
Five For Friday: June 9, 2023
This week’s new releases includes the latest heavy material from Godflesh, Torture Rack, The Arcane Order and more!
The post Five For Friday: June 9, 2023 appeared first on Decibel Magazine.

DAVID ELLEFSON: 'I've Watched The Quality Of MEGADETH Diminish Over The Last Five Years'
In a new interview with Andrew Daly of Metal Edge magazine, former MEGADETH bassist David Ellefson spoke about the way he was fired by Dave Mustaine in May 2021, just days after sexually tinged messages and explicit video footage involving the bassist were posted on Twitter. He said (as transcribed…
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The Poison Chalice
When LEGION OF THE DAMNED first formed in the early ’90s, under the name OCCULT, they could not have known exactly how enduring their bullish blend of death and thrash metal would turn out to be. “The Poison Chalice” is the Dutch band’s eighth album and arrives four years after their last, the splen…
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Tom Hamilton: “I thought, I'll be damned if I'm going to play eighth-notes on the root all my life!”
Aerosmith’s long-serving bassist reflects on becoming a “music-book junkie”, channeling John Paul Jones and “smoking a bowl” before writing Sweet Emotion
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METALLICA's Performance At U.K.'s DOWNLOAD Festival Draws Noise Complaints
According to DerbyshireLive, police have received a number of calls from local residents concerned about the noise coming Download, the annual music event held at Donington Park near Castle Donington in Leicestershire, United Kingdom.
Last night’s (Thursday, June 8) headlining performance by METALLI…

Mikey Way: “I was borderline terrified a lot of the time My Chemical Romance was active. I was learning the bass in front of 20,000 people every night!”
The reunited emo kings’ low-end ranger reveals why he swapped out his signature Fender Mustang for a sparkling new signature Jazz Bass, learning bass in arenas, and how he overcame insecurity about his chops
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Municipal Waste announce UK tour
MUNICIPAL WASTE have announced a headlining UK tour! Set for October this year, the tour will see the Richmond, Virginia-based crossover thrashers touring across the UK in support of their latest…
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ALBUM REVIEW: Dream Eraser – No Lights
Thinking of San Francisco’s Bay Area is like summoning a thousand perfect sunsets as the street lights turn on and the sky begins to take on its evening purple makeup,…
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Ex-IRON MAIDEN Singer BLAZE BAYLEY Releases First Video Message After Undergoing Quadruple Heart Bypass Surgery
Former IRON MAIDEN singer Blaze Bayley has released a new video message, his first since he was discharged from hospital after undergoing a quadruple bypass surgery following his recent heart attack.
In the one-minute clip, which can be seen below, Blaze thanks all the fans for their best wishes, su…

Maximizing Your Acoustic Rig
How does an acoustic player add some sonic flair via their pedalboard rig? Well, unless it’s your name on the ticket or your employee at the mixing console, you may need to tread lightly. Working with your mix engineer is critical, and developing some mutual understanding and respect will certainly make things go more smoothly. As players, we need to recognize that spacious reverb may simultaneously sound wonderful in your monitor and be impossible to manage in the venue PA as your reverb combines unfavorably with the room’s natural acoustic response. The bit of low-mid frequency boost you added to fill things out in rehearsal may coincide with a room resonance on show day, causing difficult-to-control feedback. What you hear in the practice room or from playing position does not necessarily translate to what the audience will hear, and understanding that is an important first step in picking out effects for an acoustic pedalboard and dialing them in for a show.If you’re just starting to work effects into your acoustic rig, I would recommend starting subtle. I’ve heard several avant setups with overdrive, phaser, and ring modulator, but if you’re headed to an in-the-round, singer-songwriter performance, these effects may prove unsuitable. Instead, focus on what I would call the basic food groups for acoustic processing: preamp, compression, and space.“What you hear in the practice room or from playing position does not necessarily translate to what the audience will hear.”Your preamp takes your instrument’s pickup system and conditions or otherwise manipulates it before further processing. Preamps can blend multi-element pickup systems together, provide acoustic imaging via impulse responses, and use equalization to minimize or bolster whatever frequencies are required. Your instrument may have an onboard preamp whose output could be connected directly to a direct injection (DI) box that then feeds into the PA. Other preamps, like Fishman’s Aura, have their own direct output. A simple EQ pedal could be added to an onboard preamp to round out its utility.Compression is a great effect for acoustic guitars. Your mix engineer will undoubtedly have thoughts on how much and what type of compression is suitable, so keep a light touch on whatever you dial and know your gear well enough to tailor it to meet everyone’s needs. The Universal Audio MAX Preamp is great on acoustics, with two types of potentially unobtrusive studio compression and the ability to add subtle texture via its 610 preamp model. You’ll likely want to stick with compressors that are designed for studio use, as the more traditional guitar effect compressors like the MXR Dyna Comp are often too colored for typical acoustic applications. A compressor will help control dynamics of non-linear pickup systems and/or undisciplined strumming hands.The space category is a bit more open. Reverb and delay can be used to make the instrument sound less dry, and the ambience supplied is more like hearing an instrument from the other side of a room instead of in the body of the guitar. Longer delays may be more intrusive as their overtly rhythmic nature can detract from what a potential band mix requires. Another space-maker is something like the TC Electronic Mimiq, which creates an artificial double-tracking effect to produce acoustic sounds as they often appear in recorded music.Dial in your pedal sounds at home with an eye towards how they will work in a performance context. If it is a solo acoustic performance, take up as much sonic space as you like. However, if you’re working in a band, you may want a slight low-frequency cut, with a shorter reverb and decay, to have a better fitting sonic footprint. If you like a very ambient sound, but it doesn’t suit the mix your audience hears, ask for an extra mixer channel. You can connect your core effects, like compression and EQ, to a DI that goes directly to front-of-house—and then run through that DI to your space-making effects to a separate DI that can strictly feed your monitor mix. This will give your mix engineer a dry signal to process as they see fit, and you can have all the cavernous reverb you’d like.However you setup your acoustic rig, know that it may change on the gig after accounting for the room and sound system. Know how to dial things back when asked, but don’t be afraid to take advantage of pedals to make your acoustic sound your own.
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