Category Archives: Music

Mega, Dude!


26th October 2007 was when I saw Dave Mustaine in flesh in Fort Canning Park, Singapore. Yes, the original guitarist for Metallica, since sacked for drug and alcohol problems, who then formed his own thrash metal band, Megadeth! A few albums later, he discovered neo-classical shredder Marty Friedman, and they made the sweetest, crunchiest, progressive blend of thrash and speed metal. Those times did not last, but Megadeth is still playing thrash metal and keeping it true. I can’t say the same for Metallica.

(Apologies for the low-quality pictures, I was using my Nokia N70 because cameras were not allowed in.)

And so, YK, Tarquin and I waited. A sound engineer would come up on stage and test a guitar, to which we’d shout in the dopiest Californian drawl, “Hey wait a minute! You’re not Dave!

A slow guitar intro started the set, with the familiar chugs of Sleepwalker coming in. This was what I thought was the most intense of the songs from the new album, United Abominations, and they picked a good starting song! The crowd shifted about with human bodies moving like ocean waves.

I always wondered if they’d play their older stuff, or keep strictly to the new album, since it was a United Abominations Tour Of Duty anyway.

Thankfully, Take No Prisoners came on! Once the main riff hit at 0:36 (well, on the album, anyway), we all jumped, dancing in circles with elbows out. Undoubtedly, the crowd energy was more intense with the stronger hits. We all chanted along, “Don’t ask what you can do for your country! Asssk! What your country! Can dooo! For you!” This song was off Rust In Peace, their first album with Marty, of many to come of my favorite Megadeth lineup.

Wake Up Dead was next, from an older, more plainly thrash metal album – Peace Sells… But Who’s Buying. They fast-forwarded to Skin O’ My Teeth from Countdown To Extinction, followed by a speech.


YK and I were like, “Whoa dude! He looks just like in pictures, with the blond curly hair and I’m-forever-second-place snarl!

What’s next? Washington Is Next! From this point on it could be made clear that Megadeth was playing a healthy mix of the old and new, evenly spaced out! Then, there was one of their slowest songs, A Tout Le Monde (which is the only song from Youthanasia.) The brooding In My Darkest Hour, from So Far, So Good… So What! then came on.

The ascending chromatic chord progression that would also be heard in Metallica – The Call Of The Ktulu were heard in chord form. Hangar 18! Eight or more solos of bliss! Alternating between the bluesy licks of Dave and the melodic neoclassical of Marty, while mucking around with rhythm changes, the whole lot of us were singing the solos aloud. We were not alone!

Interestingly, Megadeth performed the songs exactly as you’d hear them on the album, 32nd note by note. Dave’s voice followed the original recordings, not the voice on the remastered album. I found that amazing because you’d feel like you were teleported into that era when the album was produced!

James Hetfield however, uses his newer voice on older songs. Of course, James sounded worse in Metallica’s first album, heh.

I don’t know why Megadeth played note-by-note though; after all, guitarist Glen Drover was from King Diamond and you’d expect some amazing degree of technical prowess from Dave and him. Then again, it might be the case of the classical piano player who can’t make up a solo jam to save his life.


James Lorenzo on bass was from White Lion. Who’s the drummer? Shawn Drover is Glen’s brother.

Next up: Gears Of War, from their United Abominations album, and She-Wolf from Cryptic Writings. Apparently, this was a Singapore exclusive. Then, there was The System Has Failed from the album of the same name.

I am positive, however, that crowd participation was greater with songs from the Rust In Peace album, as Tornado Of Souls showed. Ashes In Your Mouth, from Countdown To Extinction, and Never Walk Alone… A Call To Arms returns to the new.

They took a break, and returned when an orchestra could be heard. Jeng-jeng JENG! Or however it was pronounced, we all mouthed the riff to Symphony Of Destruction (off CTE)! They played the extended version. This began a flurry of crowd favorites, like Trust (off CW) and Peace Sells… But Who’s Buying? (off an album the same name).

Thank you and goodnight, they said, but we all knew what to do. Call for an encore! “Holy Wars!“, chanted the crowd.


They returned obligingly, with one of their most technical, progressive metal songs. “Brother will kill brother, spreading blood across the laaand, killing for religion, something I don’t understand“, we sang along. For once, they mucked with the song, and slowed down the classical riff before the second half of the song.

Except, of course, that they played Mechanix instead, which can be heard as a slower Metallica – The Four Horsemen elsewhere. Oddly, I liked Metallica’s Kill ‘Em All album because a lot of it was contributed by Dave. Again, this was a Singapore exclusive!

Thank the devil then, for they returned to the second half of Holy Wars, The Punishment Due. I was finally satisfied.

Oh, and I won’t be uploading videos due to my inability to hold the phone completely still, or shut up during the riffs or sing the wrong lyrics. So here are some videos from Mark/Halcyon, a Korean guitarist who plays excellent covers!

Megadeth – Holy Wars… The Punishment Due Cover
Megadeth – Peace Sells Dual Cover
Metallica – Battery Cover
Eric Johnson – Manhattan Cover

Sunrise Set


Uncle Albert, when are you going to update your blog with pictures from the Sunrise Mont Kiara Jazz Fest 2007?

Awww Ashley is so cute, how can I not update? Here’s from the 24th August 2007 night.


Ariff Akhir does not bite, honestly. Lagu Malas is an all-time favorite.


He got Jaya Satriani to shred for him!


…which makes Ariff’s usual folk and blues a little trippy.


And… well, it does seem like there is a shortage of bassists in the scene. Meet Alda the band slut!


Next up, in key and on key…


Arthur Kam & Vitalique!


Also featuring Elvira (also with Asiabeat.)


Drummers are usually hard to shoot due to insufficient lighting on them. 210mm F4 1/8s ISO400 with the Cosina 70-210mm F2.8-4. Heck, most of the shots in this entry are from that lens.


Are we brothers?” “I don’t know man, I got some complicated syncopated jazz bass passages to play…


Arthur Kam. For some reason I think jazz bands where the drummer is featured in the name of the band have a tendency to avert to fusion or funky jazz.


…and the winner for the lucky draw is… (note that wireless microphones will someday be powered by the Yellow Coverage Fellow.)


Sheila Majid ended the night!


Guitar and bass.


What percussive instrument do I hit next?


Sheila’s daughter comes on stage to sing (with her brother, too.) Plus awww factor!


She brought a massive crowd and I could see why; she had this warmth that spoke to every one of us.

My other Sunrise Mont Kiara Jazz Fest 2007 post is here:
Return Of The Sunrise

My Stain

So I was listening to Megadeth’s latest album, United Abominations, in preparation for their concert down in Singapore which I’m going to. YEAH!

Megadeth had always had my respect for keeping it real and keeping to thrash metal, unlike more successful counterparts Metallica. However, their latest album had a few songs that felt not quite epic.

The savior though is Sleepwalker, which stays true (or at least closest) to the classics. However, the song, just like every other song on the album, sounds as if they were trying to compress a 7 minute epic masterpiece into 4 minutes. How? By trimming off the trademark Megadeth intro! Blasphemy.

A classic Megadeth intro works like this:
– start with an interesting single-note riff
– add some metallic bass (soon, after you’re familiar with the riff)
– kick in the drums a few seconds later
– chug in the power chords
– modify the riff a bit… and then go into solo
– add a second guitar to the solo in harmony, which always makes it sound like a Japanese video game (which Dave Mustaine does soundtracks for, so this makes sense)
– jump back into rhythm

Each part is discrete. The order might change, but ultimately, you get to enjoy each level as it comes along.

Fortunately, some songs, like the title track, have a multi-part solo.

Even a song like Holy Wars… The Punishment Due (from the classic album Rust In Peace) had a 1:30 long intro, but it sounded much longer due to intricate composition and various segments. For some reason, Marty’s oriental/neo-classical solos tickle me. I bet you anyone familiar with the song would anticipate the solos and crunchy riffs so they could air-guitar along. Yngwie Malmsteen is too neo-classical for me; Marty with angry thrashin’ Dave is just nice.

Click here to check out the video on Youtube! (Please pardon the video quality of the past.)

Speaking of video games, check out Megadeth – Holy Wars – NES Style. Cute!

Five Magics, for example, had a kickass brooding intro, where the vocals only kick in at 2:06. Also note that they jump into a call-and-response, except instead of blues shredding it’s metal. Hangar 18 is restless and the solos come in at 1:24, again at 2:24… and goes on till 5:14 where the song ends. Some count the number of solos from Dave and Marty Friedman to be anywhere between 7 to 11 solos! Quite an interesting feat for a song with a cheesy video meant for MTV airplay.

The basslines are always metal. I mean, it sounds metallic.

I can’t wait till Friday!

Return Of The Sunrise


Sunrise Jazz Fest 2007! I’m not sure what it’s called nowadays, though DiGi is one of their sponsors.


26th August 2007 featured the Aseana Percussion Unit. (Yes, I will rewind for Ariff Akhir, Arthur Kam and Sheila Majid later.)


Amanda and I are most proud to have started a conga line (though I didn’t take any pictures of it.)


Prema, one of the many vocalists.


Bring the beat down!


Fast forward to the 1st of September 2007, with Asiabeat.


Here’s a first – psychedelia at a jazz fest.


And there I was, trying to make sense of all the colors, when I felt a presence.


The Interesting Specimen!


She stalked Amanda from way afar with my Tamron 200-400mm F5.6 at 400mm! 1/6th of a second was still steady. The only problem was waiting for a clearance when people were not walking past.

We were at Chakri Palace; Amanda was in front of Starbucks.


Okay, my lens wasn’t that long…


Meet a most kickass fusion jazz band from Indonesia…


Saharadja!


400mm F5.6 1/80s ISO800. No problem, with my Sony A100’s Super SteadyShot.


I added the Kenko 2x teleconverter and got a manual-focusing 800mm F11. This was shot at 1/15s, ISO1600, from way back, around Chakri Palace or so.


Given big performances, the stage would be bigger thus requiring longer lenses to get here. Fortunately bigger stages also mean stronger lights.


This dude was awesome. He channelled the incredible Les Claypool!

They also did a cover of Flight Of The Bumblebee, among other technically excellent stuff.


Adil, Malaysia’s best saxophonist (according to Saharadja) came on stage for some saxing.


The singer/guitarist/horn player (I’m not sure which instrument don’t stab me with your conductor stick) serenaded some hot chick.


Yes, with an expression like that, who could help but fall in love? (Okay, he had a great powerful voice almost akin to Freddie Mercury’s so yeah.)


And so, when he tells people to shake their hands in the air…


…they do it.


(With the assistance of green bottles, perhaps.)

Severely Timelagged Post

And now, for shots from almost 2 months ago, from the Stone Temple Pilots Tribute Gig, 17th August 2007, Jamasia!


Any band with a saxophone is sure to astound!


It was Kabus, who played Down and Vasoline.


Vig taught me an important pointer – count with the drummer and shoot at 4, when the drummer is most likely to hit the cymbals and look cool doing it.


Flannel stripe shirts were the order of the day.


Velvia look! Photoshop’s Channel Mixer; in the Red Channel set Red +150, Green -25, Blue -25; Green set Green +150 (you get the idea…) On a side note, most shots were set to a White Balance of 2500 Kelvin, Green +9.

A side snide note to Canon fans (hello there!); the 350D and 400D doesn’t allow you to set Kelvin White Balance, and the 30D only goes down to 2800K, not low enough for the intense reds and oranges of gig lighting. Fortunately the 40D goes down to 2500K, finally.


Stonebay, grunge purveyors of the underground scene, would obviously make an appearance here. Wicked Garden, Plush (which was the first riff I played on my sister’s guitar), and the evergreen Interstate Love Song.


Brainhead did Creep and Big Empty.


Jangan tak solo!


Naked Breed however takes a more relaxed stance.


The ever photogenic Ashley Ang makes her rocking appearance!

Chicks Rock Right

Chicks Rock Night, KL Jamasia, 10th August 2007. Wow, I’m back to a giant backlog.


Chick rock night has to have chick photographers…


…and chick videographers.


Otai” chick rocker, Markiza Brown, and her dear husband, the venerable Peter Hassan Brown. Together, they form the ever-changing folksy Soft Touch.


Long-haired, but positively, this shredder was a dude.


Ah! There, the chick frontwoman of Splitends.


They played jazzy-tinged pop.


I.G. Collective‘s second last gig. Don’t leave us!


Not a chick, but check out his shirt.


The crowd, yo.


Gotta love them Steve Vai grips.


Mili’z!


They came in peace with haunting melodic rock.


Oddity, however, came in violence and aggression.


Hardcore! (No, this is not a multiple exposure, and none of this was shot on film.)


The crowd headbangs.


Give me the back mike RAWR!


This was the same crowd that was enjoying the previous, less aggressive music. For once! At gigs, usually, fans of a particular genre or friends of one band would leave when a heavy band comes on.


I love metal, and I love you man.


After the gig ended, emcee Steven surprises us with some jazz covers (yes the guy with a Sid Vicious T-shirt), while the keyboardist teaches the guitarist the chords to a jazz standard.

Artists Wanting Music Video Wanted

Got this in my email:

And here, I post the contents so Google can pick it up:

Hey man. I’m looking for any musicians (bands, singers, DJs, whatever) who want a music video made. Can you help?

The artist needs to have full original tracks on an EP or LP. No demos. Which means it’s a genuine artist with a genuine recording.

It’s a student assignment. Which means it will likely cost next to nothing for the artist, but quality will not at all be neglected of course.

If you got something get back to me soon. Thanks

(Added)

Some important extra info for those interested:

1) I’m in Miri, Sarawak, and that’s where your video would be produced. You’re most likely in KL or sewaktu dengannya, so it can’t be a typical performance video. Unless of course you’d fly here for this. But we can be creative, plus it’s the age of teh intarnets.

2) I only get to pick one out of the (checks email) three, so far, responses I’ve got. But don’t worry, if there are student friends of mine also in search of a client, I’d be happy to fix ya’ll up.

3) Please get in touch by tomorrow, Tuesday night. If it’s too short notice, well I can only blame Albert for posting this late. Lolz.

4) Include your CD-quality MP3 in your email, whether via attachment or downloadable link. (If you ask me not to distribute or use the MP3 outside of this project, I won’t.) Streaming won’t do. For online storage/filesharing I suggest box.net, it’s good and very popular with mp3blogs these days. Send the song lyrics and your CD cover image too.

We can discuss these things and anything else by email. I look forward to making your video!

Lionel

His email is lionelster@gmail.com.

(Oh and if you’re a band and would like photos taken, contact me at albnok@hotmail.com. Reasonable rates will be given, understanding the financial standing of the independent music scene.)

Metal Down South

Hot damn! Some of metal’s most influential guitarists are coming down to Fort Canning Park, Singapore to play.

Megadeth – United Abominations Tour Of Duty (26th October 2007)

Heaven And Hell – The Reunion Of Black Sabbath And Ronnie James Dio (27th October 2007)

I love Megadeth, and how they stick to being true to thrash metal. At the same time, they have more complex song structures, with varying parts and beats, and unique riffs. And yet, despite the changes, each riff is so catchy you can memorize an entire song and sing it aloud ala Jack Black.

I have to profess that despite all this, I don’t have any of their albums, and I would be very lost if they just played stuff from their latest United Abominations album.

Dave Mustaine particularly drew my attention, from his little skit in the second DVD of the Metallica – Some Kind Of Monster documentary. Plus, I like what he put into Metallica back with Kill ‘Em All (their first album) and some stuff he claimed to have written that was used in later albums.

Sadly, he was fired from Metallica, due to uncontrollable alcohol and drug abuse. Apparently, he also kicked James Hetfield’s dog.

Read his Wikipedia entry!

Check out his story, and his Feuds And Rivalries section.

While at it, here are some cool videos on YouTube:

Dave Mustaine On Jeopardy Part I (thanks Syefri for telling me)
Dave Mustaine On Jeopardy Part II
Dave Mustaine versus the lazer!

I wonder what would happen if I shouted “FREEBIRD!

Megadeth almost played in Malaysia. Dammit.

Black Sabbath is one of my favorite bands, since I am way too familiar with their first 4 albums and can hum out Tony Iommi solos from any of the songs. Ozzy Osbourne quit the band, and was replaced by Dio, but they continued being called Black Sabbath and recorded a few albums. Somewhere later, the original lineup returned and called themselves Black Sabbath, while the lineup with Dio and Vinny Appice on drums was renamed Heaven And Hell.

However, since I prefer Ozzy Osbourne to Ronnie James Dio, I have not really heard any of Dio’s stuff with Black Sabbath. Off the top of my head, what songs by Black Sabbath have Dio in it?

Uh… Heaven And Hell?

Yeah, I couldn’t name any more songs myself.

The Mob Rules and Neon Knights apparently were with Dio, too. A common trait would be the steady chugging rhythm first featured on the song Paranoid. It gets tiresome when they all sound like Survivor – Eye Of The Tiger, heh.

Still, Tony Iommi, the guitarist who invented the heavy metal guitar sound (he had to downtune his guitar due to a machining accident that left him with plastic fingertips) is in Heaven And Hell, and that warrants me going down to join balding or white-haired men in worship of the man with gothic cross inlays who made the Gibson SG sexy.

Musical Progression And All That Jazz


So I bumped into Hunny the rapper from Admonition/guest-starred-in-Three-Flow/Doze-2 who is now-a-hitz.fm-deejay at the last night of the Sunrise Jazz Fest. She said I was familiar!

How I’d love to pick that as a pick-up line but she said she’d stumbled upon my blog.

So here’s a “Albert with celebrity who found my blog” shot.

I really need to figure out a better expression to have in pictures.

So there was Adil, Malaysia’s best saxophonist according to Saharadja, this kickass Indonesian jazz/fusion band. Yes he is kickass because he used to play Prince and James Brown covers back in California, and I have yet to see anybody do one of those super funky Prince numbers (just piano ballads like How Come You Don’t Call and Nothing Compares To You.)

Somehow most naturally, the topic went to music.

What if we had… progressive rap?

You know, progressive in the sense of progressive rock, not progressive dance. Where the song tempo and mood changes often, with complex time signatures, polyrhythms and elaborate instrumentation. Think Pink Floyd and Dream Theater… or even Queen – Bicycle Race for a simpler example of such musical schizophrenia. Locally, I could cite Tempered Mental as a well-known progressive band around here.

Rappers could be switching beats and vocal styles real quick. The only coherence might be that they’d have to rhyme.

The lazy crop of song producers these days don’t bother playing with beats that interweave with the vocals. They’ll put in just one part of the song and loop it all over. Think Rihanna.

Try to play Beastie Boys – Intergalactic in your head. Note that you can remember all those times the deejay starts scratching and making funny bleeps?

At this point somebody pointed out that Kanye West is progressive.

…well, not with what he did with Daft Punk – Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger. So not cool, man. The original song feels progressive due to the ever changing tempo, although it keeps to its motif. Like what Fatboy Slim does.

Despite how much the Black Eyed Peas annoy me, I think they did good with Pump It. Without vocals, the song is exactly the same as the Dick Dale – Miserlou instrumental.

Anyway, on to pictures from a gig long time ago, Moonshine 9th August 2007 to be exact. Shot with my newfound love for Kelvin White Balance set to 2500 K.


Mia Palencia!


From acoustic fingerstyle, she now has a full band, with the ever guitar-lick-ready Faz.


Reza Salleh, who I’d say has a few rock progressions up his sleeve. Spot a different drummer!

The crowd went too insane, plus I didn’t want to get caught in the Hujan crowd.

Hey Man, Nice Shoes

27th July 2007: Fireflies And Something Something at KL Jamasia.


Kien Kit of Silent Scenery, master shoegazer, at work.


Ivan does the rhythm for their lush soundscape.


Ask Me Again. This quickly divided the night into two distinct genres; emo and post-rock.


Sky Juice Coffee turns into an emo core band. They did punk rock so well before.


Champion! A Nikon D40 with Nikkor AF-D 50mm F1.8D lens. Yes, she can only use it in manual focus.


Do not be fooled by the number of pedals here; post-rock only requires one post-rock pedal. The rest are there just to look colorful and pretty and give the shoe-gazing guitarist something to look at. I did not get this band’s name, because I can’t seem to find the gig poster anymore.


Once in a while, they bend down to tweak said pedal.


Cigarette lighter as a slide!


Izuan is again on fire, with Auburn (who, well, isn’t post-rock or emo, but more of alternative rock?)


Ian Koren returns as Jesus, to play for Throne Away!


This picture is for Sarah Chong!


They had a whole bunch of new songs. Hooray!


Their last gig was Rock The World 7, but they still had that amazing energy.

More shots were in Ian’s Canon Ixus, in black-and-white and ISO1600 (because black-and-white complements the camera noise well.) All the good ones of the jumpy frontman’s antics were on his camera instead.