Forty-seven years since forming in Spartanburg, South Carolina, and despite losing some of its original members, the Marshall Tucker Band remain on the road. The Southern-rock pioneers, best known for hits like “Can’t You See,” “Fire on the Mountain,” and “Heard It in a Love Song,” have announced a new 2019 fall tour that spans 36 shows.
Dubbed the Through Hell & High Water…and Back Tour, the second leg of their ongoing trek kicks off in Washington state on September 5th and plays cities from St. Louis to Sioux City, Iowa.
Dubbed the Through Hell & High Water…and Back Tour, the second leg of their ongoing trek kicks off in Washington state on September 5th and plays cities from St. Louis to Sioux City, Iowa.
- 9/4/2019
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
This week’s Monday Mix-Up comes to us from zedew, who brings us a tribute to the late great Frank Frazetta and his most famous painting of all, Death Dealer, the inspiration for more paintings, a line of novels, and various comics. And now we have this vision, seen through the prism of My Little Pony… yes, it’s My Little Death Dealer.
Somehow, I don’t think Molly Hatchet will be using this as an album cover. Although if they did a kids album… hmm.
What he’s not telling you: the blood on the axe? It’s Strawberry Shortcake.
via BoingBoing: If Frazetta was a bronie.
Originally published on ComicMix as Monday Mix-Up: My Little Death Dealer...
Somehow, I don’t think Molly Hatchet will be using this as an album cover. Although if they did a kids album… hmm.
What he’s not telling you: the blood on the axe? It’s Strawberry Shortcake.
via BoingBoing: If Frazetta was a bronie.
Originally published on ComicMix as Monday Mix-Up: My Little Death Dealer...
- 7/2/2012
- by Glenn Hauman
- Comicmix.com
The $25 million dollar Taiwanese epic war flick “Warriors of the Rainbow Bridge: Seediq Bale” (not to be confused with the album title by Molly Hatchet, natch) is getting quite the push beyond its native Taiwan. It’s nabbed a producing/presented by credit from John Woo, and will be the country’s entry into the 2012 Oscars’ Best Foreign Film category. Of course, it’ll have to beat out about 3 billion other films to win the golden baldie (give or take 3 or so billion). In case it doesn’t, though, feel free to keep an eye on the film as it gears up for International release. The original was released domestically as a two-part movie, totaling over four and a half hours, but an International cut of the film runs just two and a half hours. That latter version, I suspect, is what we’ll get if the film does eventually arrive Stateside.
- 12/27/2011
- by Nix
- Beyond Hollywood
A new band of tumbleweeds is rolling down Sunset Blvd, just in the nick of time. The Château Marmont hasn’t received a good trashing in awhile by a band who has actually earned the holes in their Levi’s and Frye’s by wood shedding in the Hollywood hills above. While Truth & Salvage Co.’s musical touchstones are blatant, The Band, Molly Hatchet, The Byrds, Graham Parsons (w/ tinge of Beachwood Sparks) they are also endearingly honest and worn like merit badges. Comprised of six like minded souls from La’s Hotel Café society, the endpoints of their songwriting spectrum are the verdant...
- 5/26/2010
- Pastemagazine.com
A new band of tumbleweeds is rolling down Sunset Blvd, just in the nick of time. The Château Marmont hasn’t received a good trashing in awhile by a band who has actually earned the holes in their Levi’s and Frye’s by wood shedding in the Hollywood hills above. While Truth & Salvage Co.’s musical touchstones are blatant, The Band, Molly Hatchet, The Byrds, Graham Parsons (w/ tinge of Beachwood Sparks) they are also endearingly honest and worn like merit badges. Comprised of six like minded souls from La’s Hotel Café society, the endpoints of their songwriting spectrum are the verdant...
- 5/26/2010
- Pastemagazine.com
A new band of tumbleweeds is rolling down Sunset Blvd, just in the nick of time. The Château Marmont hasn’t received a good trashing in awhile by a band who has actually earned the holes in their Levi’s and Frye’s by wood shedding in the Hollywood hills above. While Truth & Salvage Co.’s musical touchstones are blatant, The Band, Molly Hatchet, The Byrds, Graham Parsons (w/ tinge of Beachwood Sparks) they are also endearingly honest and worn like merit badges. Comprised of six like minded souls from La’s Hotel Café society, the endpoints of their songwriting spectrum are the verdant...
- 5/26/2010
- Pastemagazine.com
As I reported earlier today on Twitter, veteran artist Frank Frazetta has died at age 82.
The creator responsible for some of the most iconic images from the worlds of swords-and-sorcery and science-fiction, Frazetta died due to a stroke suffered earlier today.
Perhaps best known for his paintings of Conan the Barbarian that adorned the covers of Robert E. Howard's paperback adventures, the artist contributed both covers and interior art for comics and numerous novels — including the "Creepy" comics and Edgar Rice Burroughs' "John Carter of Mars" series. His images of musclebound men, terrifying creatures, and scantily clad women in need of rescue became the inspiration for countless artists and literary works.
My first introduction to Frazetta's work came via the aforementioned "John Carter" novels, which the artist openly admitted had very little to do with the paintings and interior illustrations he created for the stories.
"I didn't read any of it.
The creator responsible for some of the most iconic images from the worlds of swords-and-sorcery and science-fiction, Frazetta died due to a stroke suffered earlier today.
Perhaps best known for his paintings of Conan the Barbarian that adorned the covers of Robert E. Howard's paperback adventures, the artist contributed both covers and interior art for comics and numerous novels — including the "Creepy" comics and Edgar Rice Burroughs' "John Carter of Mars" series. His images of musclebound men, terrifying creatures, and scantily clad women in need of rescue became the inspiration for countless artists and literary works.
My first introduction to Frazetta's work came via the aforementioned "John Carter" novels, which the artist openly admitted had very little to do with the paintings and interior illustrations he created for the stories.
"I didn't read any of it.
- 5/10/2010
- by Rick Marshall
- MTV Splash Page
Shape-shifting Texas band takes hard left turn The disappointing thing about most Molly Hatchet albums—beside the fact that they’re horrible—is the blatant deception of their covers. During the band’s heyday, Hatchet album art featured a hulking, wide-eyed barbarian swinging a massive battleaxe as sinew and bits of bone fell about him like crimson snow. It was, in a word, badass. But when you dropped the needle, out came a sickening bilge of chuggin’ boogie blues and butt rock. The only thing hemorrhaging was your ears....
- 2/1/2010
- Pastemagazine.com
The ghost of Ronnie Van Zant must be smiling.
Blackberry Smoke are four righteous southern rockers who wear the uniform with panache; hair down to the middle of their backs, beards down to the middle of their chests, bandannas firmly in place. They've been genetically programmed to carry on the proud good ol' boy tradition and fast-frozen since 1976. Recently thawed, they've unleashed their second album Little Piece of Dixie upon an unsuspecting public that has forgotten the dubious appeal of pickup trucks, coon dogs, rednecks and longnecks, and the sweet charms of the little missus.
This is admittedly not my favorite genre of music, and I hope you'll excuse me if I fail to hearken back to the glory days of the Confederate flag. That said, these guys do it up just the way Ronnie and the Skynyrd boys used to do it, with sturdy southern rock riffs buttressing Charlie...
Blackberry Smoke are four righteous southern rockers who wear the uniform with panache; hair down to the middle of their backs, beards down to the middle of their chests, bandannas firmly in place. They've been genetically programmed to carry on the proud good ol' boy tradition and fast-frozen since 1976. Recently thawed, they've unleashed their second album Little Piece of Dixie upon an unsuspecting public that has forgotten the dubious appeal of pickup trucks, coon dogs, rednecks and longnecks, and the sweet charms of the little missus.
This is admittedly not my favorite genre of music, and I hope you'll excuse me if I fail to hearken back to the glory days of the Confederate flag. That said, these guys do it up just the way Ronnie and the Skynyrd boys used to do it, with sturdy southern rock riffs buttressing Charlie...
- 5/14/2009
- Pastemagazine.com
Murcielago is a record five years in the making. Originally recorded around 2010, its release was put on ice after label trouble and changes to the band’s lineup. Then in late 2014, Murcielago’s current lineup took another stab at recording their debut, and two weeks later (with a total of four days of recording/studio work) it was finally done. The stone-y quad out of Portland, Maine has been compared to 70’s gods Led Zeppelin, and at times the record will undoubtedly give you a serious case of the throwbacks with strong elements of Zep (think the heaviness of the opening riff to “How Many More Times” and the hypnotic trippiness of “No Quarter” on the track “Fairlane Swain”). They’ve also been compared to electric wizards Black Sabbath. It’s an impossibly heavy record dripping from the get go with standout riffs, slick fuzz and the kind of heavy...
- 1/1/1970
- by Cherry Bombed
- Destroy the Brain
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