at us
Behind our backs
I find satisfaction
In what they lack
We are tired of your abuse
Try to stop us its no use
We are born with a chance
Rise above
Were gonna rise above
I am gonna have my chance
Rise above
Were gonna rise above
We are tired of your abuse
Try to stop us its no use
Rise above
Rise above
Rise above
Were gonna rise above
Were gonna rise above
Were gonna rise above
Just for kicks, here's a little YouTube magic of it, too! (It's the Rollins Band version, which was sold to raise money for the defense fund of the West Memphis Three.)
<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/yu6LIxI1ADQ&hl=en&fs=1"
></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/yu6LIxI1ADQ&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>
Aug 04, 2008 | 02:18 PM PST
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How wide a range of music do you listen to?
Personally, I'll listen to anything that's not country.