Archive for October, 2008

Descont for Soundwave 2009

face to face is coming…!

As promised, Soundwave returns in ‘09, and to paraphrase Southpark – ‘it is bigger, longer and uncut’.

Topped by one of this generation’s most talented and uncompromising bands, Nine Inch Nails, the festival also sees a long overdue return of grunge titans Alice In Chains, the juvenile delinquents – The Bloodhound Gang and those craftsmen of exquisite doom-pop Alkaline Trio.

As always, there is also plenty to offer the fans of punk, metal and the heavier end of the alternative spectrum, as well as signing tents giving artists the opportunity to meet fans, market stalls and the odd bit of crappy installation art for you to laugh at.

Without further ado, here’s the main artist announcement:

NINE INCH NAILS ALICE IN CHAINS, BLOODHOUND GANG, LAMB OF GOD, ALKALINE TRIO, BILLY TALENT, THE RED JUMPSUIT APPARATUS FACE TO FACE, IN FLAMES, RIVAL SCHOOLS, ANBERLIN, THE SUBWAYS, EVERY TIME I DIE DEVILDRIVER, FUNERAL FOR A FRIEND, LESS THAN JAKE, POISON THE WELL, MADINA LAKE, NEW FOUND GLORY, FROM FIRST TO LAST, BEDOUIN SOUNDCLASH, HELLOGOODBYE, FINCH, GOLDFINGER, SAY ANYTHING, CHIODOS, SILVERSTEIN, SAVES THE DAY, LACUNA COIL, 36 CRAZYFISTS, STRAYLIGHT RUN, EVERGREEN TERRACE, MINUS THE BEAR, MONEEN, ACE ENDERS (THE EARLY NOVEMBER), I AM THE AVALANCHE, JAGUAR LOVE, UNEARTH BAYSIDE, EMERY, HOUSTON CALLS, THE AUDITION, ATTACK IN BLACK, INNERPARTYSYSTEM, VALENCIA, IN THIS MOMENT, ALESANA, THE RIVERBOAT GAMBLERS, HORSE THE BAND, MAYLENE & THE SONS OF DISASTER

Soundwave Festival 2009

FACE TO FACE in Soundwave Festival 2009!

SATURDAY 21 FEBRUARY
Brisbane – RNA Showgrounds

SUNDAY 22 FEBRUARY
Sydney – Venue TBC

FRIDAY 27 FEBRUARY
Melbourne – Melbourne Showgrounds

SATURDAY 28 FEBRUARY
Adelaide – Bonython Park

MONDAY 2 MARCH
Perth – Steel Blue Oval

NOTE: Venues and lineup may be subject to change.

More info: http://www.soundwavefestival.com/ for all the details.

Face To Face

Face to Face was formed in the Southern California desert town of Victorville, when singer/guitarist Trevor Keith and bass player Matt Riddle teamed with drummer Rob Kurth in 1991.

Keith and Riddle had played together since they were in junior high school and already had a clear idea of what kind of band they wanted to create; after first playing heavy metal, the two had settled on a modern rock sound strongly influenced by the band The Cure.

The newly formed band established itself by playing in clubs in the California cities of San Bernardino and Riverside, since their native Victorville lacked suitable venues for their music. Influenced by the punk bands with which they frequently played in their first club gigs, the group began to move toward a more punk sound while retaining their earlier modern rock sensibilities. The trio released their debut, Don’t Turn Away, in 1991 on the Dr. Strange label. The album found a wider distribution through the Fat Wreck Chords label a year later.

In 1993, following the re-release of its debut album, Face to Face brought in a second guitar player, Chad Yaro, and then hit the road on an intense, months-long touring schedule. Touring spawned a number of singles that the band brought together in its sophomore effort, Over It. One of the album’s tracks, “Disconnected,” became a hit on the Los Angeles radio station KROQ, helping the band to land its first major label contract, with Victory Records.

Primed by the success of “Disconnected,” the group’s next album, Big Choice, sold more than 100,000 copies after its 1995 release on the Victory label. The speedier version of “Disconnected” featured on this album was also featured in the movies Tank Girl and National Lampoon’s Senior Trip. Following the release of Big Choice, the group went on tour with bands such as The Mighty Mighty Bosstones and The Offspring, to help promote their album.

Not long after Big Choice hit store shelves, the band parted ways with both its record label and one of its members; Matt Riddle left the band at around the same time the Victory label went out of business. The band replaced Riddle with bass player Scott Shiflett in time for to sign with major label A&M Records. The result was a self-titled album released in 1996. The album featured songs that had been perfected in front of crowds at small venues around the country, as part of the band’s Econolive tour. The songs were then produced in the studio. During this time the band began its association with Vagrant Records, which nurtured the band’s own label, Lady Luck Records.

Rob Kurth and the band parted ways in 1997, shortly before the release of the band’s Live album, and was replaced by drummer Pete Parada. For its next recording Face to Face moved to Beyond Records. In 1999 the group followed Live with Ignorance Is Bliss. This album featured new drummer Pete Parada, and it represented a departure from the band’s usual sound, offering a more introspective, less hard-driving lineup of songs.

Although it was well received by critics, not all fans appreciated the band’s new sound, as evidenced by some of the responses at their live shows following the album’s release. “For the first time,” Keith told Alan Sculley in Gary, Indiana’s Post-Tribune, “there were people showing up at our shows that were booing us and giving us a hard time about playing this material.”

Ignorance Is Bliss was quickly followed in 2000 by Reactionary, released on the band’s own Lady Luck Records in conjunction with Beyond, and distributed by the record giant BMG. Reactionary represented a return to the group’s signature sound, but it broke new ground in one important respect—the way in which it was assembled. To create the album’s track list, the group posted 16 songs on the internet in the form of MP3 computer files, and invited fans to vote for the ones they liked best.

In six weeks almost two million votes rolled in, and the 12 tracks that attracted the most votes made it onto the album. In a testament to the band’s commitment to their fans, the members of the group left two of their own favorite choices off the album because they didn’t receive enough votes. Even the order of the songs on the album was determined by the number of votes each track received. The most-voted-for song, “Disappointed,” became the album’s opening track as well as the album’s leading single, receiving extensive airplay on the band’s old ally, KROQ in Los Angeles.

Following Reactionary’s release, the band hit the road on a tour sponsored by music file-sharing company Napster. Following an incident in which he attacked a booing fan at a concert, Yaro left the group, leaving Keith, Parada, and Shiflett to soldier on as a trio.

The album Standards & Practices was the group’s next album. Released on the Vagrant label in 2001 in the United States, the album had been distributed abroad two years earlier and was composed of covers of songs by The Smiths, The Pogues, Fugazi, The Jam, and other bands. Face to Face’s sixth and final studio album, How to Ruin Everything, was released in 2002.

Face to Face disbanded in 2003, after a 13-year run. The group’s parting was an amicable one, with Keith citing not differences in opinion or personal friction between the group’s members, but a feeling that the group had said everything it had to say. Shiflett added that the group’s members wanted to quit while they were still having fun. Keith and Shiflett went on to found a new band called Viva Death, which released its self-titled debut on record label Vagrant in 2002.

In 2008 Face To Face reformed playing to massive crowds at Groezrock in Europe and Bamboozle in the US. With only a handful of performances scheduled for 2008, Soundwave  is stoked to have the legendary Face To Face performing in 2009.

Face to Face em São Paulo – Brasil

PELA PRIMEIRA VEZ NA AMÉRICA DO SUL
13 de Dezembro, sábado às 19hs
FACE TO FACE
convidado especial: STREET BULLDOGS
postos de venda:
255: R. 24 de Maio, 62 – loja 255 – f: 3361-6951
Flame: R. 24 de Maio, 62 – loja 222 – f: 3224-8916
Ratus Skateshop: R. Dona Elisa Flaquer, 286/Sto André –
f: 4990-5163
local: Espaço Lux
R. Antônio Luiz Valério, 93 – São Bernardo do Campo.
maiores informações: 11 – 3229-7442

Rua Rodolfo Miranda, 110 – Bom Retiro SP
info:011 3229-7442 e 9389-3365
www.hangar110.com.br | www.fotolog.net/hangar_110

Datas já confirmadas do F2F na América do Sul

Datas Já Confirmadas Do F2F Na América Do Sul
por Wladimyr Cruz em 01/10/2008 (Quarta-feira), 10:21


Confira abaixo as datas já confirmadas da tour do Face To Face pela América Do Sul:

08/12 @ Santiago – Chile
11/12 @ Buenos Aires – Argentina
12/12 @ Curitiba Master Hall – Curitiba/PR – Brasil
13/12 @ Espaço Luz – São Bernardo do Campo/SP – Brasil (abertura Street Bulldogs)

Novas datas ainda estão sendo agendadas. Maiores informações em breve.

Dica do Douglas: Quem foi que disse que sonhos não se realizam????

Trever (Face to Face) talks about South American Tour 2008

Watch the whole interview and live material:
http://br.youtube.com/watch?v=Se6fo_xPwqQ

Video: Trever Keith, do Face To Face, comenta sobre turnê sul americana

Video: Trever Keith, do Face To Face, comenta sobre turnê sulamericana
29/09/2008, por Dario Barbosa

Clicando aqui você assiste a um trecho de uma entrevista em video com o vocalista do Face To Face, Trever Keith. Na entrevista, o frontman comenta sobre a expectativa da banda em relação aos shows no Brasil, os quais acontecem no mês de dezembro.

Conforme o ValePunk adiantou na última sexta-feira (26), a primeira apresentação confirmada até o momento é para o dia 13 de Dezembro, no Espaço Lux, em São Bernardo do Campo/SP. Além deste show, a banda deve fazer mais três apresentações no país.

Contrariando muitos boatos, o grupo não deve tocar na capital paulista, São Paulo.
Fique ligado no ValePunk, em breve iremos disponibilizar um hotsite sobre essa turnê histórica.

Via ValePunk