And the winner is…

Brian Kirsch…

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Contest time again!!!!! The Violet Burning…

Okay, this is long overdue! We have a couple of cool contests to run, we’ll do this one now and we still have a couple more things coming up that we will do after this first one finishes. Did you guys download and read the latest issue with The Violet Burning on the cover???? Hmmmm, hmmmmm, well did ya? So, go to our Down the Line facebook page and tell us what your favorite part of the new Story of Our Lives is and why…is it the music, the artwork, the concept itself? This was the most in depth interview about the release that I know of. So, share with us what you find most interesting and we will choose a post by this Friday evening at 11 PM…11/11/11…just because we think that is a cool date!

What do you win??? How about the hard copy release of The Story of Our Lives Volume 1 by The Violet Burning! That includes the full color booklet and all three CD’s in that awesome packaging! So, let the posting begin!

http://www.facebook.com/DownTheLineZine

 

 

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New music from Brian Healy/Dead Artist Syndrome

This is a new demo from Brian Healy of Dead Artist
Syndrome. This was supposed to be a Halloween present to his fans, but for some
reason my infallible internet decided to revolt and my emails have not made it through
to have had this put up in time. I apologize for the delay and the
inconvenience. This track is not mixed, however, it still sounds great. Please
download and share this with as many people as you can. Post it up on all your
networking sites and share the love. This track will be featured on the
forthcoming full band Dead Artist Syndrome release, Kissing Strangers, but this
version here is all Brian Healy.

Link to Misery Babe – http://www.mediafire.com/?43vb6hmre87le

 

Happy (belated) All Saints Day from Dead Artist Syndrome

unmixed preview demo called Misery Babe written and
performed by Brian Healy

 

℗&© 2005 Brian Healy / Blatant Christian Music (ASCAP)

 

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Bill Mallonee – The Power & the Glory

Bill Mallonee

The Power & the Glory

Independent 2011

 

I have always made a point to cover every Bill
Mallonee release that I can. Bill is without a doubt one of the most prolific artists
around, and his music is a rarity, not only in the sense of how much better it
gets through the years, but also how frequent and consistent his output is.
Bill has honed his craft and is one of the real voices for the ‘everyman’ in
this day and age. There is a weighty and meaningful quality to Mallonee’s work;
these aren’t just songs to tap your foot to. These are songs that are sung with
the conviction of salvation and a visceral quality that speaks from a
penetrating perspective. I am always surprised at how consistently good Bill’s
songwriting is, he puts out such a large body of songs that I keep thinking
‘the next one’ won’t be as good, but I am wrong every time. That brings us here
to his latest, The Power & the Glory.

With over 40 albums to his credit, to say that Power
& the Glory is Mallonee’s best would be a bold statement. Having said that,
now hear this… this is definitely Mallonee’s best to date! It is all here on
this album; the quality, the depth, the imagery and lyrical illustration. The
track placement is spot on, from the opening licks of Carolina, Carolina, down
to the howling Ghosts That I Run With, and then straight on through to the
brilliantly and lyrically imaginative track Wide Awake with Orphan Eyes (Mirror
Ball Moon).

This release runs deep with the impressive guitar
work, and while I would say this is jangly and noisy in all the right places,
it is a guitar heavy album that is fluid and not disjointed at all. The guitar
takes center stage but never feels burdensome or overpowering. To take a page
from Mallonee’s book, the guitar is like the conductor that steers this 12 car
train into the station with grace and grand intent. The harmonizing between
Bill and Muriah hits the mark, and on tracks like Just to Feel the Heat (You
Never Told Me Your House Was Haunted) the harmony is  pristine, pure and absolutely accomplished.

These tracks were picked from the various WPA
Volumes that Bill has been releasing every few months for the last 3 years or
so. To hear these songs first in a setting that was more raw and undeveloped
was a plus, because hearing them in this fully evolved environment makes the
listener really appreciate the hard work that has been put into polishing these
diamonds up. After years of slugging it out in the trenches, Bill has dialed in
a process that is yielding his best work, and we are the better for it. Whether
he’s singing/playing to bring attention to social issues like in Keep the Home
Fires Burning, or scratching at the scab of our humanity in Ever Born into This
World, Bill keeps getting better and better with each release.

The travesty here is that too few folks know about
Bill and his work. That is where you, the readers, come in. If everyone reading
this told just two friends about Bill’s work, that could make a dramatic
difference with his career, touring schedule and the best part is that it would
get this fantastic music out into the public. Stop by the download store where
you can get free music, inexpensive music and hard copy disc; but regardless of
the format, Power & the Glory is a career defining album!

Track list:

1) Carolina, Carolina

2) The Shakers and Movers

3) Just to Feel the Heat

4) From the Beats Down To the Buddha

5) Go To Sleep With the Angels

6) The Ghosts That I Run With

7) Stop Breakin’ Down

8) Bring You Around

9) Spring In Your Spirit

10) Keep the Home Fires Burnin’

11) Ever Born Into This World

12) Wide Awake With Orphan Eyes

http://billmallonee.net

http://billmalloneemusic.bandcamp.com/

http://www.myspace.com/billmallonee

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Bill-Mallonee-Music/184717971538363

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The Least Of These

As usual, this issue is late getting out because of me. I don’t know if I will ever get caught back up…however I will continue to try. This issue has some really awesome interviews and as we expand we continue to pack more and more interviews into each issue. We also have a small article that was a tribute to Flames, the guitarist for Raspberry Jam, who passed away a few months ago and moved on into his new life. I never knew Flames, never talked to him and never had a chance to know him this side of Heaven, but one of the things that I found really cool was how much his friends cared about him. It was evident that he left his mark on a close circle of friends, and it was surprisingly refreshing to hear how people remembered him. It got me thinking about how important people are in our lives. I have a very, very small circle of  friends, so small in fact it might not even be a circle, but I hope that when my time is up people will have nice things to remember about me. Who we are matters very much because of the impact that we have on others. Maybe that is why Paul said that everything else would pass away, but love would remain. Maybe that is also why we are encouraged to seek justice and to do our best to hold up the ‘least of these’. It is a funny thing, but the older I get the less I am sure about. I think pondering mortality puts things into a good perspective. It makes me realize that the memories and the marks we leave behind are so much more important than the petty arguments that we wage every day. We fight about theology, we fight about politics, we fight about not getting what we feel is our due or we beat our chests and act like petulant children when we feel we have been wronged. I am guilty of it I know… but I don’t want to be. It is a big world, there is much to learn and there are many that we can learn from. I think for me, I see the hands of God move when I learn truths about this life by watching the repercussion from someone’s death. I hope that Flames family can find comfort in knowing the mark that he left through his friendship and his music.

“We are soot-covered urchins running wild and unshod
We will always be remembered as the orphans of God
They will dig up these ruins
And make flutes of our bones
And blow a hymn to the memory of the orphans of God”
– Mark Heard

Posted in In The Magazine, September 2009 | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Bill Mallonee…still rockin’ in the free world!

I went and saw Bill Mallonee play again this past Tuesday evening. I’ve seen Bill live more than any other artist and I’ve been a fan for almost 20 years. Bill played at a local club called Eddie’s Attic in Decatur, GA. Eddie’s is just outside of the city of Atlanta and is a great little place to see live music. Bill played with A.J. Adams accompanying him on the pedal steel guitar, and as he usually is these days he was also backed up by his wife Muriah Rose on organ and background (beautiful) vocals.

Bill never ceases to amaze me…he played to a decent sized room of about 45-50 people which I find pretty good for a Tuesday evening, and the day after a holiday as well. He kicked through 15 songs of mostly newer material and he sounded better than he ever has. With a new album titled The Power and the Glory just a couple of months from seeing release, Bill is cramming and jamming in a tour as he has for well over 20 years at this point.

There is still time to pre-order the new album and catch up with Bill and the latest news that is happening through his website www.volsounds.com  Also check out his bandcamp site which you can link on here http://billmalloneemusic.bandcamp.com  Bill has a staggering amount of titles to his name; each and every one is top notch with the musicianship and the lyrical content. Bill is at the top of the Americana/Folk game when it comes to quality and consistent work. Check him out and catch a show whenever you have the opportunity!

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So Much is Going on These Days That Sometimes it is Hard to Know What to Write About

So much is going on these days that sometimes it is hard to know what to write about. Life spins around us, politics divide us and affect/infect us, people are struggling financially while some are just decimated and have lost everything they have worked for. Earthquakes, tsunami’s, war and genocide tear the land. Tornadoes and floods have taken hundreds of lives in the last couple of months, and that is just in the South. Sometimes it seems like nature is lashing out. There are people all around us that are physically, emotionally, mentally and spiritually just spent and tired. The only constant is that everything keeps changing. It is a difficult time in life for so many, and it is hard to witness people suffering and trying so hard, only to be let down or miss the mark.

My neighbors have lived in their house for years and years and years. My neighbor’s name was Cynthia, she and her son and her fiancée lived next door, they were good people and great neighbors. Cynthia’s father built that home himself sometime back in the 50’s; it is what she had left of her father that was tangible. She has lived there her entire life, never lived anywhere else. Cynthia lost her home to foreclosure. She and her fiancée both worked and they worked long hours. Still, in spite of it all, she lost her house and in many ways it was much more than just a house. I miss having them next door. Now I have foreclosed boarded up houses on both sides of me…it is sad.

I feel fortunate that my wife and I are okay. We still have tremendous struggles with a staggering amount of debt due to choices we had to make almost 2 years ago when we both lost our jobs at the same time. Regardless of the debt we still have jobs to go to, a home to come home to, and the reality is that we are okay in the midst of so much turmoil. My dogs (which are my babies) are healthy and happy, our cats are fine and my wife and I have a solid relationship. I say all this because one thing I have been realizing lately is that how fortunate I am in spite of how I sometimes feel. Could it be that way for many people out there right now? I don’t know, but I chose to shift my focus from what I didn’t have and instead start focusing on what I did have. It helped me tremendously…

I believe that the heart of Christ is with the poor and the less fortunate. Those that are absolutely beat up and broken by the life that rages around them. I believe that we encounter the life of Christ when we reach out and offer help to those around us in whatever ways we can. It happens in countless ways, a smile, hug or handshake. Giving a beggar a couple of bucks regardless of what they will spend it on, volunteer work, charity work, supporting a musician as they pre-sale orders for upcoming projects, that is after all how they support themselves. I’m a member of the human race; I’m tired of division in the church due to politics and bad theology. Maybe it can all be summed up in these words… “The greatest commandment is to love the Lord your God, AND to love your neighbor as yourself.” Those are powerful, powerful words. They transcend race, religion, politics, gender, sex and every other label or category. To quote the guy who spoke at church last week, “We are all just beggars trying to show other beggars where to get a bite of food.” Love… it’s the only thing that will endure.

Posted in In The Magazine, May 2011 | Tagged | 1 Comment

Music, music, music…

I wanted to write a new post and promote Bill Mallonee’s new WPA Volume 10 release titled “High Desert Hope”. Bill is the definition of a troubador, and he still has the most consistent output of quality music out of anyone I can think of. Bill’s music are snapshots of the American life from a historical perspective as well as from a place that is brutally honest and introspective. Mallonee is an amazing artist, a poet and a troubadour…get to know his music if you haven’t already. His bandcamp site also has everything he has ever done, a huge catalog at extremely reasonable prices. www.billmallonee.net

Also been listening to an old favorite by Toad the Wet Sprocket. Their second release Pale came out in 1990 and is still my favorite by a long shot. To me it sounds acoustically haunting and lyrically is very melancholy which I love. After these guys released Fear a year later they blew up like big rock stars and that is where I kind of lost interest. Not that Fear was a bad record, musically it was very different from Pale, but it just wasn’t the Toad that I loved! www.toadthewetsprocket.com

Herb Grimaud turned me on to an awesome band, Zola Jesus. Zola Jesus formed in 2006 and is the work of NikaRoza Danilova, a Russian/American singer/songwriter. The music is gothic, sometimes sparse but beautifully minimalistic and entrancing. www.zolajesus.com

The best news to hear in a long time is that D.A . is going to be touring this summer! The original band back together with a tour that will culminate in a main-stage show at Cornerstone Festival. Keep an eye out for the next issue of Down The Line which will feature Terry Taylor as the cover story. Also check out the front news page at Down The Line to read a message about helping Terry through a very difficult time that he and his family are enduring right now. There is info on a great way to help Terry out during this time and in a small way give back to a man who has given so much to so many for years through his music and his gift of creativity. http://www.danielamos.com/

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New music that I must recommend!

Alright, I’m giving this new blog a shot and seeing how it turns out. I bought a few highly recommended new releases in the last couple of weeks and thought I would share them. Up first is Times Of Grace and their first release titled Hymn Of A Broken Man. This band consists of 2 members, Adam Duktiewicz and Jesse Leach. For those of you in the metal world you will recoginze Adam as the guitarist from Killswitch Engage, and Jesse was the original vocalist for Killswitch as well. This entire record was written over a span of about 4 years and culminates in one of the best releases to come out so far this year. You will not be dissappointed! www.timesofgraceband.com

Next up is one of my favorite bands, Dropkick Murphys. These Bostonians always put out some of the best amped up Irish punk rock around! I love the bagpipes, the stories, the music and the comaraderie that has existed in this band for years. I am a huge Pogues fan, and these guys will carry The Pogues torch well into the next couple of decades. Good old Irish tunes of family, faith and social issues! www.dropkickmurphys.com

New band alert on Velvet Blue Music… Winter’s Fall is this awesome alt country/punky band with a killer sound and vocals that are unique and remind me of Neil Young on steroids! I love this band! I’ve only heard a couple of tunes but have ordered the CD and I am patiently waiting. Check them out at www.velvetbluemusic.com 

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Steve’s Corner January 2011

“The Undercover gets the blame for single handedly stopping all those great traditional concerts at Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa every Saturday since 1968. Thousands upon thousands have given their lives to Jesus at these anointed Concerts. One day in the mid 80s Chuck Smith showed up one Saturday night and there was The Undercover Band with their shirts off and jumping around like idiots! U call that ground breaking? Hitler was ground breaking too! Just another “in the flesh, look at me” band that never gave God any Glory, and why are you booking these guys?”

Hitler was groundbreaking too??? What? We definitely get all kinds of letters here, but I’m pretty sure that this is the first one with a reference to Hitler. Besides the obviously flawed comparison, this letter made me reflect on a couple of things. I never lived in California and I was never able to have attended any of these shows back in the day. It was a new, fresh and exciting time in Christian music. There were bands like the aforementioned Undercover, there was The Lifesavors, The Altar Boys, Crumbacher, The Lifters and so on. My wife lived in California then and she remembers going to Calvary Chapel and recalls how cool it was to see all the people who were outside of the mainstream yet together in one place… church. They were hanging out, listening to music and having a good time. Her recollection in comparison to the letter we received made me think of a couple of things.

One is that the differences between what my wife witnessed and what this reader’s letter recalled speaks about how different we all are. We are each one looking for something different and unique to us. For the writer of the letter, they were still looking for what had typically gone on at Calvary Chapel, the same type shows and the same type of “anointing” that they were accustomed to. My wife was visiting family in California when she visited Calvary Chapel. She had recently gotten sober from drugs and alcohol and she wanted to know what it meant to love Jesus. She identified with these people who were outside of the norm – she identified with the dress, the music and the message. For me it speaks to how big God is… He comes to us as we are and in a way that we can understand. For my wife, if it had been the same way as in the late 60’s and the 70’s, it never would have spoken to her the way it did.

The other thing this letter made me think of was this: isn’t it time to stop judging people so harshly? Christianity is about love isn’t it? “For God so loved the world…”, “Love the Lord your God and your neighbor as yourself”, “and these three remain, but the greatest of these is love”. Love is a big thing. Its open ended and we don’t get to choose who we love and who we don’t. Doesn’t mean we have to agree with everyone or what they do, say or believe, but who are we to say someone else is “in the flesh”? What is that supposed to mean anyway, seriously? Who is this person to say that these guys in Undercover never gave any glory to God? I am usually reminded of the scripture that says that we will be judged in the same way we judge – that’s a stark measuring line isn’t it? I’m also reminded of the scripture that says to work out our salvation with fear and trembling. Our salvation is very personal. The way we come to Christ has different circumstances and the way we express our faith and our salvation may be different from everyone else as well. It doesn’t mean that we are “in the flesh” or “out of God’s will” or anything of that nature.

So, in conclusion I guess what I am saying is get over yourself. If you don’t like what is going on somewhere, go where you can be more comfortable. Just give everyone else the freedom to express themselves in a way that they like. Jump around a little more, take your shirt off from time to time, turn the volume up and remember that you are an individual… just like everybody else.

Posted in In The Magazine, January 2011 | Tagged | 1 Comment