Tuesday, January 21, 2020

ITP V.020 BOOK READING: "RAISING HELL" BY JON WEIDERHORN

Author JON WEIDERHORN has released "RAISING HELL", a book of short stories of the back stage lives of many hard rock and metal legends, unleashed 1/7/2020 via DIVERSION BOOKS.  











FROM SEASON OF MIST:



Tombs mainman Mike Hill is helping author Jon Weiderhorn kick off the release of his latest book, 'Raising Hell' at The Strand (828 Broadway) in New York City on Thursday, January 23 at 6:30 PM. Mike and Testament's Alex Skolnick will be reading passages from the book and talking about their own experiences Raising Hell on the road.
'Raising Hell' is entirely composed of great stories from metal artists. Each chapter is named after a metal song and every story is somehow related to a chapter title without being about the song. The book features a number of interviews from Season of Mist recording artists.




FROM AMAZON:


 From the author of the celebrated classic Louder Than Hell comes an oral history of the badass Heavy Metal lifestyle―the debauchery, demolition, and headbanging dedication―featuring metalhead musicians from Black Sabbath and Judas Priest to Twisted Sister and Quiet Riot to Disturbed, Megadeth, Throwdown and more.

In his song “You Can’t Kill Rock and Roll” Ozzy Osbourne sings, “Rock and roll is my religion and my law.” This is the mantra of the metal legends who populate Raising Hell―artists from Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Slipknot, Slayer, and Lamb of God to Twisted Sister, Quiet Riot, Disturbed, Megadeth, and many more! It’s also the guiding principle for underground voices like Misery Index, Gorgoroth, Municipal Waste, and Throwdown.

Through the decades, the metal scene has been populated by colorful individuals who have thwarted convention and lived by their own rules. For many, vice has been virtue, and the opportunity to record albums and tour has been an invitation to push boundaries and blow the lid off a Pandora’s box of riotous experiences: thievery, vandalism, hedonism, the occult, stage mishaps, mosh pit atrocities, and general insanity.

To the figures in this book, metal is a means of banding together to stick a big middle finger to a society that had already decided they didn’t belong. Whether they were oddballs who didn’t fit in or angry kids from troubled backgrounds, metal gave them a sense of identity.

Drawing from 150-plus first-hand interviews with vocalists, guitarists, bassists, keyboardists, and drummers, music journalist Jon Wiederhorn offers this collection of wild shenanigans from metal’s heaviest and most iconic acts―the parties, the tours, the mosh pits, the rage, the joy, the sex, the drugs . . . the heavy metal life!

Horns up!


Thanks-Stay Metal, Stay Brutal-\m/ -l-