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FunkyMonkey
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« Reply #1140 on: May 11, 2011, 12:14:58 PM »

It's up on their site now, but they don't give any more information.

Posted by Editor | 06 May 2011

We are pleased to announce that British Post-Punk band The Cult have signed to Cooking Vinyl. Check back here soon for more info.

http://cookingvinyl.com/artists/the-cult/
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« Reply #1141 on: May 11, 2011, 12:30:58 PM »

THE CULT Signs With COOKING VINYL RECORDS - May 11, 2011

Legendary rock band THE CULT has inked a deal with Cooking Vinyl Records. The group, which took part in the "Love Live Tour" last year and also recorded a four-track release with Chris Goss (QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE, MASTERS OF REALITY), is back in the studio with Goss recording a new album.

"I feel we have reached our zenith in terms of our writing and performing skills," singer Ian Astbury recently said. "We intend to deliver on all levels."

THE CULT's "Capsule 2: New Blood Deep Cuts" featured new songs "Embers" and "Until The Light Takes Us", live recordings of some of the band's huge hits and an intimate look into THE CULT's rehearsal space, with a never-before-seen warm-up performance of "Black Angel".

Rather than revisit the traditional method of releasing a long form CD, the band pioneered a new way of providing material. Capsules span multiple media formats including vinyl, digital, USB, CD and DVD formats, and can be purchased at CultCapsuleStore.com.

THE CULT is Ian Astbury (vocals), Billy Duffy (guitar), Chris Wyse (bass), John Tempesta (drums) and Mike Dimkich (rhythm guitar).

http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=157977
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« Reply #1142 on: May 13, 2011, 12:34:06 AM »

Ian, Aki, Buzz and Ian's brother Brian have started to heavily contribute to the offical Southern Death Cult Facebook page.

It really gives the feel of what SDC was about (and about to become) through the eyes of the people who were there, the pictures alone are worth a visit.

http://www.facebook.com/home.php?sk=group_40684221535
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« Reply #1143 on: May 14, 2011, 03:03:03 PM »

THE CULT, COOKING VINYL RECORDS Comment On New Record Deal - May 14, 2011

Legendary rock band THE CULT has inked a deal with Cooking Vinyl Records. The group, which took part in the "Love Live Tour" last year and also recorded a four-track release with Chris Goss (QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE, MASTERS OF REALITY), is preparing to enter the studio to record its ninth album. A fall release is expected.

Commented THE CULT guitarist Billy Duffy: "We are very much looking forward to returning to our U.K. roots in many ways working with Cooking Vinyl." THE CULT vocalist Ian Astbury added, "We look forward to a long and fruitful relationship with Cooking Vinyl."

The band has been busy writing and recording new demos at its Witch Mountain studio hideaway in the Hollywood Hills. They will be joined by guru and master producer Chris Goss, frontman of MASTERS OF REALITY, producer on various QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE albums as well as credits on countless other works.

Chris is already working with the band to sculpt a sonic assault and truly visceral work that promises to be the greatest work THE CULT has ever released. The album will be recorded in the high desert and darkened rooms of Hollywood Recording Studios.

Cooking Vinyl beat the heated competition to the deal on the back of their long-established reputation as an artist's label, which made them the obvious choice for the band.

Commented Cooking Vinyl director Rob Collins: "I tried to sign Ian's first band, SOUTHERN DEATH CULT, when I was a scout at Virgin in the early '80s. I think I paid for coach fares to London and they promptly signed to Beggars Banquet. It's great to finally be working with Ian, Billy and co."

The reaction is mirrored at Cooking Vinyl's U.K. distributor and sister company Essential Music. Head of sales Lance Meade said, "Martin [Goldschmidt, MD of Cooking Vinyl] knew that such was the love here in the sales department, he couldn't stand on ceremony? He had to sign THE CULT? Now the atmosphere is Electric."

The announcement bodes well for THE CULT's forthcoming appearances at the U.K.'s Download and Isle Of White festivals and a variety of summer dates around Europe. At press time, a September tour is being planned across Canada to coincide with the yet-to-be-titled album's first release, followed by a worldwide tour in support of the new music.

THE CULT's "Capsule 2: New Blood Deep Cuts" featured new songs "Embers" and "Until The Light Takes Us", live recordings of some of the band's huge hits and an intimate look into THE CULT's rehearsal space, with a never-before-seen warm-up performance of "Black Angel".

Rather than revisit the traditional method of releasing a long form CD, the band pioneered a new way of providing material. Capsules span multiple media formats including vinyl, digital, USB, CD and DVD formats, and can be purchased at CultCapsuleStore.com.

THE CULT is Ian Astbury (vocals), Billy Duffy (guitar), Chris Wyse (bass), John Tempesta (drums) and Mike Dimkich (rhythm guitar).

http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=158123
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« Reply #1144 on: May 16, 2011, 07:01:30 PM »

Some cool pro shot footage from The Cult's May 13th gig in Curtiba can be viewed here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SCeR4irz69A&feature=related

A great angle of Johnny Tempesta on drums. yes
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« Reply #1145 on: May 17, 2011, 10:12:34 AM »

Just bought L.A Woman Doors of the 21st century live with Ian on vocals, awesome dvd
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« Reply #1146 on: May 18, 2011, 02:01:07 PM »

A random US date and full on Canadian Tour info is in:


Thu, Jul 28th, 2011 Chicago, IL NAVY PIER
Fri, Sep 9th, 2011 Coquitlam, BC-Canada RED ROBINSON THEATER
Sat, Sep 10th, 2011 Prince George, BC-Canada CN CENTRE
Mon, Sep 12th, 2011 Medicine Hat, AL-Canada ESPLANADE THEATER
Tue, Sep 13th, 2011 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan-Canada CREDIT UNION CENTRE
Thu, Sep 15th, 2011 Regina, SK-Canada AGRIBITION CENTER
Fri, Sep 16th, 2011 Edmonton, Alberta-Canada EDMONTON EVENTS CENTER
Sat, Sep 17th, 2011 Lloydminster, SK-Canada KOOLER
Sun, Sep 18th, 2011 Calgary, Alberta-Canada FLAMES CENTRAL
Tue, Sep 20th, 2011 Thunder Bay, ONT-Canada THUNDER BAY COMMUNITY CENTRE
Fri, Sep 23rd, 2011 Moncton, NB-Canada THE CENTRE
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« Reply #1147 on: May 21, 2011, 06:17:06 PM »

From Ian 's twitter yesterday:

"WTCHMNTN dispatch / Album 9 Session begins tomorrow .... "
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« Reply #1148 on: May 22, 2011, 03:53:42 AM »

Some cool pro shot footage from The Cult's May 13th gig in Curtiba can be viewed here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SCeR4irz69A&feature=related

A great angle of Johnny Tempesta on drums. yes


what is going on with Ian? he looks homeless.....sort it out mate, at least get a haircut.
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« Reply #1149 on: May 22, 2011, 12:36:31 PM »

[
what is going on with Ian? he looks homeless.....sort it out mate, at least get a haircut.

Ian being Ian - he's living in the desert in California now and is going full on nomad...
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« Reply #1150 on: May 23, 2011, 05:51:14 PM »

THE CULT: S?o Paulo Footage Available - May 23, 2011

Fan-filmed video footage of THE CULT's May 14, 2011 concert at HSBC in S?o Paulo, Brazil can be viewed below.

The band's setlist was as follows:

01. Every Man And Woman Is A Star
02. Rain
03. Electric Ocean
04. Sweet Soul Sister
05. White
06. The Phoenix
07. Saints Are Down
08. Lil' Devil
09. Embers
10. Spiritwalker
11. Dirty Little Rockstar
12. Rise
13. Wild Flower
14. She Sells Sanctuary
15. Love Removal Machine

Encore:

16. Fire Woman
17. Break On Through (to the Other Side) (THE DOORS cover)

Video footage: http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=158476
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« Reply #1151 on: May 28, 2011, 12:39:29 PM »

Here's a cool article circa 2001 with Billy Duffy discussing Bob Rock, his guitar sound for "Beyond Good and Evil" and a few points in between:

By Darrin Fox
"This album sounds like a Cult record should sound," says Billy Duffy about the group's first album in seven
years, Beyond Good and Evil [Atlantic]. "The production is very stark and dark. It's an aggressive -- even
violent -- record in places."
When the Cult's 1984 debut album, Dreamtime, was released in England, the group piqued interest with its
Goth-tinged sound and Duffy's trippy guitar textures. However, it was 1985's Love, and the track "She Sells
Sanctuary," that put the Cult on the map. The band's next record, Electric, shocked fans. Teaming with producer
Rick Rubin, the Cult shed their brooding sound, and opted for a crunching, bare-knuckled approach. "We saw a
movement back to basic rock," says Duffy, "and we wanted to be a part of that energy. We wanted to take our
music to another level, and get away from the Gothic '80s. Rick was a good conduit for that."
The Cult reached the height of their success in 1989, when Sonic Temple reached the Top Ten. However the
group's subsequent records were disappointments, and the Cult disbanded in 1995.
Now Duffy and singer Ian Astbury have regrouped, and the duo is eager to regain its rightful place in the rock
world. With seminal producer Bob Rock at the helm, Beyond Good and Evil reeks of a band that is fired up and
ready to throw down -- a feeling Duffy enthusiastically confirmed when he spoke to GP from London.
Beyond Good and Evil is surprisingly heavy.
Yeah, a lot of people are surprised, but I don't know what they expected -- a folk album? When Ian and I got the
band back together, we wanted to make a brutal, heavy, and uncomplicated record.
Why?
I think sometimes you have to make the message very, very simple in order to communicate. To an extent, we
wanted Beyond Good and Evil to be easy for people to digest. The Electric album, for example, is an incredibly
simplistic record that lots of people hold very dear.
Your tones really run the gamut on the new album.
That's one of the joys of having Bob Rock as a producer. I mean, if you want heavy, Bob knows heavy. He's a
guitar player, and he's into all of the nuances of guitar tone and its placement in the mix. He made my heavy
sounds heavier and my lighter sounds lighter.
What's it like working with Bob Rock, as opposed to Rick Rubin?
Well, you're talking about two different time periods for us. Both Rick and Bob are very strong characters, and I
think that's essential if you're going to produce the Cult. Ian and I will give you a very bad time if you're weak.
Rick doesn't approach music as an accomplished musician. He's more of a stylist who understands what he
wants to hear. Bob is more of a hands-on producer who still sees himself as a guitar player and songwriter.
Enter Today!
Guitar Player Online - Heavy Hitter: The Cult's Billy Duffy
http://archive.guitarplayer.com/archive/artists/thecult.shtml (1 of 3) [6/7/2002 2:35:18 PM]
As producers, each one seems to be a guitarist's dream.
Bob is very passionate about the guitar, and he understands what you need to do to get sounds. Rick knows
what he wants to hear, and he doesn't care how you do it, as long as you do it. Sometimes Rick would give you
a solution, whereas Bob could be part of the solution.
Did you have your tones fully realized before going into the studio?
I had some ideas. One thing Bob did was get me to listen to our early records. He said, "Remember some of the
more frail tones you got on the Love album? They're good." So I went out and re-invested in a Roland JC-120
amplifier -- which I used all over Love -- and plugged in my old Gretsch White Falcon. Most of the record was
tracked with Les Pauls, however.
"Nico" is a swirl of guitars.
That song was the most difficult one to capture on the entire record! Ian brought it in, and I was trying to find
different ways to approach the chords. That tune was one of the few times I played a different guitar on the
album -- a Gibson ES-335 -- and I used a lot of delays to make the track wooshy and atmospheric. So there
aren't as many guitar tracks as you may think, they're just kind of wet. On the tunes that are really big-sounding,
the guitars were usually quadruple tracked.
The solo on "Speed of Light" sounds very energetic. Do you get into a certain frame of mind when tracking a
solo?
To get the best performance out of me, Bob would often try to gauge what kind of mood I was in, and match it
to an appropriate track. If I still couldn't get the vibe, he'd help me understand the essentials needed for the solo
to communicate. The "Speed of Light" solo is a particularly good one, but I'm not thrilled with "Ashes and
Ghosts." We didn't have a lot of studio time available to go back and recut solos. Sometimes you have to be a
big boy.
But the solo on "Ashes and Ghosts" is one of my favorites.
Well, I trust Bob. Sometimes my judgment about myself isn't that great.
Are your solos improvised or constructed?
I usually have some kind of framework. I concentrate on getting a good beginning and a good ending, because
the note you go in on, and the note you go out on are pivotal.
Most of the solos were cut with an old JMP Marshall and a reissue Gibson goldtop. I also used a wah, but more
like Mick Ronson used it back in the day with Bowie. I work the pedal until I find the right voice for the guitar,
and then I leave it in that position.
What gear are you using to replicate the album's tones onstage?
I'm touring with a four-amp setup designed to give me a spectrum from heavy to light and everything in
between. I use a Roland JC-120 for clean tones, a Matchless DC30 for some clean grind, a Marshall JCM 800
for a fat tone with strong mids, and a Mesa/Boogie Dual Rectifier for a heavy, percussive tone. I can switch
between any combination of all four amps, but switching the amps onstage can be a ridiculous tap dance.
What effects are you using?
I've always used a lot of Boss stuff. Their delay pedals -- analog and digital -- get that authentic "She Sells
Sanctuary" sound. I still use my MXR Phase 100. Our old bass player gave me his Boss Super Overdrive, and
I've used one ever since. Lately, I've been using an Ibanez Tube Screamer. I can't tell the difference between the
Super Overdrive and the Tube Screamer -- I defy anyone to tell the difference.
Have you been influenced at all by current rock guitarists?
Not too much. I mean, I like to be aware of my surroundings. There are certain things I've heard from young
guitar players that make me think, "That doesn't sound a million miles away from what we were doing on the
Love album."
To me, a lot of the new guys are a bit the same. I don't want to be some old guy criticizing -- this is just what I
hear. Too many of them are conforming to one super-heavy sound and one clean sound. It's very safe. I can't
really distinguish any of those guys from the new school except Tom Morello. He was doing some
ground-breaking stuff for a while.
Do you still practice?
Not nearly as much as I should. There were times on the Electric album where the dog was taking me for a
walk, you know? On Sonic Temple, Bob helped me a lot by comping multiple solo takes to get what we wanted.
On this album, however, I felt more in control of what I was doing. I'll keep improving as long as I never stop
Guitar Player Online - Heavy Hitter: The Cult's Billy Duffy
http://archive.guitarplayer.com/archive/artists/thecult.shtml (2 of 3) [6/7/2002 2:35:18 PM]
learning -- and I feel like I've been learning lately.
What's something you've learned recently?
On Beyond Good and Evil, almost everything is dropped-D tuning -- which is absolutely not a new trick to
anyone except me. It's something I just got into, and it gave me a whole new lease on riff writing. It made me
play familiar things differently. It's no big deal to many people, but for us, it made the sound of this record.
Do you remember when you first realized you had stumbled onto something?
The first riff I did with the dropped-D was for the song "Breath," and that was a pivotal moment in the making
of this album. I even started changing the keys of other songs so I could play them in dropped tuning. Suddenly
the album had a voice.
Were you in a rut?
Maybe. There was no shortage of tunes, but I was having a hard time finding riffs that came out and said,
"Make me a song." The dropped-D tuning changed everything.
What are Billy Duffy's stylistic signatures?
It's difficult to be objective about yourself. I think being English and growing up with punk rock has instilled
the quest to find something musically unusual. I like to ride on the verge of experimental sounds. That concept
has always held more for me than being able to play every Jimmy Page solo.
In this band, I had one era with the Gretsch White Falcon and the mid-'80s, jangly guitar thing, like on "She
Sells Sanctuary." But another part of me is Les Paul, Marshall, wah-wah, and tunes like "Fire Woman." I think
those are my two things. People like to see me play the Gretsch. It's a visual image of me they're comfortable
with -- the guy in the Cult with the big white guitar."
« Last Edit: May 28, 2011, 04:53:31 PM by Falcon » Logged

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« Reply #1152 on: May 30, 2011, 02:32:14 PM »

Interview with Billy on The Rock Report on Ireland's Radio Nova.

http://www.nova.ie/podcast/2011/05/billy-duffy-on-the-rock-report/
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« Reply #1153 on: May 31, 2011, 01:10:57 AM »

I didn't know Ian could be so...brief. Smiley

Ian Astbury - Short Interview @ LupaLuna 2011

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CAgVR5BeRhA
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« Reply #1154 on: May 31, 2011, 10:23:28 PM »

Cult drummer Johnny Tempesta has a new look website, lookin' cool:

http://www.johntempesta.com/Home/

News on his new side project as well.

Temple Of The Black Moon
May 24, 2011

Lo and truly behold! A hellish new band has emerged from the quagmire that is the extreme music scene.

Calling themselves the TEMPLE OF THE BLACK MOON, the group (who describe their output as "music for an evil film noir') are an eclectic stew of musicians/hell-raisers/miscreants in the ungainly form of Dani Filth (CRADLE OF FILTH), Rob Caggiano (ANTHRAX, THE DAMNED THINGS), King (formerly of GORGOROTH and OV HELL) and John Tempesta (formerly of WHITE ZOMBIE and now drumming with THE CULT).



« Last Edit: May 31, 2011, 10:26:23 PM by Falcon » Logged

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« Reply #1155 on: May 31, 2011, 11:57:17 PM »

A 19 year old Ian on the cover of the New Musical Express, Southern Death Cult era:



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« Reply #1156 on: June 10, 2011, 04:04:35 PM »

The Cult Ian Astbury Speech, Belgrade Arena, 4.6. 2011

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M8VcodohGWk

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« Reply #1157 on: June 12, 2011, 03:11:31 AM »

The Cult performing Rain, Live at Sweden Rock

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHn994LkT5A
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« Reply #1158 on: June 13, 2011, 02:09:41 AM »

The Cult - She Sells Sactuary - Live at Sweden Rock Festival 2011

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ryfEjpcabJ4

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vlKAjluiO0w

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« Reply #1159 on: June 18, 2011, 11:27:08 AM »

I am hearing that a majority if not all of these dates are being rescheduled due to recording commitments.

Thu, Jul 28th, 2011 Chicago, IL NAVY PIER
Fri, Sep 9th, 2011 Coquitlam, BC-Canada RED ROBINSON THEATER
Sat, Sep 10th, 2011 Prince George, BC-Canada CN CENTRE
Mon, Sep 12th, 2011 Medicine Hat, AL-Canada ESPLANADE THEATER
Tue, Sep 13th, 2011 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan-Canada CREDIT UNION CENTRE
Thu, Sep 15th, 2011 Regina, SK-Canada AGRIBITION CENTER
Fri, Sep 16th, 2011 Edmonton, Alberta-Canada EDMONTON EVENTS CENTER
Sat, Sep 17th, 2011 Lloydminster, SK-Canada KOOLER
Sun, Sep 18th, 2011 Calgary, Alberta-Canada FLAMES CENTRAL
Tue, Sep 20th, 2011 Thunder Bay, ONT-Canada THUNDER BAY COMMUNITY CENTRE
Fri, Sep 23rd, 2011 Moncton, NB-Canada THE CENTRE


Nothing is 100% official yet although I do expect a formal announcement at some point soon.

More to follow...
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