Thursday, April 26, 2012

Roger Taylor from Duran Duran...

"Happy 52nd Birthday"
Roger Taylor 




Roger Andrew Taylor (born 26 April 1960) is an English double grammy award winning musician who is best known as the drummer of British rock band Duran Duran from their inception until 1985, and again from 2001 onwards, the band selling in excess of 80 million records worldwide in the process.




Taylor began drumming around the age of twelve, teaching himself by playing along with his favorite records. His first ambition was to be a goalkeeper for English Premier League club Aston Villa, and as a child he was taken to every home match by his father Hugh, but at 5' 9½ never grew tall enough to realize his dream. He would eventually "play" at Villa Park but as Duran Duran's drummer for their 1983 charity concert there. Taylor cited drummers Paul Thompson of Roxy Music, Charlie Watts of the Rolling Stones and Tony Thompson of Chic as his key musical influences growing up.




Before joining Duran Duran, he performed with several school (Park Hall School in Castle Bromwich, Warwickshire) and local club bands. After being inspired by the punk bands playing at Barbarellas club in Birmingham, he formed the New Wave/Punk outfit Scent Organs, who became regional finalists in the 'Melody Maker' young band of the year in 1978. After the band split in 1979, he joined Duran Duran and went on to become one of the world's most famous and influential drummers.




Taylor became an international star with the other members of Duran Duran as they rose to fame in the early-mid 1980s. Taylor played drums on the band's first three studio albums (Duran Duran, Rio, and Seven and the Ragged Tiger) and the live album Arena. In 1985, the band recorded the theme to the James Bond film A View To A Kill which became their second US no.1 hit and only Bond theme in history to hit the coveted transatlantic #1 spot. 





However, the intense schedule of recording and touring coupled with the pressures of fame left Taylor exhausted. His final performance with the original line-up of Duran Duran was in July 1985 at the Live Aid benefit concert in Philadelphia which reached a global audience of 2 billion people.
Prior to formally leaving the band, Taylor worked with Duran Duran bandmates Simon Le Bon and Nick Rhodes on the album So Red The Rose for their side project Arcadia in 1985. The album featured Sting, David Gilmour, Herbie Hancock, and Grace Jones. 







Taylor also contributed percussion to the other Duran Duran splinter-group Power Station's version of Some Like It Hot from their self titled album. He then purchased a remote farm estate in the hills of Gloucestershire to live a semi-reclusive life of contemplation there with his wife Giovanna, whom he had married in Naples the year before. Initially his hiatus was expected to be for a year, but in 1986 the remaining members of the band issued a statement saying that he would not be returning.









In 1994, while visiting a friend in Paris, he temporarily joined Duran Duran to play drums on three tracks for the covers album Thank You (although only two ended up on the album), later appearing in the video for "Perfect Day" and on the band's Top Of The Pops performance of the song.
In 1997, Taylor resumed an interest in the music industry again. He briefly formed the electro/dance band Freebass, which produced a single, "Love is Like Oxygen", (a cover of The Sweet) on underground dance label Cleveland City Records and was placed in the top ten of the Music Week UK Dance Chart. Taylor released electro house vinyl with Freebass member Jake Roberts under the name 'Funkface' – 'Lost This Feeling' and 'Shine' on Taylors own label Rt Music.




In 2001, Taylor rejoined Duran Duran, as all five of the original members reunited to record new material and perform as a quintet again. This culminated in 5 sold out nights at Wembley Arena, playing Madison Square Garden again and signing with Epic Records in New York. The band delivered a worldwide hit single '(Reach Up For The) Sunrise' and multi million selling album Astronaut.









The 'Astronaut' tour lasted for more than 2 years with shows all around the world. The band picked up several prestigious 'achievement' awards from Q magazine, MTV and a Brit award.





In 2003, he began a long running DJ residency at Londons Met Bar playing a mix of house and hip hop and has gone on to become a renowned DJ over recent years, performing sets at Cielo New York and Pacha Ibiza. In 2005, he was named (along with John Taylor) as one of the greatest musicians of all time in the Ubersonik.com top 100.




   The 'ALL YOU NEED IS NOW' album was released on 21 December 2010 to worldwide critical acclaim. It immediately reached the number 1 spot on the iTunes pop chart in 15 different counties. Duran Duran are said to have re-discovered their real sound with the guidance of Mark Ronson.
2011 - Duran Duran commenced 'All You Need is Now' world tour.








Taylor has always played the 'archetypal drummer' role in Duran Duran; he has always preferred to keep a low profile and is very rarely seen in the media or at public events outside of band commitments. Taylor had three children – James, Ellea and Elliot – with his first wife, whom he later divorced. In 2004, Taylor was named Britain's fifth most eligible bachelor in the UK high society magazine the Tatler, alongside Prince William and Hugh Grant. In 2007, Taylor married Peruvian national Gisella Bernales, who gave birth to their first child, a son named Julian Roger, on 9 July 2011. They now live in South West London.





In 2002, Taylor appeared on the "Twelve Drummers Drumming" Christmas card in the "Twelve Days of Christmas" set sold at Woolworths to raise money for the NSPCC – alongside the "other" Roger Taylor, the drummer for Queen.
-Wikipedia.com

















José Pasillas - Mini B-day Bio...

"Happy 36th Birthday"
José Pasillas 


 José Antonio Pasillas (born April 26, 1976) is an American drummer known as the drummer of alternative rock band Incubus.




José Pasillas is of Mexican descent. He grew up in Calabasas, California. He began playing drums in 1990. Later in 1991, José and friends Brandon Boyd, Mike Einziger, original bassist Dirk Lance (Ben Kenney joined in 2003 upon Lance's departure) began Incubus in high school in the San Fernando Valley outpost of Calabasas. He endorses DW drums and Sabian cymbals.


José has mentioned he has never had any formal training for the drums, which he says has positives and negatives. Some of his influences include Chad Sexton of 311, Stewart Copeland of The Police, and Tim Alexander of Primus.


Before dedicating himself fulltime to Incubus, he was a fulltime art student (as was Brandon), and he continues to create designs in his free time.
-Wikipedia.com






Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Rock News, April 25th..(Page3)

The steam engine that is rock band "Foreigner" is racing full steam ahead.

 


Even without the presence of founding guitarist-singer-songwriter Mick Jones — the 67-year-old Jones recently had heart surgery and is recuperating away from the stage — Foreigner put on a solid concert on April 10 at the Walton Arts Center in Fayetteville, Arkansas. The event was a fundraiser for the Level 3 Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at the Fayetteville-based Washington Regional Medical Center, and showed Foreigner to be tight and ready to deliver the hit singles.





Jones’ trademark, punchy riffing that drove the studio versions — and recent tour versions of — “Feels Like the First Time,” “Urgent,” “Juke Box Hero,” “Dirty White Boy” and “Urgent” all came from Bruce Watson, a fill-in guitarist for the departed Jones.
Lead singer Kelly Hanson and bassist Jeff Pilson bonded to help keep the front-of-stage energy up on the up-tempo cut “Head Games” 





Multi-instrumentalist Tom Gimbel played the haunting piano introduction of “Cold As Ice” that usually is played live by Jones. Resembling a taller version of Journey’s Neal Schon, Gimbel blew terrific, dirty-sounding saxophone for “Urgent” and played key rhythm parts on his Les Paul.


Giving the songs a stomping, dependable beat was drummer Mark Schulman, while keyboardist Michael Bluestein provided moody atmospherics, sound effects and crucial piano parts. The band even did a mostly acoustic version of “Say You Will” that was greeted with some of the most screams, cheers and whistles of the night.



To be fair, Watson seems as equally gifted as Jones as a guitarist and performer. Boasting a thick, curly mane of hair, Watson ate up every chorus and verse in the roaming, multi-colored spotlights with grins and 110-percent effort.



Despite Watson’s gifts and warm persona that can be found both on the stage and in the band’s dressing room, Jones was missed. Usually bespectacled with white, sky-pointing hair, Jones resembles a cool-looking, rock-and-roll version of a Koala bear. Let’s hope that Jones quickly bounces back to strong health, rejoins Foreigner for more tour dates and adds Watson as a full-time member.
-Realrocknews.com







Rock News, April 25th..(Page 2)

Freddie Mercury Meets Wolverine in Lost Comics Page



Sci-fi blog io9 has unearthed a comic book page featuring Wolverine and Queen frontman Freddie Mercury drawn by an unknown artist as a submission to Marvel Comics at some point in the Nineties. The page depicts the X-Men antihero prowling through the woods only to stumble upon the Queen singer standing in a confident pose.
The only dialogue on the page has Wolverine uttering "Freddy Mercury?," because, really, what else would you say if you unexpectedly ran into the Queen singer a few years after his death? Also, obviously, Wolverine must be wondering what Mercury is doing in a comic book to begin with.
The page has been in circulation online for some time. Back in 2010, former Marvel Comics staffer Steve Bunche shared the page on his blog, saying that while the art was not up to snuff for the top superhero comics publisher, he admired the artist's imagination. "Seriously, how the fuck does someone even make the leap in narrative logic from depicting Wolverine stalking through the forest to having him run into Freddie Mercury of Queen for no apparent reason?" Bunche wrote. "That, dear readers, is a sign of true creativity."
-Rollingstone.com