RANDY BLYTHE, vocalist of Richmond, Virginia  thrash/metal core warriors LAMB OF GOD has posted an explanation of the bands cancelled FALL 2015 EUROPEAN tour with CHILDREN OF BODOM via TUMBLER. 
CHILDREN OF BODOM will CONTINUE on with the bands FALL 2015 EUROPEAN trek without LAMB OF GOD.
CHILDREN OF BODOM are looking to ADD more shows for tthe bands FALL 2015 EUROPEAN tour itinerary. 
LAMB OF GOD unleashed "STURM UND DRANG",    7/24/2015 via NUCLEAR BLAST  RECORDS.
 CHILDREN OF BODOM  unleashed  "I  WORSHIP CHAOS", 10/2/2015 via NUCLEAR BLAST   RECORDS.
FROM RANDY BLYTHE (LAMB OF GOD) VIA TUMBLER:
At the request of management, I have agreed to write a post 
concerning our recently cancelled tour of Europe. I wouldn’t have 
bothered to do this on my own, since a rather self-explanatory general 
statement has already been made explaining our reasons for leaving and 
that seems more than sufficient to me- the basic gist of the post was 
that something specific occurred that made some of us in the band feel 
that it was unwise to continue on with the tour, potentially putting 
ourselves, our crew, and large numbers of defenseless people in harm’s 
way. Simple enough. And I won’t elaborate on the details of that 
occurrence here, since I have no wish to add to the atmosphere of 
speculation and fear that currently surrounds terrorist activities in 
Europe- there are way too many ill-informed running mouths across the 
globe making an already tense, highly complex, and extremely fluid 
situation on that continent even worse. I feel pretty ridiculous even 
writing this (who knew deciding to cancel a tour after venues you have 
played start getting blown up would require any sort of explanation to 
anyone?), but since I have been asked nicely to do so by the people I 
employ to manage my band, I will. 
  And as one of the band members who said “I am done here,” I will 
speak solely for myself, not my band as a whole. I have no problem with 
this because, well, because frankly I don’t give a rat’s ass what most 
people think of me in general- historically, other people’s opinions of 
what I should or shouldn’t do or say hasn’t made much of an impact on my
 decision making process, and it’s not about to start now. Besides, I’m 
already more than used to being the bad guy, so I won’t lose any sleep 
over the inevitable pissy internet comments. That kind of stuff just 
isn’t significant enough to keep me up at night, and I don’t pay much 
attention to it anyway- I’ll leave that to the hand-wringers and 
gossipmongers who have nothing better to do. So here is what I have to 
say, and it’s all I’m going to say on this matter, PERIOD- those with 
just half of a functional brain in their heads will easily understand, 
the rest… well, who really gives a fuck what you (don’t) think anyway? 
Certainly not me.
  Obviously, no working band wants to cancel a tour, especially once 
it is underway- fans get disappointed, a lot of money gets lost by 
several different groups of people, a massive amount of time is wasted 
by all parties involved, it’s generally an all-around bad business move,
 and (trust me) it’s just a huge pain in the ass. My band is not in the 
habit of cancelling tours, so unless there is a family emergency, we 
carry on regardless of almost anything. And lots of “interesting” things
 have occurred in our 21 years of existence as a band. We have taken the
 stage five minutes after martial law has been declared (Bangkok, 
Thailand), we have been stuck in airports for multiple days unable to 
enter a country because the armed forces and the police force of that 
country have decided to go to war with each other (Ecuador), we have 
narrowly missed, driven through, or managed to maneuver around deadly 
natural catastrophes (earthquakes in China, floods in Poland, hurricanes
 here in America, and more). Personally, I’ve gone onstage with a broken
 arm, broken ribs, various broken toes, a broken nose, staples in my 
forehead due to a stage dive gone wrong- hell, I’ve even been to prison 
in a foreign country, gotten out after a month, and played massive gigs a
 little over a week later. In fact, before the first night of this very 
tour had even gotten underway, I met a group of particularly unpleasant 
young people on a dark street and consequently played the first few 
shows with a banging headache.
  My band and I aren’t even strangers to touring in an environment of
 terror- just over a month after September 11, 2001 we played in Times 
Square, downtown Manhattan, New York City (a lot of bands, especially 
European bands, cancelled tours of the States around that time, and I 
didn’t blame them- it was a seriously heavy time to be in America). But 
such is the life of a touring musician, so something really, really 
serious has to occur to make us cancel. 
  And something really, really serious (and utterly heartbreaking) 
did occur in Paris, prompting several bands to go home early or cancel 
upcoming tours- I couldn’t blame them. But my band didn’t leave- we paid
 attention to what was going on, evaluated the situation the best we 
could, and decided to continue on with the tour. Despite some obvious 
concerns, it felt like the right thing to do.
  Sitting in a hotel room in London, as I followed along in real-time
 during the tragic massacre in Paris at Bataclan I could see the layout 
of the club in my mind, and I thought “That is a terrible spot to be 
trapped in like that (which of course is exactly why the gunmen chose 
it)- God help those people inside.” It was sickening to me that people 
were dying just because they wanted to see a rock show, and what made it
 worse was that I could clearly envision it happening as it went down- 
I’d played that club several times before. 89 people died in Bataclan 
that night, including one individual known to several crew members of 
our tour. The next day the mood was serious before the gig, but all the 
bands got up and played their hearts out- it felt like the right thing 
to do, to try and raise people’s spirits. From the stage, I told the 
audience to try not to be consumed by hatred or to live in fear- after 
all, we were still onstage, people had come out, and no one wants to sit
 around and be overwhelmed by anger, anxiety, and sadness over something
 they have no control over. It was an emotional show for everyone 
involved.
  The next day the tour played another smaller UK gig in Birmingham. I
 was forced to stop the show so an injured member of the crowd could be 
carried out to an ambulance, but overall it still felt good, like we 
were doing the right thing. 
  Then the band and crew flew to Stuttgart, Germany. We had 
originally planned to ride the ferry from Dover, England to Calais, 
France and from there make our way to Germany, but after the bombings 
and shootings in Paris the French government shut the borders, and we 
figured either the ferry wouldn’t be available or it would just be a 
complete security nightmare, so we spent money on flights. Imagine my 
surprise when I talked to our bus driver the day of our gig in 
Stuttgart, asking him how crowded and hectic the ferry ride was- “Oh, 
no, it was almost empty,” he said “And when we got to France, we were 
just waved in- there were no cops there at the border or anywhere in 
sight.” Umm… ok. That seemed just a little loose to me, given that just 
three days previously men who had traveled from a nearby different 
country had blown themselves up in Paris after massacring over 100 human
 beings, but I’m no security expert, so what do I know, right? Right 
before I walked onstage in Stuttgart, I saw on the news that they 
evacuated a soccer stadium north of us in Hannover, Germany due to 
threat of explosives. I didn’t exactly feel relaxed going onstage that 
night, but it turned out to be a great gig, despite once again me having
 to stop the show so another injured crowd member could get wheeled out 
to an ambulance (two gigs in a row of people getting badly hurt was a 
real bummer for sure though- it really throws things off when you know 
an audience member is injured). And so we continued on through mainland 
Europe to Tilburg, Netherlands- once again, it felt like the right thing
 to do.
  I woke up in a great mood around 1 or 2 pm on the day of the 
Tilburg show (I like Holland, and always enjoy my time there), went into
 the venue, ate lunch and began looking online to see if there was a 
camera store nearby. Sometime later that afternoon, soon before the band
 was scheduled to soundcheck, our tour manager called us together, 
closed the dressing room door, and said “I’ve got some news, and it’s 
not good.” He then informed us of a specific occurrence that made me 
immediately say “Fuck this, I’m not going on that stage tonight.” 
  At that moment, it no longer felt like the right thing to do 
anymore, not at all. It did not feel like the right thing to still stand
 on stage and tell people “Don’t worry about it- come on in and enjoy 
yourselves. There’s no need for concern.” It did not feel like the right
 thing- not for myself, not for the people I employ, and not for our 
fans. Things had quickly changed- it felt foolish, it felt 
irresponsible, and it felt potentially very, very dangerous.
  As I mentioned earlier, I do not wish to add more rumors or 
speculation to an already tense and constantly shifting situation in 
Europe, so I won’t go into details. Suffice it to say, this new specific
 piece of information (not some nebulous news story about the generally 
pensive atmosphere pervading Europe at the time) gave me enough to pause
 to think “I am not going to chance endangering the lives of myself, my 
crew, and the 1,800 or so fans expected to show up this evening by going
 on with this show. I can’t tell these people they are safe in here. It 
does not feel right, screw this, I’m out of here.” Furthermore, what I 
had just been told made me think “Even if it’s nothing tonight, I’m not 
going to go through this every day. Our job is done here for now- it’s 
time to go home. It doesn’t feel safe enough to cram ourselves and 
hundreds of people into venues anymore.” 
  And I wasn’t the only one who thought or spoke that way, but since 
I’m writing this, I’ll own it here. That was my judgement call, I stand 
by it, I was at the time (and I remain to this very second) completely 
and utterly 100% unapologetic about it to anyone anywhere, and if placed
 in the same situation right this instant the only thing I would do 
differently would be somehow get the words “Fuck this, I’m done” out of 
my mouth quicker (which would probably be difficult, but I would damn 
sure try). Shortly after our tour manager told the club manager we had 
decided not to play, the venue put a press release saying the gig was 
cancelled, and our crew began to pack up everything onstage. The doors 
never opened to the general public, and I feel very, very good about 
being part of the decision that caused that. Why? 
  Because aside from some grumpy fans’s feelings, no one got hurt 
that night. To my knowledge, everyone made it home ok. Sure, if we had 
done the show, maybe nothing would have happened anyway. Maybe it would 
have been a great gig, as all our gigs at that club have been before. 
Maybe cancelling the gig was all for nothing.
  But maybe not. And if things had gone badly, afterwards while I sat
 talking to the cops (because in all probability, once guns started 
going off, I would have made it out the nearby back exit while the fans 
and maybe some of my crew got stuck inside and gunned downed or blown to
 bits like those poor people in Paris), I would have said to myself “You
 got some specific information. You knew there was something potentially
 sketchy. You didn’t feel right about this. Why didn’t you just cancel 
the show, you stupid, selfish, idiot?” 
  When I said I was done, did I know that some fans would be bummed 
out about our cancelling the tour? Yes. Did I realize that this was 
going to cost us a lot of money? Yes. Did I know that some people would 
be incapable of understanding why we were going home and complain about 
it? Yes. Did I care? Hell no. And I still don’t- in fact, looking at 
news about the current situation in Europe, I feel better and better 
about leaving before something else happened, either at our show or 
anywhere else over there. I don’t feel like constantly wondering what 
the security climate in the next country we are scheduled to play in is,
 playing terror alert hopscotch through Europe right now just to play a 
few fucking heavy metal concerts- I’m glad I’m home. I feel like I made 
the right decision, and that’s all that matters to me. I don’t care what
 anyone else thinks.
  Once a few years ago in Europe, I made a poor decision to let a 
show go on, despite the fact that that show was obviously dangerous and 
out of control. While the particular circumstances were very different 
than what was happening in Tilburg, the general problem was the same- 
there was a possibility that band members and/or fans could get hurt. I 
ignored that possibility, and as it turned out, a fan did get hurt that 
night- in fact, he died a month later as a result of his injuries. I 
went to prison in Europe for a bit over it, got out on bail, then 
returned to Europe to stand trial and face up to any responsibility I 
may have had in the matter- that story is pretty well known, so I won’t 
bother explaining it further. What I will say is that I already have one
 dead person in Europe forever attached to my name- I won’t add anymore 
if I can prevent it, no matter who it pisses off or disappoints. I’m not
 going to play around with my life or the lives of others if I feel 
there is a dangerous situation I could potentially stop from occurring 
by simply saying “The show is over.” It’s not worth it to me, and if 
someone can’t understand or won’t accept my reasoning, then I have 
nothing for them but a firmly raised middle finger. 
  I will not be castigated or chastised for making a decision I felt 
was in the best interest of the safety of a) first and foremost, myself,
 and b) hundreds of other people. Like it or lump it, that’s the way it 
fucking is.
  I hope that the situation in Europe and everywhere else calms down,
 posthaste (and yes, I know that an attack could occur in America- 
obviously, I’d feel better about being at home to help deal with it the 
best I could, or at the very least die on my native soil). I hope no one
 else dies anywhere on the planet (and this is a global problem) because
 some misguided maniacs with suicide vests and Kalashnikovs decide to 
martyr themselves over their twisted interpretation of divine will. But 
yesterday at least 21 people died in Mali during a hostage situation at 
the hands of terrorists, and as I write this, Milan, Italy (where we 
were booked in three days) is on high alert. And the city of Brussels 
(where we were scheduled to play next week) has been placed on the 
highest possible alert, with governmental officials telling people to 
avoid high concentration areas like sporting events, train depots, 
airports, and… concerts. Downtown is basically shut down, and I’m more 
than happy we won’t be filling a concert venue there (or any other place
 at the moment) for something to potentially go terribly, terribly 
wrong. The way I feel, to do so at this particular time seems not only 
risky to myself, but irresponsible to our crew and fans- enormously, 
cosmically, irresponsible. And as of this second, the venue we were 
supposed to play in Brussels is closed anyway. I guess they don’t feel 
safe remaining open at this time, what with their government basically 
telling everyone to expect something really bad to happen at any moment.
 Not the best environment for a rock show.
  While we were still on tour, when other bands canceled their tours 
immediately after the attacks in Paris, one typical and very widespread 
online reaction I saw (and was completely baffled by) was “ISIS wins! By
 not playing, they are letting ISIS win!” 
  “By not playing, they are letting ISIS win”? People, do you have any idea of how colossally stupid this sounds? 
  Please crawl out of the hive mind echo chamber for a second and try
 to use your own head for a change- these are ROCK BANDS trying to play a
 gig without being gunned down onstage, not Navy SEALS assaulting a 
mountain stronghold in the Hindu Kush. You aren’t going to stop a bullet
 with a ripping guitar solo- Jimi fucking Hendrix couldn’t do that, even
 if he resurrected and came back to rock Europe one more time. This 
isn’t a game of Mortal Kombat or a goddamn G.I Joe cartoon or just some 
news story- almost 100 people died horrific deaths just over a week ago,
 screaming with terror as they were gunned down like fish in a barrel 
simply because they were crammed into a club trying to have a good time 
at a rock show. These were real human beings, not blips in a Twitter 
feed. Tragically, more people might die before it’s over. I hope not, 
but overall the situation in Europe doesn’t look good at this second. I 
encourage those of you who don’t agree with my assessment of the 
situation to immediately book a ticket to Belgium, walk around with 
picket signs in front of Ancienne Belgique (the club we were booked to 
play in Brussels) and yell at them about how they aren’t properly 
fighting terrorism by closing their doors. I’m sure your presence there 
will do the people of Brussels a ton of good. Hell, the Belgian 
authorities will probably immediately give you a job as a high-ranking 
officer in their anti-terrorism task force (since you obviously know how
 to end the current crisis). 
  Right now, several of my friends remain in Europe on tour. I hope 
they have good gigs, I hope they stay safe over there, and I hope (most 
importantly) that they return home safely to their loved ones. It is 
their decision to stay, and I respect that. When you join a touring 
band, you aren’t issued some sort of rock-n-roll handbook that reads 
“Section C: In case the country you are touring in falls under threat of
 attack by homicidal Jihadists, viable options are: A) play only secret 
basement shows until the threat passes, B) appeal to the local armed 
forces for a loan of assault rifles, C) issue body armor to all band, 
crew, and concert attendees D) roll the dice and hope for the best or E)
 catch the next thing smoking home.” There is no textbook answer for a 
situation like this, so I can’t even pretend to say what other people 
should or shouldn’t do. I can only do what I think is the right thing to
 do for me and mine, and so I did. I stayed on tour in Europe until 
something concrete, not a general sense of dread, made me decide to go 
home. And I don’t regret going home in the slightest- not one tiny 
shred.
  None of this makes me happy- not cancelling a tour, not losing 
money, not bumming out fans, not people having to worry about being 
blown up, and especially not people dying. It sucks on a very, very deep
 level. And I hope nothing else happens. I honestly hope we cancelled a 
tour for absolutely nothing, so that people can point  their fat little 
fingers at this later and laugh their heads off at my unwarranted 
concerns. I would rather be ridiculed by the entire online virtual 
peanut gallery of pinheads than take chances on myself or anyone else 
getting hurt or killed (and yes, I include even the dummies who are mad 
and still can’t understand why we cancelled) because I ignored what I 
felt was the smartest move given our circumstances. I can deal with 
people disagreeing with me and my actions, no problem. I could not deal 
with a news story that reads “Hundreds die at lamb of god concert; 
authorities say potential warning signs were ignored by band.” 
  Then people would have something of actual consequence to bitch 
about, not a few cancelled heavy metal concerts- “How could those 
fucking American morons play a show when they thought something might 
happen? Why didn’t they cancel? Now there are dead people everywhere- 
what a bunch of ASSHOLES.” No thanks- better safe than on CNN.
  Y'all stay safe, and let’s hope this mess gets sorted out soon. 
  That is all I have to say.
Thanks-Stay Metal, Stay Brutal-\m/ -l-  

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