courtney love at the mtv vma rehearsals, 1995
Vampire Queen.
Source: X
Courtney Love early-mid 90s looks
joey jordison
me btw
+rose+mortem+
[x] / [x]
happy valentineās day š
she's my kanye
You've heard of rot girl winter, now get ready for creepy and unsettling girl spring
I think all computers should have cd slots and all phones should have headphone ports send tumble
Wilted and faded somewhere in Hollywood
Illustrations from Pierre LouĆæsā Les Chansons de Bilitis by Georges Barbier (1922)
studded bracalets!! (not my pic)
By Tom Lindgren Photo: Frank White
Hit Parader 462 ā March 2003 (drive link)
They say that lightning rarely strikes twice in the same place. But these days youād have a hard time convincing Joey Jordison about the validity of such a claim. With the immediate, out-of-the-box success of the Murderdolls, Jordison has now played a vital role in helping two bands reach the apex of New Metal acclaim. And while the āDolls have yet to attain the level of fame and fortune enjoyed by Jordisonās āotherā band, Slipknot, this trash-āem, bash-āem glam metal unit seems well on their way to grabbing hold of rock and rollās proverbial gold ring. On their debut disc, Beyond the Valley of the Murderdolls, Jordison and his bandmatesā vocalist Wednesday 13, guitarist Acey Slade, bassist Erik Griffin and drummer Ben Gravesā have proven that theyāve got what it takes to deliver the kind of high-impact, action-packed sound that a fast-growing legion of todayās fans crave to hear. With all this good stuff goinā on, we figured what could be better than having a heart-to-heart chat with Jordison and Wednesday about all the positive things happening within their musical lives.
Hit Parader: How satisfied have you been by the kind of reaction that your first album has generated?
Joey Jordison: Itās been great. But one of the first things I learned with Slipknot is that you canāt let any sort of commercial expectations get in the way of what youāre doing. Youāve got to make the music you want to make and then let things just take their course. But since the music of the Murderdolls does have a very broad-based appeal, I would hope that a lot of people would get into it. This isnāt just another one of those records with the kind of depressing lyrics that you hear out there. This music is the polar opposite of thatā in fact itās the polar opposite of just about everything that Iāve heard played in the last decade.
HP: Do you include Slipknot in that assessment?
JJ: Absolutely! Iām not criticizing what weāve done in that band in any way. But this band was designed to be different, and it is. If I wanted to make the kind of music we make in Slipknot, I just would have waited until we all went back into the studio. But I wanted to do something different. I play guitar hereā not drums. There are no masks, and the music is about as fun and exciting as it can be. Iām not saying itās better⦠only that itās different.
HP: The band has received some criticism because of your lyrics. Was that something you anticipated?
JJ: It wasnāt something that surprised me because a lot of people take things on a very superficial basis. They donāt want to delve one inch under the surface because they might end up revealing the truth. Anyone whoās listened to our songs knows that on songs like Graverobbing U.S.A. and Kill Miss America weāre just having fun. Thatās the main thingā this is great rock and roll music that is fun to play and fun to listen to. Donāt try to analyze it much more than that.
Wednesday 13: Iām one of those people who is a definite product of his environment. I grew up in North Carolina, which is a conservative place where there really isnāt that much to do. So I was forced to listen to a lot of music and watch a lot of horror movies. Thatās the real inspiration for most of my lyrics. I loved movies like Night of the Living Dead and Friday the 13th, and some of the stuff we do plays off of that same kind of mentality. You just canāt take it too seriously.
HP: Youāre (sic) sound is an amalgam of old and new. How would you describe the essence of what the Murderdolls are doing?
JJ: Itās rock and roll, thatās the best way that I can describe it. Rock music has lost so much of its edge over the last ten years. What was once this great outlet for rebellion and fun has become this sad-mouthed excuse for bemoaning everything. Our goal was to get rock and roll back on the right path. I like to say that the world needs us right nowā that this is the right time for the Murderdolls to make their mark.
13: Weāre taking all of our influences, everyone from Motley Crue and Twisted Sister to Alice Cooper and the Sex Pistols and just mixing them all together, shaking them up, and seeing what comes out. Itās just a blast. Thereās an edge of craziness and danger to everything that spices it all up and makes it very exciting.
HP: Do you believe that itās time for so-called āhair metalā to make a comeback?
13: Iāve never trusted any musician that looked too normal. I want my rock and roll heroes to be larger-than-life. Maybe todayās kids donāt know any better because thatās all theyāve been exposed to, but weāre here to show āem that you can look cool and sound cool too. Itās really sad that an entire generation of kids have grown up without seeing bands really lay it on the line on stage. I remember seeing the Plasmatics, and watching them destroy everything in their path. That was incredible⦠that was rock and roll!
JJ: Weāre trying to avoid being labeled in any way, but we know thatās asking for the impossible. Weād like everyone to just enjoy what weāre doing, but we know that a lot of people are gonna look at us, listen to the music and call us āglamā, ātrash metalā, āhair metalā, whatever. Itās no big deal. We knew from the day we came up with all this, that the Murderdolls were going to shake things up. Thatās all that matters. By now, weāve heard it all, and itās all okay. Weāre presenting something thatās very aggressive, thatās got a definite attitude. Weāre not trying to reinvent the wheel here. Weāre just trying to make sure that the wheel runs as fast, as loud and as far as it possibly can. This is the kind of rock that I loveā the kind of stuff I grew up listening to. The problem is that nobody is playing that kind of music these days. Thatās why I keep saying that the Murderdolls are needed now more than ever before.
this is who I aspire to be for drumming. FUCK why is he so cool?
Vol. 3
Me and the bestie