September 7, 2011

Blackbird Meets My Chemical Romance Meets InAisce.

Last week, we received an e-mail from rockers My Chemical Romance asking if we’d like to be their VIP guests at their show that evening. We are dorks, so we of course jumped up and down and cancelled any other silly plans we had. My Chemical Romance said they had been long time fans of Blackbird and were very excited about InAisce, and the boots shown below. Gerard, the lead singer was looking for just the right boot as inspiration for the look of the band’s upcoming album. Nicole, Blackbird’s owner and creative director, shared stories of hanging out and sharing ideas with Jona, InAisce’s lead Designer while Gerard made sure these were just the boots he was looking for. Thanks to all the guys for a great time, your humble hearts and talent will continue to take you far.

INAISCE - LOW BOOT DETAILS:

Gorgeous fully lined reverse horse leather boot with a waxed finish. Square deerskin laces, 9 eyelets, angled full zipper at inner left with deerskin pulls, reinforced ankle with double stitched details through out. 3” stacked heel finished with 1/4” rubber heel cap. Distressed detailing along sole and heel.


Handmade in Italy


Sizing: These fit approximately one size small.
InAisce, meaning “in vain” in Gaelic is the work of a designer based out of New York, Jona. Inspired by historical figures, events, art and photography, as well as incredible stories of actual history the designer creates visions of utilitarian clothing from the past with a modern touch and unique fabrics. $1212

More information.

Source.

4:46pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx9Fpvi3
  
Filed under: Candid Article 
September 6, 2011
K! Exclusive: Michael Pedicone speaks!

Following his dismissal from My Chemical Romance for alleged theft, former drummer Michael Pedicone has issued a statement exclusively through Kerrang.com.

“To the media, my colleagues in the music industry, and, most importantly, the fans of My Chemical Romance.

“As many of you have heard by now, on Thursday evening I was let go as the touring drummer for MCR. The ensuing hours have been difficult for many reasons, but particularly because the actions that led to my dismissal have been twisted and misinterpreted via rumor mongering on the internet. With this, I’d like to put the rumors to rest.

“Almost as soon as I began touring with MCR I ran into problems with a member of the band’s crew who I’ll not name. The problems were many, big and small, but some of them were large enough that they began to greatly impact me and, by extension, my family. I’d reached my wits’ end, and I made what was certainly the poorest decision of my life. Rather than address the issues that I had with the crew member in an open and honest manner, I tried to make them look irresponsible. My intention was to make this person look incompetent. I had no intention of profiting whatsoever. Again, I cannot overstate how poor my judgment was in this situation; it was a tremendous mistake, and it’s one I’ll regret for years to come.

“I would have liked an opportunity to share my side of the story with MCR, an opportunity to express my remorse. I was never given one.

“I’d like to thank MCR’s members, crew, and supporters for giving me some of the best musical experiences of my life in the past several months. However brief our partnership, it was an honor and a dream come true to play with such a talented bunch of individuals. I wish MCR the best of luck in the future, and I’m looking forward to my next endeavor.

Thank you, Michael Pedicone.”

Former Suicide File drummer Jarrod Alexander is temporarily filling in while the band continue their U.S. tour with Blink 182.

Source.

12:24pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx9CvCpq
  
Filed under: Article 
September 3, 2011
Exclusive: My Chemical Romance replacement drummer identity revealed

AP has confirmed that Jarrod Alexander—who has drummed with Death By Stereo and Suicide File and is in the band Dead Country— is playing with My Chemical Romance tonight at the Salt Lake City stop of the Honda Civic Tour. Former touring drummer Mike Pedicone and the band parted ways yesterday due to allegations of stealing.

Source.

11:01pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx96YiUX
  
Filed under: Article 
September 1, 2011
Good Times for My Chemical Romance

In a way, the huge achievement that was The Black Parade CD and tour almost caused the guys in My Chemical Romance to forget who they are as a band.

Released in 2006, The Black Parade CD itself was one of the most ambitious albums of recent vintage, a full-blown theatrical concept album that essentially centered around a journey through death as told from the perspective of a character called “the patient.” Despite that subject matter, it was a musically compelling and highly entertaining work.

The real topper, though, was the marathon tour, in which My Chemical Romance donned black outfits and essentially became the band The Black Parade. During that set, the group performed the album from front to back, before returning to the stage for a second set as My Chemical Romance and playing a selection of songs from earlier albums.

Having been immersed in such a lavish production for months on end, the group reacted sharply to The Black Parade by teaming up with super-producer Brendan O’Brien and recording a back-to-basics, non-thematic album that was essentially the polar opposite of The Black Parade.

It was only after finishing that CD that the guys in My Chemical Romance — singer Gerard Way, his brother, bassist Mikey Way, guitarists Ray Toro and Frank Iero, and recently departed drummer Bob Bryar — realized they had lost their way and began the process of rediscovering and reclaiming the group’s musical identity.

“I think we accomplished what we set out to do,” Mikey Way says of the disc produced by O’Brien (known for his work with Bruce Springsteen and Pearl Jam). “But there was nothing; there was no high arc to it. There were no, like, left turns where you saw a right turn ahead. There were no sudden drops or sudden spikes. It was very much a middle-of-the-road rock album, which isn’t like us. That’s not something that we would normally do.”

So the band shelved the O’Brien tracks, reunited with the producer of The Black Parade, Rob Cavallo, and returned to writing and recording new songs.

“We were about five songs in and we realized we were tracking a new album. We didn’t quite realize it at the time,” Mikey Way says. “We thought we were just making more songs for our [O’Brien-produced] album. But there was something in those songs that was so special and undeniable that we were like, this is the route we have to go.”

The CD that finally emerged from the second round of writing and recording — 2010’s Danger Days: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys — sounds much more like a My Chemical Romance CD. Yet at the same time it’s something different for the band.

On the one hand, Danger Days once again has a story line — this time it’s a futuristic tale in which America is ruled by a devious corporation called Better Living Industries, and a group of rogue artists called the “Killjoys” come to the rescue to try to destroy Better Living Industries and save society. As one might expect, the CD has its share of elaborately produced songs with plenty of instrumental bells and whistles and undeniable melodic hooks.

But it is also an upbeat CD — a first for a band that previously had stuck to dark themes with plenty of emotional turmoil. This shift in mood reflects the improved outlook of the band.

“It’s a complete 180,” Mikey Way says. “There were a lot of growing pains that we probably went through in the time during The Black Parade. We were a relatively young band, and we saw a lot of crazy things that transpired. The band got extremely big and the workload was extremely big. But I think we’re all very comfortable in our own skin now. Yeah, everybody’s just really happy.”

Not surprisingly, the shows in support of Danger Days — both as headliners and now opening for Blink-182 — have a very different vibe from The Black Parade extravaganza.

“It’s kind of a less-is-more approach,” Mikey Way said, noting that the group has scaled back the stage set and pyrotechnics of The Black Parade concerts and ditched its black costumes. “We really wanted to give people the band. We wanted to showcase just the guys playing the instruments this time and show people, because some people haven’t gotten the chance to see a proper My Chemical Romance show. Maybe they only saw a ‘Black Parade’ show. It’s almost like a reboot of sorts.”

Source.

2:33pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx90Z7pN
  
Filed under: Article 
August 30, 2011
My Chemical Romance: ‘We’re Writing New Music Everyday.’

My Chemical Romance have revealed that they are writing new music everyday.

In an exclusive interview with Gigwise, the band’s frontman Gerard Way said they will return to the studio later this year to work on the follow-up to 2010’s ‘Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys’.

Asked whether he felt it would take a while to record, Way replied: “No I don’t think it will. The thing is that the band was in a really unhealthy place when ‘Black Parade’ ended and now the band is in such a healthy place that there’s no more ‘I want to run away’ or ‘It’s about me’.

“Now it’s like this is what I do and I want to do this for the rest of my life. Everybody’s so happy.”

He added: “We’re writing music every day at the moment, which was something that wasn’t happening on ‘Black Parade’.”

Way’s brother Mikey agreed that the band were in a good place at the moment.

“If anyone in the band has an issue or if somebody has an idea for a song it can now become a song in five or ten minutes,” he said.

“Stuff like that is happening at the moment which is really exciting to see what It turns into for the next album.”

Source.

7:14am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx8xEcjn
  
Filed under: Interview Article 
August 27, 2011
Gerard Way reveals how he met Brian May

Gerard Way has told NME how he first hooked up with Queen’s Brian May - who joined them onstage at Reading Festival last night.

Guitarist May played Queen’s ‘We Will Rock You’ and MCR’s ’Welcome To The Black Parade’ at the headline show, with Way explaining that they first met after he emailed May out of the blue.

The singer explained:

“I wrote an email to Brian after getting his email off [producer] Rob Cavallo. There was this story that you [Queen] played a show in Paris and got booed off and Freddie [Mercury] said, ‘We’re gonna come back and be the biggest band in the world’. And after what happened to us at Reading in 2006 [when they were bottled], people would ask us, ‘Are you gonna do that again? [play the festival]’ and I’d go, ‘Not unless we’re headlining it’.

He added:

“So I told him this whole story and how we were gonna go back and could he give me some advice. So we just got talking and I went to his house – I got off a plane, went to his house, went to his jam room, jammed out, did a soundcheck. I had a feeling that morning, it flipped in my brain, not, ‘Are we ready for this’, I almost felt like ‘Is the crowd ready for us’?”

Source.

5:16pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx8qUyI9
  
Filed under: Interview Article 
August 24, 2011
Tom Meighan Apologized To Way Over Insult

Kasabian frontman Tom Meighan spent an agonizing 10 hours trying to avoid fellow rockers My Chemical Romance on a plane - after insulting the band early in his career.

The British rocker had criticized Gerard Way’s group, accusing the “Welcome to the Black Parade” hit makers of penning “ventriloquists’ music” - and then found himself on a 10-hour plane flight from the U.K. to San Francisco with the band earlier this year (11).

He admits he spent almost the entire journey avoiding eye contact before plucking up the courage to apologize to Way.

Meighan tells Q magazine, “I thought, ‘Fuck it, I’ve gotta go and apologize.’ So I went over, he went, ‘Hey man!’ We gave each other a hug and then the whole band started laughing.

“I thought, ‘Fuck, why didn’t I do this before we took off, (we) could’ve saved ourselves 10 hours of shit!’ Anyway, all that taking the piss, we was (sic) only ever having a laugh. What else did you want from young, foolish 23-year-olds?”

Source.

4:13pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx8izcoy
  
Filed under: Article 
August 10, 2011

Blink-182 & My Chemical Romance Kick Off Tour

-

“I guess this is growing up,” is the chorus to Blink-182’s most famous song, “Dammit (Growing Up),” and that sentiment played out in front of 16,000 fans on Friday night during the kickoff of the Honda Civic Tour at the PNC Bank Arts Center in Holmdel, New Jersey.

Although San Diego’s Blink-182 and Jersey City’s My Chemical Romance have a generation and an entire country separating them, they’ve had a remarkably similar musical journey; in fact, you could argue that MCR’s breakthrough single “I’m Not Okay (I Promise)” was another rendering of the adolescent frustration Blink channeled on “Dammit (Growing Up),” and the evening proved that both acts have entered musical adulthood gracefully.

During their 20-song, nearly two-hour headlining set, Blink debuted four songs from their upcoming album Neighborhoods, including the first single “Up All Night,” which features experimental guitar riffage and a quasi-ska drum beat. Bassist Mark Hoppus and guitarist Tom DeLonge traded verses about the “demons that keep [them] up all night,” which continued in the same progressive vein as their last album, 2003’s Blink-182.

Later, the grinning and shirtless drummer Travis Barker propelled the melodic hardcore of “Heart’s All Gone,” which was released online the day before the show, with what seemed like eight limbs. They followed that up with another newbie, the synth-driven “After Midnight,” and “Ghost On The Dancefloor,” a new wave-influenced number that sounded so big you’d think there were twice as many musicians onstage.

But Blink know that the audience didn’t want to hear all their new material — Hoppus joked they should grab a beer or go to the bathroom before they played “After Midnight.” So they unleashed a run of solid gold classics, and it’s easy to forget just how many they have: “Dumpweed,” the opener from 1999’s Enema Of The State, “Feeling This,” “What’s My Age Again,” “Stay Together for the Kids,” “All The Small Things,” and “Josie,” which saw even the security guards breaking character to mouth the lyrics.

Later, Barker kicked off the band’s encore by playing a five-minute drum solo from a crane that raised him above the crowd and nearly scraped the venue’s ceiling, and Blink closed with “Dammit (Growing Up).” It seemed as if the song had an added resonance as Blink embark on the next stage of their career. And it was difficult not to get caught up in the collective excitement of a sold-out arena of people singing along to the once-ubiquitous hit as black-and-white confetti showered the pavilion.

“Thank you so much, best first-show ever,” DeLonge said when it was over, and despite all of the dick jokes that preceded his statement, you could tell he was being sincere. Now this is growing up.

Earlier, openers My Chemical Romance delivered their own version of the sonic fountain of youth. With drummer Mike Pedicone (The Bled) and keyboardist/percussionist James Dewees (Coalesce, The Get Up Kids) bolstering the core lineup, MCR spent the first half of their hour-long set playing songs from their latest LP, Danger Days. Among them was the new-wave techno rocker “Planetary (GO!),” which a fluorescent pink-haired Way introduced by challenging the crowd to a dance contest—and when multi-colored balloons engulfed the stage, it really did feel like you were at futuristic rave instead of a New Jersey rock show.

“We’re all kids. Stay a kid, don’t be a grown-up because being a grown-up is bullshit,” Way preached as a preface to “Teenagers.” Then a dirty classic rock riff kicked in and Way — resembling a goth Peter Pan as he bounded across the stage in tight black jeans and floppy hair — let the crowd sing the refrain of “teenagers scare the shit out of me!”

Next, guitarists Frank Iero and Ray Toro broke into the opening lick of “Helena,” from 2004’s Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge, and Way gave so much of himself in the performance that he collapsed onstage. When the band finally exited it was clear that there would be no encore, not because the crowd didn’t ask for it but because MCR were physically and emotionally drained. They may be in their mid-30s, but onstage they still rock with the abandon and intensity of teenagers, no matter the consequences.

Source.

(Source: extra-mcrupdates)

5:10pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx89OtiF
  
Filed under: Article 
August 4, 2011
My Chemical Romance on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon

My Chemical Romance is scheduled to perform on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon on Monday, August 8th! Check your local listings for more information. My Chemical Romance fans can also enter the “Band Bench” sweepstakes.

Source.

2:17pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx7vLVrU
  
Filed under: Article 
July 29, 2011
Grant Morrison and Gerard Way Cure San Diego’s Comic-Con Withdrawals at Meltdown Comics

We were having Comic-Con withdrawals. Severe ones. So, in order to continue our nerdfest, we headed to Meltdown Comics on Thursday night, where a large crowd of both locals and travelers who had head to L.A. after the Con had gathered for a night with the one and only Grant Morrison.

Morrison is part of the pantheon of comic book greats. The dapper, Scottish writer is responsible for the Batman classic Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth. He created late-1990s series The Invisibles and co-created the character Xorn during his time working on X-Men. When DC relaunches this fall, he’ll be handling Action Comics.

Last night, Morrison was at comic hub Meltdown to promote his latest book, Supergods: What Masked Vigilantes, Miraculous Mutants, and a Sun God from Smallville Can Teach Us About Being Human. Though Supergods was the catalyst for this appearance, the discussion touched on many aspects of his career.

Way opened the night by recalling an early encounter with Morrison. It was at the end of the 1990s and he was inside DC’s New York City headquarters when the spotted the famed writer. He likened Morrison’s appearance, wearing rubber despite the heat, he added, to “King Mob from The Invisibles.”

Over time, Way and Morrison have become friends and the former speaks of the latter as an influential figure in his life. It was fitting then that Way conduct this live interview.

Way brought up an interesting misconception about Morrison, that many may believe “that he’s like Tim Leary” in regards to drug experimentation. Morrison noted that he was “straightedge” until he reached his 30s, describing himself as a “straightedge good boy mod” in his early career. This led to a conversation about The Invisibles and, in particular, the “method acting” approach that Morrison took while he was writing the series. He discussed how he took on aspects of the characters personalities as he worked, sometimes even becoming sick when they would get sick.

“Reality becomes very plastic,” he said of the experience.

Way and Morrison discussed The Invisibles as “the high,” with Morrison drawing a comparison to another late-1990s classic, Pulp’s album This Is Hardcore. The Filth, in comparison was “the comedown.” Morrison says it was “about my cat dying, about my dad dying.” He says it’s is favorite, adding that it’s his “response to the 21st century.”

During the audience Q/A session, guests asked some really interesting questions on a variety of topics. Someone asked about any possibility of Morrison writing an episode of Dr. Who. His answer was “I don’t know,” but he stressed that he has loved the series since he was a child and thinks that Matt Smith is the “ultimate” Doctor.

Another audience member asked about how Morrison’s musical interests affect his writing (Morrison had played in a band in his early career).

“I always thought of comics as music on paper,” said Morrison. He described individual works, like his last issue in the Batman and Robin series as being structured “like a song.”

The main event closed with a song, when Morrison played for the audience on a guitar that Way had given him as a gift. He played a song that Way enjoys, that the My Chemical Romance frontman said that his two-year-old daughter also loved. It was a song that Morrison said John Lennon had given him.

“I decided to treat John Lennon as a god,” the writer explained. He then detailed a magic ritual he had performed. He said he made a circle with Beatles albums and wore a paisley shirt and his Beetle boots. He went on to describe how he saw the famed singer’s head and how the song came out of this experience.

“Keep looking for signs, that somebody loves you,” he sang in a gravely voice with a Lennon-esq quality to it as he played guitar.

The song that closed the panel felt like a once-in-a-lifetime event. We came to hear Grant Morrison speak, but we also got to hear him sing and play guitar. It was fun and completely unexpected. We couldn’t really ask for more than that.

Article Source.

Pictures from the event here.

9:50pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx7h6E9X
  
Filed under: Article 
July 25, 2011
Rawson Thurber To Rewrite ‘The Umbrella Academy’ For Universal

Dodgeball director Rawson Thurber is rewriting The Umbrella Academy for Universal Pictures, based on the 2008 Eisner Award-winning Dark Horse comic written by My Chemical Romance singer Gerard Way. Mark Bomback wrote the first draft.

The comic revolves around an adopted dysfunctional family of superheroes with bizarre powers who are brought together by a mentor. As children, they defeat the Eiffel Tower when it’s turned into a laser-spewing structure by a zombie robot. In later installments of the comic, the kids disband but reunite as adults after their mentor is killed.

It’s the second Dark Horse property at Universal, which will begin production on RIPD in September. Dark Horse’s Mike Richardson will produce with Scott Stuber and his Stuber Films banner. Pam Abdy will oversee the project for Stuber and also produce, and the author is executive producer. Thurber’s repped by CAA.

Source.

10:43pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx7WycUz
  
Filed under: Article 
July 21, 2011
Gerard Way Warns Bands Off Michael Jackson Lifestyle

Rocker Gerard Way is glad he turned his back on his drug-fuelled lifestyle as he fears he would have suffered the same fate as Michael Jackson.

The My Chemical Romance star admits he and his bassist brother Mikey had a “really bad drug problem” during the band’s early years, using medication to help “switch off” from the pressures of life on the road.

They both eventually quit after getting a “wake-up call” when several friends died - and they are adamant many current bands are dicing with death by adopting a Jackson-style dependency on painkillers.

Mikey tells Kerrang! magazine, “It was a means to an end: it was a way of getting from city to city. You had to build yourself up and then shut yourself off again. We got into a bad routine. I missed home and I was petrified to play, so I would get intoxicated. Then I had to find a way to wind down, so I’d take something to make that happen. Sometimes the drugs were like installing a shut-off switch in the back of my neck.”

Gerard adds, “The crazy thing is that it’s the same thing that killed Michael Jackson: he had to be put to sleep by one drug, then he had to be woken up by another. That’s what everyone in bands is doing; they’re just doing a cheaper, low-level version of it.”

Source.

10:04pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx7NTWN-
  
Filed under: Article Interview 
July 10, 2011
My Chemical Romance channel Scottish roots at T In The Park

My Chemical Romance proudly channeled their Scottish roots at T In The Park today (July 10).

Frontman Gerard Way and his bass player brother Mikey are both half-Scottish, and before their show, Gerard told NME that he always feels a connection to Scotland whenever he is here. He said: “I think I always wear it on my sleeve when I’m there. I certainly feel Scottish and I’ve always felt really proud of that,” before adding that he has always instinctively put salt on his porridge, a traditionally Scottish trait.

Opening with ‘Na Na Na’ (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na)’, MCR played ‘Destroya’ from their last album ‘Danger Days: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys’ - dedicating it to Scottish comic book artist and friend of the band Grant Morrison and his wife Kristan. The show took place under ominous grey clouds, but the rain held off for their set.

Despite being booked as headliners for Reading and Leeds next month, the band today played third from top on the bill behind Foo Fighters and Pulp. But the singer said he was nothing but “proud” to warm up for the returning British indie stars.

He explained the significance of his band covering their ‘Common People’ on Radio 1’s Live Lounge. He said: “We did that cover with total respect for the original. It’s a testament to Pulp’s music the fact that song meant so much to me being a cartpusher in New Jersey with no future, all the way across the ocean. That meant hopefully as much to me as it did for everybody else. So I tried to go back to that place where I would push carts with no future when I was singing it.”

Source.

3:07pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx6yoX1l
  
Filed under: Article 
July 6, 2011
Way Won’t Play Pulp Cover At Festival

Rockers My Chemical Romance have vowed not to play their cover version of Pulp’s hit track Common People when the two bands share the bill at an upcoming festival.

The Welcome to the Black Parade hitmakers performed a rendition of the British band’s most popular song during a recent radio broadcast, with frontman Gerard Way admitting he is a huge fan of the track.

They are due to take to the stage at Scotland’s T in the Park festival on Sunday (10Jul11) as a warm-up for Pulp - and Way has vowed not to spoil the Britpop band’s set by playing the song.

He tells Nme magazine, “I don’t know if Jarvis (Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker) has heard it, but we did that cover with total respect for the original. It’s a testament to Pulp’s music that the song meant so much to me being a cart-pusher in New Jersey with no future, all the way across the ocean… No (we won’t play it at the festival), I think it’d be weird. I think it’d bum everybody out! I would want to definitely wait to hear (Pulp play) that song.”

Source.

8:15pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx6qQzaI
  
Filed under: Article 
June 10, 2011

Old Sonic Meets New Sonic Meets My Chemical Romance In E3 Trailer.

Check out the latest Sonic Generations trailer that SEGA have put together in honour of E3 2011.

Now, when we saw that the trailer was to feature both classic and modern Sonics hurtling down the streets of a busy city we prayed we’d hear the classic ‘Escape from the city’ song from said original level in Sonic Adventure 2 on the Dreamcast. Are prayers have gone unanwsered. Apparently Ted Poley and Tony Harnell aren’t as cool as say My Chemical Romance, with the Na Na Na-ings of MCR now accompanying both Sonics as they plot their city escapes.

Check out the new trailer and as an extra treat, press play on the video beneath it and listen to the music that should really come with this level. Make it so SEGA.

9:46am  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/Zbojyx5yWJXo
  
Filed under: Article 
Liked posts on Tumblr: More liked posts »