Kiko Loureiro
September 9, 2010 by Publisher
Filed under arcint2010
by Alissa Ordabai
Staff Writer
Kiko Loureiro began his career at the time when the guitar virtuoso genre was not only out of fashion, but almost defunct. The great era of rock guitar heroes who inspired Loureiro throughout his teenage years, was now over and grunge was de rigueur worldwide. The time has come for unprecedented musical austerity, major revision of trends, and deep suspicion of any guitar efforts going beyond the straightforward rhythm function. The guitar was still an instrument of self-expression, but with huge limitations imposed on it.
Out of this situation of severity and restriction Loureiro managed to emerge triumphant – turning his band Angra into an outfit now famous not only for its thought-provoking progressive leanings, but also for breathtakingly virtuosic guitar leads. Joining the Sao Paulo band in 1992, Loureiro never stopped developing both as a player and as a composer, releasing 8 albums with Angra, 3 solo albums, and last year – a debut record as a member of a fusion trio Neural Code.
This ability to assimilate a multitude of genres, to develop a parallel interest in jazz, and to study Latin music which he now blends so impeccably with rock, makes his latest solo album Fullblast a multi-directional, yet perfectly unified record. Full of spellbinding melodies, firework chops, and showcasing Loureiro’s phenomenal knack for mixing different genres, it is at once an accessible and a deeply personal album. Blending tradition with the feel of the new, it is the kind of record which you want to return again and again – not only to hear those magical melodies once more or to figure out the technique, but to try to understand how one can weave Latin and jazz influences into the fabric of rock so seamlessly and with such taste.
A delicately balanced, finely wrought album, it makes you wonder what lies behind this ability to balance explorative spirit with congeniality. The answer is perhaps in Loureiro’s awareness of his audience, but at the same time an innate feeling which he refers to as “sincerity” and which runs through the entire record – an ability to connect with yourself while not forgetting about your listener. This, as well as the creative process behind Fullblast and Loureiro’s current artistic priorities were the main themes of Hardrock Haven’s telephone conversation with the guitar meister last week.
Hardrock Haven: Kiko, thank you for finding time for our magazine, we really appreciate it. And congratulations on the new album!
Kiko Loureiro: Thank you very much!
HRH: I have to say – what an elegant, diverse piece of work! How did you manage to combine so many musical styles, and yet to produce such a coherent, unified album?
KL: I think it has to do with many years spent playing music. Playing rock, first of all, and then I am really proud of my background as a Brazilian. I really like to mix rock – things that came from England and from the United States – with the harmonies and rhythms of the Brazilian music. I studied our grooves, our rhythms, and I like to combine them to create something different.
HRH: You do it so seamlessly, it’s such a beautifully unified record. Do you have any favourite tracks on this album?
KL: I like all of them. I like the acoustic guitar tracks with Brazilian influences. This is something that I like, but, of course, electric guitar soloing is my main thing. So I like all of those songs. Each song has a different story, it came out in a different way, at a different moment, so, of course, I like all of them.
HRH: How many electric guitar solos are improvised on this record?
KL: This is instrumental music, so you have the main theme, you have the riffs, which are, of course, parts of the composition, but then you have solos which are improvised. I don’t like to study them, I just play them, I improvise the solos. I play them several times and see what I like. Sometimes it’s the first take, sometimes it takes longer, but I like to improvise.
HRH: Did you challenge yourself technically on this album? Where there any parts that you had to rehearse and go over and over before recording them in the studio?
KL: Yes. There is a song called “Cutting Edge”. On that I did a solo for the guitar freaks, the guys who like this shredding stuff. It’s quite fast, so I had to stretch for it, and I had to play sitting down and holding the guitar closer to my body, which is different to playing live, and I had to really stretch my fingers. So that was a bit technical.
HRH: How do you keep your technique in shape these days? Does it still require everyday practice?
KL: I still do it, but I don’t do that much now, to be honest. Because there are so many things that go on, and, of course, I rehearse, but I like to play a lot of acoustic guitar, and I also play other stuff, and sometimes I don’t play that much, and sometimes I play more. And then I have to go on tour, and it’s not a daily thing anymore. It used to be, of course, but now I think more about music. Going back to your other question – thinking about music is more important than technique. But there was a time in my life when I needed to work on my technique. And once I got the technique where I am now and became more secure, I began thinking about the musicality: “What can I do with the technique that I have?” So this is more important. Sometimes playing chords and chord progressions is much more fun for me than playing fast scales.
HRH: Talking about composition, the album is full of such perfect melodies and such perfect phrases. Does it usually take you a long time to compose those tracks? On average – how long does it usually take you to take a track from the initial snippet of an idea to a finished piece?
KL: It’s always different. Some songs you can write in one day, and sometimes it takes longer. Sometimes you have two parts and you don’t know what to do with the other one. Whether you continue, or take a break and come back to it. But it has to be natural, the composition thing has to be natural. And composing is something that you have to practice.
HRH: It’s like a muscle that you have to exercise, isn’t it?
KL: Yes, that’s right. A brain muscle that you have to develop. It’s like speaking, putting across an idea. Some people are good at appearing in front of other people and making a speech, and some can’t communicate the message. Composition is like that. You have a melody that you like, but what are you going to do with it? If you repeat it too much, then it’s boring and the good melody is no good anymore. It has to do with the piece of music as a whole. So you have to practice. Make it so that the melody that you like is also hopefully liked by other people.
HRH: How accurately is it possible to convey the initial feeling that inspired a piece of work? Is it possible at all to convey through music 100 per cent accurately what you are feeling?
KL: Well, yes. You have to be very sincere. It’s a difficult question. You have to be very sincere about what you really like, because I think sometimes musicians are not so sincere. I think for guitar players when they do a solo album, they are not doing something very popular, you are not doing it for selling units or something like this. But you are sincere because you like that. You are not doing something because you think people will like it that way, or say to yourself: “I will not play this chord because it’s too crazy and I think people will not like that.” If you like it, you do it. When you are starting a new song, if you like it, then you will get a good feeling, you will feel it somehow. When there is something interesting going on, then there is a connection – from this melody, this chord, this song – to your body somehow. To your brain, to your body. And then you have to be sincere with that. You cannot cheat and try to be somebody else. If you compose something you like, then it’s 100 per cent. I don’t know how clear that sounds.
HRH: Very clear, or as clear as it can be when you talk about these kind of things. I have another question here, and it may sound a bit stupid, but I’ll still give it a go. Does your music ever surprise you? Do you ever listen back to stuff that you wrote, or stuff that you played, and go, “I didn’t know I had this aspect to my character,” or simply, “I didn’t know I could be like this”? Does that ever happen?
KL: Yes, yes, yes. Normally when you put some distance from your work. When you listen to something that you recorded many, many years ago. Because sometimes you are so close to the work that you are doing, you don’t get that perspective. But when I listen to some of the stuff I recorded in the 90s, I go, “Wow, that was me when I was twenty-something!”. It can surprise you: “How naïve I was, I was doing that just because of that guitar player or that music I was listening to at the time! I was not so sincere and was trying to play like somebody else!”. It happens. It surprises me when I listen to something from 20 years ago. I almost can’t recognise it. But I was studying the guitar and studying music. I’ve always been a rock guy, I was playing rock guitar a lot and listening to all the great guitar players like Jeff Beck and Steve Vai. I was trying to learn, also from acoustic guitar players, to learn interesting harmonies that took me to jazz, took me to ways of combining it with rock, took me to classical music, to some Arabian music. And I started learning how to combine rock with all those other elements. So it surprises me, the way I was doing things all those years ago.
HRH: When you were growing up, did you have a clear musical ambition or a clear musical goal?
KL: The main thing was that I wanted to play the guitar. When I was a teenager, I wanted to do it as a profession. But it was more of a teenage thing, I didn’t know what I was going to do – whether to go to the university to be a lawyer… I did biology at university. Then I began playing and traveling. I’ve always been thinking about being a musician. So I was really eager to learn music in general. To be able to play any kind of music if somebody asked me to do it. To be prepared to be a good professional musician. Then I had my band, and my band started getting more known, but I never wanted to be a rock star.
HRH: Really? But you are a quintessential rock star, aren’t you?
KL: I’m not a rock star!
HRH: But of course you are!
KL: But it was not my goal. I wanted to learn about music, about this or that scale, or to understand how this guy plays, more than worrying whether my shoes were cool or not. This is what you think about when you hear the expression “rock star”. Of course, there were great musicians who were also rock stars, but I think they were more musicians than rock stars. The two can combine when you have the situation when people like their music, so they start posing for the pictures and something like that, and then you have the image of a rock star. But I wanted to grow as a musician. I want to be a better musician more than to have more people in the audience, more than having more pictures of me somewhere. I get a good feeling out of knowing that I played well on a particular night. Not from having a lot of people in the audience.
HRH: So you would be happier playing to a small club full of people who completely understand what you are doing, as opposed to a stadium of screaming fans?
KL: Yes, of course. People who like the music and are connected somehow with the music. With guitar players, the audience most of the time are guitar players as well, or they love the guitar. They know their guitar heroes and the history, and then you have this connection. But then you have to go to other places where people may not know as much about the guitar. You can play for some kids who may become interested in learning about the guitar and getting into this small club of guitar players. With the Guitar Hero thing nowadays, you can get teenagers in the audience who are there for the Guitar Hero thing, and not for the actual guitar, but then they become so interested they want to find out how a real guitar works. And I like that.
HRH: Were you ever in a position where you had to choose or compromise between making your music accessible to an as wide audience as possible, and at the same time expressing your full self? Is there a conflict between the two, or can an agreement be reached within one creative mind to balance those two urges?
KL: I don’t know exactly how to answer that because there can be a fear of something being too weird, as in, “I am playing something that I like, but maybe I am going too far?”. You can introduce some weird chords because, for example, you are listening to Frank Zappa at the time. And then you listen back to it the next day you think that maybe it’s too much. You have to have a limit and introduce people to those things step by step. I listen to some crazy, weird stuff sometimes. I mean stuff like John Coltrane. I can get into the John Coltrane thing, but if I want to produce some kind of feedback, I can’t put this John Coltrane thing into my songs, because on my album it would be too much. I like it when he uses percussion on his songs, but I can’t make it my thing and do percussion guitar, that would be too extreme. I would play rock music and then add the percussion. It’s different from the American guitar players who don’t add percussion to those grooves, but it’s not that far. Carlos Santana is a good example of how to combine Latin music with rock guitar. It’s rock with a Latin vibe. It’s not Latin music, he plays rock, and it’s a good combination. You have to show people things in a good way. Otherwise it may not work.
HRH: Do you think there is a greater degree of freedom when you do a solo album as opposed when you are working on material with a band, with Angra, for example? Do you feel more free, do you feel it’s easier?
KL: Yes. First of all because it’s a solo album. Secondly, because I’m alone. A band is a compromise with other people. You may like the song, but there are five members and they play it the way they like. If it’s a solo album, you can say, for example, to the drummer, “Please do what you want, but this is how I imagine it.” He knows it’s my album, so he respects that and he respects my vision for that music. A band is different. You have to combine the vision of five members to have one concept.
HRH: In a band situation, when do you think it’s appropriate to compromise, and when is it time to stand by your work?
KL: It’s difficult, but when you really care about the song you wrote, you can fight for that. Some songs you like, and someone can make a suggestion to change a chorus, and you agree when you like it. It can be great because you have five brains thinking. The drummer may come in and say, “We’ll do it like this – this groove instead of that,” and then you have to imagine it. He is the one for the drum grooves, not me. There are different moments, so you never know. If you are doing it alone, the entire thing is up to you. You have to believe in being right, do it the way you see it, and hope that people will like it. And if they don’t like it, it’s like, “They don’t like me.” It becomes very personal. When it’s your song, it’s like it’s you out there. If it’s something that you really enjoy, it’s like a part of you. And if someone comes along and says, “I don’t like the song,” it’s like saying, “I don’t like you.” If they say, “I don’t like the sound,” then it’s cool, it’s OK. If they talk about the sound of the album, it’s OK. But if they don’t like the song itself, if they don’t like the melody, then it can hurt. It’s complicated.
HRH: Do you think being a rock guitar player, as profession, has changed in any fundamental way since the time when you were growing up? Do you think there are more expectations now, or maybe less? In terms of technique, and being able to write, and the knowledge of theory? Do you think it’s easier now to be a rock guitarist or the opposite?
KL: I started my professional career in the beginning of the 90s. Grunge took over and it went down for the 80s guitar players. Not Satriani and Steve Vai who of course were always there, but the other ones. Guitar solos went out of fashion, and so did the 70s and the 80s stuff. There were suddenly no solos. It became more difficult for the guitar players from the 80s which was the great moment of rock guitar, and then suddenly everything stopped because of Nirvana, Pearl Jam, and all those bands. So I found my place during a difficult moment for the guitar players. Nowadays it is different again because it’s the internet era, and you have do things by yourself and take care of your career by yourself. You have to take care of your contacts, and the pictures you have to take, and your solo album, and the video you have to upload. And it’s different than 10 or 20 years ago. It’s more demanding. And the guitar complains because you play less. [Laughs]. Because you have to take care of a lot of stuff.
HRH: Are there plans to take the new record on the road?
KL: Yes. I will be playing in Italy in November. That’s it so far. Then we are going to Japan in October, and I am doing an Asian tour with Laney, the British amplifier, in October as well, and in November we are going with the trio [power fusion trio Neural Code where Loureiro plays and which released its debut album last year] as well. I have my solo gigs and the band as well, and you have to combine both agendas.
HRH: I have one last question and it’s a bit goofy. I hope you don’t’ mind, and you don’t’ have to answer it if you don’t want to. It goes like this. If you could have an answer to any question in the Universe, what would you ask?
KL: Wow! Of course it would be about the existence of god.
Brandan Narrell of Anchored
May 4, 2010 by Publisher
Filed under arcint2010
by Deb Rao
Staff Writer
Hardrock Haven is proud to present an interview with singer Brandan Narrell of Anchored as he discusses the launching of Anchored and their upcoming release Listen To This.
Anchored is an exciting new band that hails from Dallas, Texas. They are bringing their special brand of southern hard rock on tour this Spring opening for Saliva. Anchored is gearing up for their debut release Listen To This. Their first video is “Dirty In Texas.”
Anchored have a sound that is reminiscent of Drowning Pool meets Pantera with a southern twang. They write good ol’ fashion songs about real life and everyday situations. There is nothing pretentious about this band. They are the real deal. Check them out at www.myspace.com/anchoredmusic.

HRH: Brandan, thank you for checking in with Hardrock Haven. Anchored performed in NYC last night at the Highland Ballroom with Saliva. What were some of the highlights from the show?
BRANDAN: It has always been a dream for me to play in New York. I got to visit 10 house and meet real heroes from 911. As for the show, the fans showed us a great time and embraced our southern sound. It was amazing to hear New Yorkers singing “Dirty In Texas” and we can’t wait to go back.
HRH: Anchored is actually on tour with Saliva. The band is hitting New England tonight. Tell us about the show and what the fans can expect to see this Texas rock band?
BRANDAN: Expect to see 5 guys pouring their hearts out on stage. Every song is true and has an emotional connection with each member so there is nothing fake about our performance. I think the crowd will detect that from the first note.
HRH: Are you enjoying being on the road with Saliva?
Brandan: For sure…the guys in Saliva have been super cool throughout this tour. They are Southern as well so it helps with the bonding phase of the tour. Someone is always BBQ’ing or playing pranks on each other. It definitely has been a wild ride so far.
HRH: Anchored is gearing up for your release Listen To This. Tell us about the writing process for this album?
BRANDAN: The album was written in my home studio over 3 weeks. I had the privilege of working with some great people on a couple of the tracks. “Dirty in Texas” was written by Geoff Byrd and myself over phone calls and e-mails back and forth as was a couple more with a very talented artist named Nash out of Montreal. Waymon Boone of Splender produced the record at the Batcave studios in Montreal, Canada and co wrote “We Had Everything”. I wrote songs like “Last Night,” “Save Me” “By Your Side” “Ms Stress” and the rest of the record at home.
HRH: The first single will be “Dirty In Texas.” Will there be a new video for this too?
BRANDAN: We actually already have the video out now on YouTube and it is being pitched to TV as we speak.
HRH: When is the release date for the album slated and what label is it on?
BRANDAN :It is being released on Trynd Entertainment and music group on iTunes in a week and in stores early July.
HRH: As a singer what kind of sound were you looking for in the studio on your debut CD?
BRANDAN: I wanted the record to have a southern feel with lots of melody and catchy hooks but also do so with more dirty raspy vocals that come more natural to me. I also wanted it to be not over produced on the vocal side so it would be more unique. I am a huge fan of Shaun Morgan of Seether and have always loved how his vocals aren’t over produced.
HRH: Now Anchored hail from Dallas, Texas. I was recently down that way at the Glass Cactus. Do you think your southern style shines through on this album?
BRANDAN: For sure. When you are in Texas it becomes a part of you. It is a state of great pride and I couldn’t help but write more southern orientated songs deep in the heart of Texas.
HRH: How is the music scene in Texas these days?
BRANDAN: The scene is packed full of hard working great bands that deserve a shot on the big stage. Hopefully with the direction music is moving now that will become a reality.
HRH: How would you describe the sound of Anchored?
BRANDAN: I describe it as Texas rock. It is real in your face good time rock n roll!
HRH: What does the title Listen To This denote to you?
BRANDAN: I have worked extremely hard for many years to ” get a shot” in this business and now that I have what I believe is the best record I’ve done, I simply want people to “listen to this”!
HRH: I read that Vinnie Paul of Hell Yeah recommended you as a singer for Drowning Pool when Dave Williams passed away? How did this transpire?
BRANDAN: I was asked to audition for Damageplan first and we all felt I would be a better fit with Drowning Pool. The reason it didn’t work out was because it was way to soon after Dave’s passing. They also thought that my voice and appearance resembled Dave’s and it was too much to soon. We are all still friends and I wish them nothing but success.
HRH: Do you have any final thoughts on the new album?
BRANDAN: Simply stated…listen to it and I hope you enjoy it as much as I do. I was an honor to write a song about the great state of Texas and get to write an album I’ve always wanted to write…an honest and fun rock record. Thanks for your time and I’ll see ya on the road!
Anchored Tour Dates:
BUZZFEST 2010 @ The Woodlands Pavilion Houston, Texas , US
May 4 2010 8:00P
Freebird Live w/ Saliva Jacksonville Beach, Florida , US
May 5 2010 8:00P
Firestone w/ Saliva Orlando, Florida , US
May 6 2010 8:00P
The Music Farm w/ Saliva Charleston, South Caro, US
May 7 2010 8:00P
Hooligans w/ Saliva Jacksonville, North Caro, US
May 8 2010 8:00P
The Rock Shop w/ Saliva Fayetville, North Caro, US
May 9 2010 8:00P
The Masquerade w/ Saliva Atlanta, Georgia , US
May 11 2010 8:00P
Soul Kitchen w/ Saliva Mobile, Alabama , US
May 12 2010 8:00P
Strange Days w/ Saliva Montgomery, Alabama , US
May 13 2010 8:00P
Sammy T’s w/ Saliva Huntsville, Alabama , US
May 14 2010 8:00P
Club Fire w/ Saliva Jackson, Mississipp, US
George Lynch
August 21, 2009 by Publisher
Filed under arcint2009
by John Kindred
Staff Writer
LYNCH MOB is back with a new studio album entitled Smoke And Mirrors released on September 18th in Europe and October 13th in the USA.
After seventeen long years singer Oni Logan and guitar wizard George Lynch found their way back together and again show their amazing abilities in some killer new Hard Rock songs.” I would say this new record Smoke and Mirrors, is the record we should have put out as a follow up to “Wicked Sensation”…better late then never I guess…”, says Lynch presenting the new record.
Joining the new line-up are bassist Marco Mendoza (Whitesnake, Thin Lizzy) and drummer Scott Coogan (Brides of Destruction, Ace Frehley).
Lynch Mob are ready to embark on a World Tour in the fall 2009 to follow up on the successful performance at the ROCKLAHOMA 2008 and to promote Smoke and Mirrors.
Hardrock Haven took a bit of George Lynch’s time to talk about the new studio record, new bandmates, guitars and possible tour plans. Maybe a co-headline run with a Lynch Mob / Dokken tour? Check out this exclusive audio interview.

Weblinks: www.frontiers.it / www.myspace.com/frontiersrecords / www.georgelynch.com / www.myspace.com/lynchmobrocks
(If the embedded player doesn’t populate, click here to stream in a stand alone player.)
Andreas Kisser
July 30, 2009 by Publisher
Filed under arcint2009
by Alissa Ordabai
Staff Writer
Andreas Kisser’s upcoming double album Hubris I & II is Sepultura guitarist’s first solo effort, and it shows. The variety of styles, genres and approaches on this mulligan-stew of an album couldn’t have been wider, even if diversity was the actual purpose behind this release. But it wasn’t. All ideas, experiences, and moods that Kisser has been privately musing on while presenting a perfect image of the ultimate metal god in Sepultura, have finally, in one way or another, found an expression on this impressively varied yet cohesive solo debut.
The first disk of this release was meant to be all about the electric guitar, while the second one – an acoustic opus. However, both bleed into each other, showing that for Kisser’s guitars – be it electric, acoustic, steel-stringed or nylon-stringed – are simply a means of expression, not a categorized set of gear that he keeps apart in separate tool boxes.
To prove this point and to defy the initial concept of separating of the two, there is plenty of acoustic guitar on the first disk, and some indelible electric guitar on the second. In fact, the opener of the first disk, “Protest,” is an exquisitely wrought acoustic number that channels Jimmy Page’s late ‘60s instrumental wizardry and mixes it with ethnic chanting. “Euphoria / Desperation” that follows takes the vibe further into the direction of heavier but no less colorful ethnic romps underpinned by metal riffs.
The result is a haunting, multi-layered, irresistible atmosphere that sets the mood from the word go, as this rich exotic vein continues throughout the record, at times joining hips with contemporary Brazilian popular music and, at times, gives way to straight-up metal.
In an interview with Hardrock Haven, Kisser admits that the second disk, which was meant to be acoustic, was far more challenging to make than the first part of this album. And the first track proves this point perfectly. “Sad Soul” is a melancholy number in which classically-bred acoustic guitar lets its younger electric sister run atop of its rigorous arpeggios to create an exquisite layered dissonance of traditions and purposes and then magically transforms into a prism through which you can see the essence of Kisser’s message on this album – the interaction between the old and the new, between rigour and abandon, between the earth and the stratosphere.
(If the audio player doesn’t populate, click here to stream the interview in a stand alone player.)






