Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Hank Williams Jr. Enlists Justin Moore, Brantley Gilbert for New Album

Hank Williams Jr. has revealed the title, track list and release date of his first new album in four years. It's About Time, produced by Julian Raymond, who oversaw Glen Campbell's Ghost on the Canvas, will hit stores on January 15th.

Williams' first album for the Nash Icon label, his new recording home, features the lead single "Are You Ready for the Country," a duet with Eric Church. The pair will perform the song, written by Neil Young but made famous in country music by Waylon Jennings, to open the 49th CMA Awards on November 4th.

It's About Time also includes a version of Mel Tillis's "Mental Revenge," which artists from Jennings to the Flying Burrito Brothers have covered. Williams says it was that song that generated a buzz around Nashville about his new album, fueled by the word-of-mouth of the studio players.

"It started with the musicians. Right after 'Mental Revenge,' they started yakking in town: 'Man, he's on fire,'" Williams tells Rolling Stone Country, adding that artists began petitioning him to guest on the album. Along with Church, Justin Moore and Brantley Gilbert also appear on It's About Time, helping  reprise the 1987 autobiographical swamper "Born to Boogie," with Brad Paisley on guitar. "[My manager] said, 'Everybody in the world is calling here wanting to sing on the album,'" recalls Williams. "It couldn't be any better."

"Buy Me a Boat" singer-songwriter Chris Janson co-wrote a pair of songs for the project, while Williams himself penned four tracks. But it's a cover of the Reverend Charlie Jackson spiritual "Wrapped Up, Tangled Up in Jesus (God's Got It)" that especially excites the son of Hank Williams. 

"Wait until you hear it. It's seven and a half minutes of Thunderhead Hawkins," says Williams, referencing his blues alter-ego. "You know what [daughter] Holly [Williams] says, 'In his mind, Daddy is Thunderhead Hawkins.'"

While Williams has never shied away from grand statements — "I only deal in facts," he tells Rolling Stone Country emphatically, smoking a cigar —  It's About Time, with its strong first single, guest stars and CMA Awards promotional push is poised to live up to the Bocephus hype.

"I'm what you call a motivated icon," says Williams, "and you got to watch out for a motivated icon, baby."

Here's the track list for It's About Time.
1.   "Are You Ready for the Country" featuring Eric Church
2.   "Club U.S.A."
3.   "God Fearin' Man"
4.   "Those Days Are Gone" 
5.   "Dress Like an Icon" 
6.   "God and Guns"
7.   "Just Call Me Hank"
8.   "Mental Revenge"
9.   "It's About Time"
10. "The Party's On" 
11. "Wrapped Up, Tangled Up in Jesus (God's Got It)" 
12. "Born to Boogie" featuring Brantley Gilbert, Justin Moore and Brad Paisley 



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Watch Jimmy Fallon Induct the Roots Onto Philadelphia Walk of Fame

Jimmy Fallon lauded the Roots as "the hardest working band in late night, and anywhere else" at the hip-hop outfit's induction onto the Philadelphia Music Alliance Walk of Fame on Monday.

The ceremony was captured by radio station WOGL, and Fallon happily trekked from New York City to the hometown of his Tonight Show band to to mark the occasion. During his speech, the host recalled how NYC's proximity to Philadelphia was a crucial component of getting the Roots to sign on as the house band of his first gig, Late Night.

"They defy genre, they can play any type of music, they can appeal to all different audiences, they're smart, they're talented, they can do it all," Fallon said, adding later: "Every musician coming through New York wants to sit in with the Roots. Singers booked on the show won't even bring bands, they're just like, 'Nah, we'd rather just have the Roots play with us.'"

Fallon even closed out his speech with some local flavor, summing up his love, affection and appreciation for the Roots in the most Philly way possible: "What can I say, the Roots are my jawn."

Both Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson and Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter spoke on behalf of the Roots following Fallon's introduction. Questlove recalled the induction of his own father, musician Lee Andrews, onto the Walk of Fame 25 years earlier. He admitted, however, he doesn't remember much about the ceremony — he was too busy listening to the first demo he and Black Thought had recorded that same day. 

Black Thought, for his part, offered a poetic paean to Philadelphia in his remarks: "It is an honor to know that, in the tradition of the cave etchings of original man, the hieroglyphics of ancient Egypt, the iconic artistry found in the ruins of the Mayans, Aztecs and in Rome, that these monuments that we now erect — this graffiti, these murals, these statues and plaques and so on — will serve as our time capsule.

"This is what makes up the fabric that, once woven together, will tell the story of our great city and these great times, as turbulent as they may be, to generations and civilizations to come," he added. "So what better place to be immortalized in that way than on Broad Street, Philadelphia's main artery. Our equator. Our Mason-Dixon Line, so to speak. It's from these streets that we came, and now back to these streets that we return."



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10 Things We Learned From Phil Collen's Wild Def Leppard Memoir

Phil Collen, who has played guitar for Def Leppard since 1982, has written an autobiography with Chris Epting — Adrenalized: Life, Def Leppard, and Beyond — that's packed with juicy tales of his time with the band. The book has its frustrating elements: Collen spends time with both Diana Ross and Taylor Swift but doesn't have anything in particular to say about either of them. But the memoir also gives some inside dirt on Def Leppard, everyone's favorite nine-armed pop-metal superband. Here are 10 things we learned.

1. Collen is color-blind.
The condition isn't an occupational hazard in his current life as a rock star, but it was a disadvantage in his first job working at a burglar-alarm factory, where he would solder wires incorrectly because he couldn't tell the colors apart. 

2. The guitarist has always taken the glam aesthetic literally.
When Def Leppard started, Collen was in a glam-rock band called Girl. The two groups were friendly, and at one Girl gig, Def Lep guitarist Steve Clark and Joe Elliott joined them onstage — that night, everyone ended up crashing at Elliott's mother's house. She was irate the next day, because she thought the lads had snuck some ladies into the bedroom: "Ohhhh! There was makeup in the bed this morning when I changed the sheets!" Elliott had to explain to her that it was just because of the excessive amounts of cosmetics worn by the members of Girl.

3. Hysteria producer Mutt Lange's aesthetic was anti-harmony, pro-scream.
The Def Leppard mission statement, from genius producer Robert John "Mutt" Lange: "Def Leppard will be all about great pop songs that resonate with the punk ethos. We won't have lovely harmonies like Styx or Foreigner. Our vocals will be more like a screaming chant, which will set them apart."

4. MTV helped the Leps conquer Middle America.
The band's early success was hugely dependent on geography: specifically, on whether your town had been wired for cable television. "Places that had cable TV had MTV, and places that had MTV had us all the time," Collen says. "By the time we came to town, we'd already become rock gods to these kids in places like Norman, Oklahoma, and Monroe, Louisiana, that didn't always have big bands rolling through."

5. Def Leppard had a lewdly named backstage pass reserved especially for eager groupies.
Def Leppard were astonished to discover that American girls wanted to sleep with them, and would even fellate crew members to gain access. Collen says, "I was waiting for an elevator in a hotel. A really hot girl whom I had never seen in my life came up to me, pulled my pants down, and went down on me and didn't say a word. This type of stuff didn't happen before with total strangers." The band ultimately created a special backstage "boiler pass" for sexually eager fans: In the same style as the band's angular "Def Leppard" logo were the words "Dik Likker." 

6. Rick Allen's tragic accident spawned an unlikely romance.
The car accident that severed the left arm of drummer Rick Allen was horribly unlucky, of course. But in a weird stroke of good fortune, he was found by a nurse who happened to have a cooler of ice that she was taking to a party. A policeman followed soon after. The pair put Allen's severed arm in the ice and rushed him to the hospital — and the nurse and the policeman ended up getting married.

An operation to reattach the arm failed when it became infected, but Allen barely missed a beat. When the rest of the band nervously visited him in the hospital, he immediately launched into his plans for playing one-armed. Collen's initial reaction: "This poor kid, he must be so medicated that he actually thinks he's cool with all of this and that everything is going to be okay."

7. Lange stirred some country twang into "Pour Some Sugar on Me."
By the time the band recorded "Pour Some Sugar on Me," the Hysteria album was two years late. Mutt Lange had gotten in a car accident of his own and was supervising the recording of the song from a hospital bed that he had imported into the studio. You've probably noticed the obvious hip-hop influences on the song, but that wasn't the only genre being mixed in with the sugar. Lange came up with the introductory guitar riff. "It actually sounded very country," Collen says. "When Mutt told me to try it, I was told my finger-picking sucked. He told me to play it the way I would play it. So I played it with a metal guitar pick, making a weird hard-rock/country hybrid."

8. The band were millions of dollars in debt when Hysteria came out.
The Leps had always believed in frugality, preferring hotel vans to limousines. "Coming mostly from nothing," Collen writes, "we didn't want to waste anything." But one consequence of taking two years to make an album with Mutt Lange was that by the time Hysteria came out, the band had accumulated $4.5 million in debt, meaning they needed to sell over 5 million copies just to break even. It worked out: The album's been certified for 12 million in sales in the United States, and has sold about that much in the rest of the world as well.

9. Robert Plant once rode through Def Leppard's audience in a laundry basket.
Touring behind Hysteria, Def Leppard played arenas in the round: That maximized the number of seats, but the arrangement made it difficult to get onto the stage when it was showtime. So the crew, using the same giant laundry baskets that they had loaded the opening band's equipment into when removing it from the stage, would hide the members of Def Leppard in the baskets and wheel them through the unsuspecting crowd. (Collen says the popular rumors of under-the-stage orgies are untrue.)

One night in Chicago, Robert Plant visited backstage — which would have been enough of a thrill for everyone in the band. But when "he heard about the way we got wheeled out there every night, he got all excited and asked if he could part of the clandestine operation that took place before the show." Plant, one of the most recognizable rock stars in the world, disguised himself with dark sunglasses, a bandana wrapped around his head, and a leather jacket. "I remember he looked a bit like a pirate," Collen writes. 

10. The state-fair ain't all it's cracked up to be.
Having more fame than record sales can feel undignified. "We were still valid and better than ever onstage, but we were playing these really shitty venues," Collen complains of the band's later years. Def Leppard "got into a bit of a rut playing state fairs."



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Keith Urban Reveals New Album 'Ripcord'

Days after releasing his newest single, "Break on Me," Keith Urban has announced the name of his upcoming studio album: Ripcord

The follow-up to 2013's genre-jumping Fuse, Ripcord has been in the works for some time, with Urban slowly leaking new information about the record over the past five months. First came the kickoff single "John Cougar, John Deere, John 3:16," which found Urban putting down the electric guitar and, instead, driving the tune forward with a bass-heavy groove. Next came the news that Nile Rodgers, award-winning guitarist and co-founder of the disco band Chic, was somehow involved in the project. The two recently performed together during Rodgers' FOLD Festival and are reportedly spending a good chunk of time in the recording studio, a potential indicator that Ripcord, like Fuse, widens Urban's sound far beyond his country roots. 

Urban, who will perform with John Mellecamp at next week's CMA Awards, hasn't unveiled any further details for Ripcord. There's no release date, no tracklist and no official producer. Fans can look for future clues on the singer's Twitter account, though, where an October 24th post reading, "Ripcord - KU," effectively gave away the album's title before the official announcement. 



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McCartney, Bowie, Eazy-E Lead Record Store Day Black Friday Lineup

Paul McCartney, David Bowie, Eazy-E, Frank Zappa, Queen and Spoon are just a handful of artists prepping special releases for Record Store Day's annual Black Friday bonanza.

McCartney will follow up the recent reissue of his solo LP, Pipes of Peace, with a new remix of his 1983 hit collaboration with Michael Jackson, "Say Say Say"; meanwhile, Bowie will preempt his new album, Blackstar, with the re-release his 1997 LP Earthling on translucent green vinyl with tri-fold cover packaging. And as a special holiday treat, Eazy-E's "Merry Muthafuckin’ Xmas" will be released for the first time as a 45 RPM record.

Elsewhere, Spoon will issue their Cramps cover, "TV Set," as part of a two-track, 10-inch RSD Black Friday exclusive, while Queen will celebrate the 40th anniversary of "Bohemian Rhapsody" with a 12-inch vinyl edition featuring the original artwork and track listing.

Other special titles include a reissue of Zappa's posthumous Feeding the Monkies at Ma Maison on bright yellow vinyl; The Best of Earth Wind & Fire on 12-inch picture vinyl and Johnny Cash's Man in Black Live in Denmark 1971 as a remastered double LP on white and red colored vinyl.

Run-D.M.C. will also offer The Singles Collection, which features some of the group's biggest tracks released with full color jackets based on the original records. Pharcyde will also drop a blue and clear split pressing of Labcabincalifornia cut "Runnin'" and non-album B-side "Emerald Butterfly" as a 45 RPM seven-inch.

Among the myriad artists also readying RSD Black Friday offerings are Elvis Presley, Jimi Hendrix, Judas Priest, the Clash, Faith No More, Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins, Gang of Four, Jesus and Mary Chain, Otis Redding, the Buzzcocks, Brian Wilson, Garbage, Dave Matthews Band, Nine Inch Nails, Charlie Parker and John Lee Hooker. More information about these releases, as well as participating independent retailers, is available on the Record Store Day website.



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Buddy Guy, Zakk Wylde to Helm 2016 Experience Hendrix Tour

Buddy Guy, Zakk Wylde, and Band of Gypsys and Jimi Hendrix Experience bassist Billy Cox will anchor the 2016 Experience Hendrix tour, a 27-date U.S. trek featuring a variety of all-star musicians paying tribute to the late, great guitarist.

For Guy, it's the blues legend's sixth Experience Hendrix outing, while other returning players include Dweezil Zappa, Jonny Lang, Kenny Wayne Shepherd and vocalist — and Hendrix's first cousin — Henri Brown. The rest of the primary cast consists of guitarist Eric Johnson, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble drummer Chris Layton, Indigenous guitarist and singer Mato Nanji, and Noah Hunt, singer for the Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band.

Special guests set to appear on select dates currently include blues musician Keb' Mo', singer and guitarist Doyle Bramhall II (Eric Clapton, Roger Waters, Arc Angels), acclaimed Memphis-via-Serbia guitarist Ana Popovic and steel guitar legends, the Slide Brothers. The specific concerts these musicians will play are available on their respective artist pages on the Experience Hendrix website. More guests will be announced in the coming weeks.

The 2016 Experience Hendrix tour will hit the East Coast, South and Midwest, starting February 24th at the Hard Rock Live in Hollywood, Florida, and wrapping up March 25th at the Hampton Beach Casino in Hampton Beach, New Hampshire. Ticket prices vary between venues, as do on-sale dates; all information is available on the tour's website.

Experience Hendrix 2016 Tour Dates

2/24 — Hollywood, FL @ Hard Rock Live
2/25 — Clearwater, FL @ Ruth Eckerd Hall
2/26 — Jacksonville, FL @ Florida Theater
2/27 — Atlanta, GA @ Fox Theater
2/28 — Charleston, SC @ Gaillard Center
2/29 — Nashville, TN @ Schermerhorn
3/2 — Tulsa, OK @ Brady Theater
3/3 — Grand Prairie, TX @ Verizon Theatre
3/4 — San Antonio, TX @ Majestic Theater
3/5 — Houston, TX @ Bayou Music Center
3/6 — New Orleans, LA @ Saenger Theater
3/8 — St. Louis, MO @ Fox Theater
3/9 — Milwaukee, WI @ Riverside Theater
3/10 — Milwaukee, WI @ Riverside Theater
3/11 — Detroit, MI @ The Fox Theater
3/12 — Chicago, IL @ Chicago Theater
3/13 — Cincinnati, OH @ Taft Theater
3/15 — Northfield, OH @ Hard Rock Casino
3/16 — Syracuse, NY @ Landmark Theatre
3/17 — Wallingford, CT @ Oakdale Theater
3/18 — Brooklyn, NY @ Kings Theater
3/19 — Atlantic City, NJ @ Borgata Casino
3/20 — Poughkeepsie, NY @ Mid Hudson Civic Center
3/22 — Red Bank, NJ @ Count Basie Theater
3/23 — Worcester, MA @ Hanover Theatre
3/24 — New Bedford, MA @ Zeiterion
3/25 — Hampton Beach, NH @ Hampton Beach Casino



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Warren Haynes Talks Life After Allman Brothers, Singer-Songwriter Roots

On October 28th, singer-guitarist Warren Haynes will celebrate the one-year anniversary of his final concert with the Allman Brothers Band — an epic and now legendary show at New York's Beacon Theater — by working. He is appearing with his current Ashes and Dust band at the Fonda Theater in Los Angeles, performing material from across his long career as a songwriter, power-blues guitarist, Allmans veteran and the leader of his own band Gov't Mule — with a hearty focus on Haynes' latest album, Ashes and Dust (Concord), made with the bluegrass-jam band Railroad Earth.

"I enjoy working — I feel fortunate to do what I do," Haynes, 55, said during a recent, rare 90 minutes away from the tour grind in his publicist's New York office, during a candid, reflective interview about his life since the Allmans ended in 2014, featured in the current issue of Rolling Stone. "I've been lucky to not have to compromise, to get away with what I want to do. That's something I never take for granted."

Haynes went long and deep during that conversation, recalling both the bonds and tensions that ultinmately led to the Allmans' 2014 farewell show at the Beacon as well as his teenage roots as an aspiring singer-songwriter, which in turn led to Ashes and Dust. He also acknowledged the realities of his freelance life in a much tougher music business than the one he started in, as a country songwriter, session and touring guitarist and, in 1989, a new member of the Allman Brothers.

"We're in a situation where everybody's reinventing their role," Haynes said pensively. "Longevity is a whole different thing now. I read interviews with young musicians and hear people talk about how they're not sure what they're going to do five years from now."

 But, he went on, "I don't understand that. You're a musician — especially if you're fortunate enough to have done something in that. That's kind of your clue — this is what you do."

The end of the Allman Brothers Band came as a surprise to many fans, given everything that the group had survived. Could you feel it was getting closer, even before you and Derek announced your departures early last year?
We had been talking about it for three or four years — all of us. It's funny because I think back to when I joined the band 26 years ago. The original members would have conversations on how they viewed the Allman Brothers, that the legacy was not the typical thing where you could go out and play the hits — do the nostalgia trip. Even back then, the discussion was, "If this band is ever on the verge of becoming a nostalgia act, it would be time to quit."

The past 14 years we had with this incarnation were such a pleasant surprise to everyone. It seemed to getting better all the time. Then the conversations started again. [Drummer] Butch Trucks would say, "I've only got three or four more good years left." The first time I heard him say that was eight years ago [laughs].

When you and Derek both announced you were leaving, that set the stage for the end. Did you realize that might be the result?
Derek and I had basically become a package deal. If I didn't want to be there, then he didn't want to be there. And if he didn't want to be there, then I didn't. Neither one of us wanted to stay and initiate some new incarnation. That was something everybody felt as well. The band had come too far; the chemistry was really special. I don't think any of us wanted to start trying to get past that.

How did you feel at the end of that last night at the Beacon after "Trouble No More?"
We were all walking on air. Thankfully, that last show was all we hoped it would be — a real representation of what that band was capable of. Everybody was communicating and listening, more deeply entwined in the music than we had been in quite some time. I was proud of everyone, individually and collectively.

You wrote "Spots of Time," one of the songs on your new album, with Phil Lesh of the Grateful Dead, and played it in live shows with the Allmans. Would that have appeared on a new Allmans record, if you could have made one?
Everybody individually pushed for it — or acknowledged that we should do it — at varying times. We could just never get everybody to push for it at the same time.

Was that frustrating for you as a songwriter — trying to keep the repertoire moving forward rather than relying on the established glories in the old material?
Part of the frustration was based on the fact that myself, Derek and Gregg were all doing other things. That was taking precedent in some ways. And Derek and myself both felt that if we're going to make another Allman Brothers record, it needs to be as good or better than [2003's] Hittin' the Note. We needed to buckle down, get Gregg into songwriting mode. We had a nice half of an album, but it would have taken real effort to have a whole one.

What was the nice half?
There were a couple of instrumentals. We were doing "Spots of Time" and "Dust 'Til Dawn," another song I had written. There were a couple of cool cover arrangements floating around. It could have gone toward a whole record, but it would have taken all of us getting on the same page.

It's ironic that the record you made right after that show, Ashes and Dust, actually started with an Allmans gig. Because that's where you met Railroad Earth.
That's true. They opened for us at Red Rocks six years ago, I'm guessing. We went into the studio this past November, so that was just a month ...

After the Beacon finale.
The plan was "Before things start getting hectic, let's go into the studio and record as many songs together, in one direction, as possible. Then start thinking about what that means." There was a time when I thought I wanted the album to be a double CD. Or I'd put out two CDs simultaneously — call one Ashes, the other Dust. But cooler voices prevailed [laughs]. It's 80 minutes long anyway, a lot of music.

What was it about Railroad Earth that appealed to you as collaborators? You're a favvorite guest on other artists' records, but this is the other way around.
When it started, I was thinking two or three of the guys would join me in the studio. Then it turned into four or five — and eventually the entire band. I was careful to not feel like I was intruding on what they were doing. We would go into the studio fresh in the morning. I would sit down with an acoustic guitar — "Let's look at this song" — and we would work up an arrangement. We'd record a few takes, and if we liked what we got, we noved on to the next song — which, in each case, they had never heard before.

We do that in Gov't Mule, to some extent. But these songs were more complex, steeped more in folk music. I wanted them to be captured in the way I had lived with them, for years in some cases — the way I wrote it and would play it on acoustic guitar. I wanted it to be a folky singer-songwriter record.

Your liner notes refer to your adolescence in North Carolina, growing up in coffeehouses and clubs around older singer-songwriters. How important was that compared to your guitar influences, like the heavy British rock and blues of Cream and Free?  
Once I realized I could sneak into this folk club, Caesar's Parlor — that became my thing. I was obsessed with that. One night, there was a duo playing. Somebody said, "I hear this kid plays pretty good guitar. We should get him up to play." I was 14. That's all it took for me. I wanted to be there every weekend — and weekdays, too. There was always something cool going on, and the older cats — Malcolm Holcombe, Ray Sisk, Larry Rhodes — all took me under their wing. It was a non–rock & roll environment that was equally captivating on its own level.

Do you think you could have easily become a singer-songwriter instead of a blues-rock guitar player — more like Jackson Browne than Eric Clapton?
There was a large percentage of my makeup that would have loved that. Is it as large as the part that wants to play guitar? I don't know. I know that as a listener, I listen to songwriters more than I do guitar players.

How do you decide what to do next, from phase to project, from one band to another? Is there a plan, or do you operate on impulse?
It's mostly impulse. I want to make a traditional blues record at some point. I want to make an instrumental jazz record. But when and why is yet to be determined. I've had a lot of things on my plate for a long time, this new record being an example. It could have happened six or seven years ago. I can't really complain that I'm so busy — about having songs I haven't recorded yet or projects I haven't done. You have to remind yourself — it's the opposite that is really a problem.

"I listen to songwriters more than I do guitar players."

With the end of the Allmans and the Grateful Dead's recent Fare Thee Well shows, there is a powerful sense of seminal eras and institutions coming to an end — the rock equivalent of Duke Ellington or Louis Armstrong passing away.
Or Art Blakey or Frank Zappa — that's true. But the Grateful Dead music is going to be played by umpteen different camps. And the Allman Brothers' music will continue to be played and celebrated. Different people will keep that going. It's a strange thing to watch. But nobody thought it would go this long anyway.

I remember having conversations with [original Allmans guitarist] Dickey Betts. The Allman Brothers were broken up for nine years, before they reunited in 1989. They seemed to think that not only would they never reform, but there was a time when they didn't think they were relevant. Dickey told me that for him, seeing the Grateful Dead on one side of the equation, then Stevie Ray Vaughan and Robert Cray on the other side, having success — Dickey thought, "Somewhere in between those things is where we are. Maybe we are relevant. Maybe we could reappear."

One of the smartest things the band did — and Dickey was definitely a part of this thought process — was say, "If we're going to do this, let's go back to square one. Let's figure out what made the Allman Brothers great in the first place — beginning with the Duane and Berry [Oakley] era — and get back to that sound." That was the mission. And it was the best decision the band could have made.



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