scott weiland and the wildabouts blaster album download free Rapidgator. Получите преимущества премиум-доступа прямо сейчас! Скорость скачивания без ограничений Количество одновременных скачиваний неограничено Никаких очередей для скачивания Отсутствие рекламы Загрузка файлов до 80 гигабайт Безопасно скачивайте файлы по защищённому протоколу https. Шаг 1: Выберите тарифный план. Ваш выбор: Copyright © 2010-2021 Rapidgator, Все права защищены. To continue, please agree to our Terms of Service and Cookie Policy. We use cookies for functional and analytical purposes. I Agree. SCOTT WEILAND Tribute: ART OF ANARCHY Debut Album Available For Free Download. The self-titled debut album from ART OF ANARCHY , the band featuring Scott Weiland ( STONE TEMPLE PILOTS , VELVET REVOLVER ) on vocals, John Moyer ( DISTURBED ) on bass, Jon and Vince Votta on guitar and drums, and Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal ( GUNS N' ROSES ) as co-guitarist and producer, is available for free download at this location. The members of ART OF ANARCHY explain in a statement: "In memory of Scott Weiland , we would like to offer the ART OF ANARCHY record digitally for free to the world during this holiday season. We hope everyone enjoys listening as much as we enjoyed creating it." "Art Of Anarchy" was released on June 2 via Century Media imprint Another Century . Weiland earlier in the year denied that he was ever a member of ART OF ANARCHY , explaining that he was paid to contribute to the group's CD as a session musician and a songwriter. "It was a project I did where I was just supposed to have written the lyrics and melodies for this band that I'd never heard of, and I was paid to do it," Weiland told The Daily Beast . "And so I did it, and did some production work on it, and the next thing I knew there were press releases that I was in the band. I mean, I did one photo shoot with them, 'cause it was part of the deal, but I'm not in the band." He added: "I wish them all the best once they find a singer, I hope they do well, but [ SCOTT WEILAND AND THE WILDABOUTS ] is my band." In addition to Weiland , the recording lineup for ART OF ANARCHY 's first album included GUNS N' ROSES guitarist Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal and DISTURBED bassist John Moyer . The rest of the lineup is filled out by Jon Votta on guitar and Vince Votta on drums. In a statement to Rolling Stone , Thal wrote that " ART OF ANARCHY is not competition or a threat or interference to what any of us are doing — it's a complement, an addition, one I'm proud of creatively." He continued: "[There is] no need to minimize or undermine or devalue a project we all worked on together over the course of two years. "I enjoyed working with Scott … The five of us made an album together. Scott is currently the singer of the band. It's in writing; no confusion. But yes, Scott 's solo album and tour are his priority and we're all on the same page about getting another vocalist if ART OF ANARCHY hits the road. But we don't need to cross that bridge just yet. Taking everything as it comes, one step at a time, letting it evolve organically. Where it goes from here (and with who!) is yet to be seen." ART OF ANARCHY is the brainchild of Thal and the Votta brothers, who have been friends for 18 years dating back to their days on the New York music scene. Thal also serves as producer and engineer on the album. Weiland was no stranger to supergroups, having formed VELVET REVOLVER with several former members of GUNS N' ROSES more than a decade ago. He was dismissed from that band in 2008, rejoining STP until they also fired him in early 2013. He and THE WILDABOUTS will put out a new album in March. Thal has been with GUNS N' ROSES since 2006, playing on the 2008 album "Chinese Democracy" . He has also released a number of solo CDs. Moyer has been DISTURBED 's bassist since 2004. The band released its new album, "Immortalized" , on August 21. Toxicology tests revealed on December 18 that Weiland died from a combination of drugs and alcohol. The Hennepin County Medical Examiner in Minneapolis said that the former STONE TEMPLE PILOTS frontman overdosed on cocaine, MDA — which is chemically related to ecstasy — and ethanol. The report also indicated that heart disease and asthma were "significant" conditions and that Weiland 's "multi-substance dependence" was also a factor. Weiland was found dead on his tour bus on December 3 at the age of 48. Blaster. Emerging from a seven-year semi-hiatus -- one broken for the release of Christmas and covers albums, plus a flirtation with playing in a band called Art of Anarchy with Bumblefoot -- Scott Weiland returns to action with Blaster, the first record he's cut with a new backing band called the Wildabouts. The supporting cast may be new but the sounds remain the same: he's still enamored of the heavy metal, glam, and psychedelia that have formed his signature since the glory days of Stone Temple Pilots. With such a familiar palette, details matter and the aptly titled Blaster lacks in subtlety. Much of it churns at crackling digital overdrive, sounding brutal, loud, and ugly, but beneath that gnarled surface Weiland can still deliver the kind of candied hooks that keep him firmly situated as a guilty pleasure. Usually, these hooks grab hold on the lightest songs: the snaky sway of "Way She Moves," the icy new romanticism of "Youth Quake," and, especially, "Beach Pop," a piece of sticky AM bubblegum pop that earns its handclaps. These, along with the sweetly sun-kissed country-rock closer "Circles," are all the more appealing because they're surrounded by heavy rockers so big-footed they often stumble upon themselves. So, a mixed bag: good enough to satisfy and also to wish the whole thing was slightly better. Scott Weiland on his new album Blaster and the power of David Bowie. Today is a bittersweet day for Scott Weiland, as it marks both the release of his band the Wildabouts’ new album Blaster but also the passing of longtime friend and Wildabouts guitarist Jeremy Brown. Late last night on his Facebook page, Weiland wrote this: We received a call today about my friend Jeremy Brown that has shaken me to the core. We were all concerned this afternoon when Jeremy didn’t show up for a long-scheduled rehearsal for tonight’s album release show at School Night. An hour later, Jeremy’s family called us to say that he had passed away. I am in shock right now, everyone that knows him is devastated. It is a terrible loss that goes beyond words. He is one of my best friends, a truest friend and one of the most gifted guitar players that I’ve ever known. A true genius. It’s impossible to explain how much he will be missed and what a hole this will leave in our hearts. A post on Facebook feels so trite and small compared to the love that I have for him and for the talent that has passed on but I felt it was necessary to at least start here. Please keep his family in your thoughts. Only a few hours before hearing that news, the former frontman of Stone Temple Pilots and Velvet Revolver called EW to chat about the impending release of Blaster , and he credited Brown as an intergral part of creating the album, which is more of a straight-ahead rock record than past Weiland solo efforts. “That was a set of chords and a riff that Jeremy brought to rehearsal, and he showed us the riff and we started jamming on it and I came up with the melody and the lyrics,” Weiland tells EW about “Hotel Rio,” one of the highlights of Blaster . “The process was the same on most of the songs—Jeremy bringing in these great pieces and all of us really collaborating.” Blaster represents a departure for Weiland as a solo artist. “When I created the Wildabouts with my friends, we decided we wanted to make a band-sounding album, a rock-sounding album,” he says. “I made two solo albums before that were more experimental, and I think that they didn’t really resonate with my fan base because they were too out there, too artsy. I wanted to make an album that would resonate with the fans and still make myself happy on an artistic level as well.” The result is a big, loud, glammy-sounding album that pays homage to Weiland’s heroes, including T. Rex and David Bowie. “One thing that has really influenced me with Bowie where I’ve taken an approach from him is how he changes from album to album and has always modified his sound and his appearance,” Weiland says. “I think that’s an important thing. I think if an artist stays stagnant in one style, you end up becoming stagnant artistically in your songwriting. You get bored. I always feel like I have to change styles and keep on evolving.” He keeps pressing forward lyrically as well. The bulk of the lyrics on Blaster are inspired by his wife, photographer Jamie Wachtel, with the rest coming from a more expanded sense of fiction. “As I’ve gotten older and my life is a lot more stable, I’ve gotten more into storytelling,” he explains. “I’ve listened to a lot of Dylan and listened to how he wrote stories.
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