position:drummer

  • Is This the Greatest Photo in Jazz History? - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/08/nyregion/thelonius-monk-charlier-parker.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

    A friend gave Bob Parent a tip: be at the Open Door on West 3rd Street on Sunday.

    Mr. Parent, a photographer with a knack for showing up at the right time and place, didn’t need much encouragement. He arrived at the jazz club early in the evening of Sept. 13, 1953. It was unseasonably cool for late summer. The New York Times front page detailed the marriage of Senator John F. Kennedy and the glamorous Jacqueline Bouvier in Newport, R.I. The Brooklyn Dodgers had just clinched the pennant in Milwaukee.

    The show that night was billed as the Thelonious Monk Trio. Monk, 35, was already a prolific composer and piano innovator, yet it would take a decade for his brilliance to be fully appreciated by mainstream America. The trio was rounded out by Charles Mingus, 31, on standup bass and the youngster Roy Haynes, a 28-year-old hotshot drummer everyone called “Snap Crackle.”

    With Monk, Mingus and Haynes, he had certainly booked a top-shelf trio, reason enough to make the trip downtown. The word on the street that afternoon — and what a savvy Bob Parent already knew — was that there was a good chance Charlie Parker would sit in with the trio.

    #Musique #Jazz #Photographie

  • Monkey Thinking
    https://hackernoon.com/monkey-thinking-7241e9db353e?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3---4

    Let’s begin with this music video…https://medium.com/media/0ea26cbdfe8f558064d2355d815c0aef/hrefWithout a doubt this is my favourite song and since hearing it first in late 2013, I’ve probably listened to it a few times each week since. It was during one of those weeks that I started working on a feature for a programming-project that heavily uses natural-language processing/understanding and it was during this song, that I asked myself:What’s the difference with how I hear this song and how the computer hears it?The key in answering this is to first consider how computers attempt to emulate our own physiological processes when we hear the opening line, “Have you got colour in your cheeks’…”. So, how do we hear that?When Matt Helders (the drummer in the Arctic Monkeys) starts with the (...)

    #monkey-thinking #engineering #computer-science #medicine #neuroscience

  • Plagiarists or innovators ? The Led Zeppelin paradox endures
    https://theconversation.com/plagiarists-or-innovators-the-led-zeppelin-paradox-endures-102368

    La musique entre usage des communs et plagiat, entre appropriation et « just have fun ». Superbe article.

    Fifty years ago – in September 1968 – the legendary rock band Led Zeppelin first performed together, kicking off a Scandinavian tour billed as the New Yardbirds.

    The new, better name would come later that fall, while drummer John Bonham’s death in 1980 effectively ended their decade-defining reign. But to this day, the band retains the same iconic status it held back in the 1970s: It ranks as one of the best-selling music acts of all time and continues to shape the sounds of new and emerging groups young enough to be the band members’ grandchildren.

    Yet, even after all this time – when every note, riff and growl of Zeppelin’s nine-album catalog has been pored over by fans, cover artists and musicologists – a dark paradox still lurks at the heart of its mystique. How can a band so slavishly derivative – and sometimes downright plagiaristic – be simultaneously considered so innovative and influential?

    How, in other words, did it get to have its custard pie and eat it, too?

    As a scholar who researches the subtle complexities of musical style and originality as well as the legal mechanisms that police and enforce them, such as copyright law, I find this a particularly devilish conundrum. The fact that I’m also a bassist in a band that fuses multiple styles of music makes it personal.
    A pattern of ‘borrowing’

    For anyone who quests after the holy grail of creative success, Led Zeppelin has achieved something mythical in stature: a place in the musical firmament, on its own terms, outside of the rules and without compromise.

    When Led Zeppelin debuted its eponymous first album in 1969, there’s no question that it sounded new and exciting. My father, a baby boomer and dedicated Beatles fan, remembers his chagrin that year when his middle school math students threw over the Fab Four for Zeppelin, seemingly overnight. Even the stodgy New York Times, which decried the band’s “plastic sexual superficiality,” felt compelled, in the same article, to acknowledge its “enormously successful … electronically intense blending” of musical styles.

    Yet, from the very beginning, the band was also dogged with accusations of musical pilfering, plagiarism and copyright infringement – often justifiably.

    The band’s first album, “Led Zeppelin,” contained several songs that drew from earlier compositions, arrangements and recordings, sometimes with attribution and often without. It included two Willie Dixon songs, and the band credited both to the influential Chicago blues composer. But it didn’t credit Anne Bredon when it covered her song “Babe I’m Gonna Leave You.”

    The hit “Dazed and Confused,” also from that first album, was originally attributed to Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page. However in 2010, songwriter Jake Holmes filed a lawsuit claiming that he’d written and recorded it in 1967. After the lawsuit was settled out of court, the song is now credited in the liner notes of re-releases as “inspired by” Holmes.
    ‘Dazed and Confused’ by Jake Holmes.

    The band’s second album, “Led Zeppelin II,” picked up where the first left off. Following a series of lawsuits, the band agreed to list Dixon as a previously uncredited author on two of the tracks, including its first hit single, “Whole Lotta Love.” An additional lawsuit established that blues legend Chester “Howlin’ Wolf” Burnett was a previously uncredited author on another track called “The Lemon Song.”

    Musical copyright infringement is notoriously challenging to establish in court, hence the settlements. But there’s no question the band engaged in what musicologists typically call “borrowing.” Any blues fan, for instance, would have recognized the lyrics of Dixon’s “You Need Love” – as recorded by Muddy Waters – on a first listen of “Whole Lotta Love.”
    Dipping into the commons or appropriation?

    Should the band be condemned for taking other people’s songs and fusing them into its own style?

    Or should this actually be a point of celebration?

    The answer is a matter of perspective. In Zeppelin’s defense, the band is hardly alone in the practice. The 1960s folk music revival movement, which was central to the careers of Baez, Holmes, Bredon, Dixon and Burnett, was rooted in an ethic that typically treated musical material as a “commons” – a wellspring of shared culture from which all may draw, and to which all may contribute.

    Most performers in the era routinely covered “authorless” traditional and blues songs, and the movement’s shining star, Bob Dylan, used lyrical and musical pastiche as a badge of pride and display of erudition – “Look how many old songs I can cram into this new song!” – rather than as a guilty, secret crutch to hold up his own compositions.

    Why shouldn’t Zeppelin be able to do the same?
    Willie Dixon’s imprint can be found on a number of Led Zeppelin songs. Brianmcmillen, CC BY-SA

    On the other hand, it’s hard to ignore the racial dynamics inherent in Led Zeppelin’s borrowing. Willie Dixon and Howlin’ Wolf were African-Americans, members of a subjugated minority who were – especially back then – excluded from reaping their fair share of the enormous profits they generated for music labels, publishers and other artists.

    Like their English countrymen Eric Clapton and The Rolling Stones, Zeppelin’s attitude toward black culture seems eerily reminiscent of Lord Elgin’s approach to the marble statues of the Parthenon and Queen Victoria’s policy on the Koh-i-Noor diamond: Take what you can and don’t ask permission; if you get caught, apologize without ceding ownership.

    Led Zeppelin was also accused of lifting from white artists such as Bredon and the band Spirit, the aggrieved party in a recent lawsuit over the rights to Zeppelin’s signature song “Stairway to Heaven.” Even in these cases, the power dynamics were iffy.

    Bredon and Spirit are lesser-known composers with lower profiles and shallower pockets. Neither has benefited from the glow of Zeppelin’s glory, which has only grown over the decades despite the accusations and lawsuits leveled against them.
    A matter of motives

    So how did the band pull it off, when so many of its contemporaries have been forgotten or diminished? How did it find and keep the holy grail? What makes Led Zeppelin so special?

    I could speculate about its cultural status as an avatar of trans-Atlantic, post-hippie self-indulgence and “me generation” rebellion. I could wax poetic about its musical fusion of pre-Baroque and non-Western harmonies with blues rhythms and Celtic timbres. I could even accuse it, as many have over the years, of cutting a deal with the devil.

    Instead, I’ll simply relate a personal anecdote from almost 20 years ago. I actually met frontman Robert Plant. I was waiting in line at a lower Manhattan bodega around 2 a.m. and suddenly realized Plant was waiting in front of me. A classic Chuck Berry song was playing on the overhead speakers. Plant turned to look at me and mused, “I wonder what he’s up to now?” We chatted about Berry for a few moments, then paid and went our separate ways.

    Brief and banal though it was, I think this little interlude – more than the reams of music scholarship and journalism I’ve read and written – might hold the key to solving the paradox.

    Maybe Led Zeppelin is worthy because, like Sir Galahad, the knight who finally gets the holy grail, its members’ hearts were pure.

    During our brief exchange, it was clear Plant didn’t want to be adulated – he didn’t need his ego stroked by a fawning fan. Furthermore, he and his bandmates were never even in it for the money. In fact, for decades, Zeppelin refused to license its songs for television commercials. In Plant’s own words, “I only wanted to have some fun.”

    Maybe the band retained its fame because it lived, loved and embodied rock and roll so absolutely and totally – to the degree that Plant would start a conversation with a total stranger in the middle of the night just to chat about one of his heroes.

    This love, this purity of focus, comes out in its music, and for this, we can forgive Led Zeppelin’s many trespasses.

    #Communs #Led_Zeppelin #Musique

  • Thelonious Monk Creates a List of Tips for Playing a Gig: “Don’t Listen to Me, I Am Supposed to Be Accompanying You!” | Open Culture
    http://www.openculture.com/2012/09/thelonious_monk_scribbles_a_list_of_tips_for_playing_a_gig.html

    Transcribed by soprano sax player Steve Lacy in a spiral-bound notebook, Thelonious Monk created a primer of do’s and don’ts for club musicians. For the greenhorns, Monk presented a syllabus for Band Etiquette 101 titled “1. Monk’s Advice (1960).” For the rest of us, it’s a view into one of the greatest, quirkiest minds of American music.

    Some highlights:

    “Don’t play the piano part. I’m playing that. Don’t listen to me. I’m supposed to be accompanying you!”

    Monk himself was famous for his eccentricity—some say he was mentally ill and others blame bad psychiatric medications. He was known to stop playing piano, stand up and dance a bit while the band played on. But through his advice he reveals his fine sense of restraint.

    “Don’t play everything (or every time); let some things go by. Some music just imagined. What you don’t play can be more important than what you do.”

    Monk was evidently a stickler for band protocol. He leads his list with “Just because you’re not a drummer doesn’t mean that you don’t have to keep time!”

    What should players wear to a gig? Definitively cool, Monk replies “Sharp as possible!” Read that as rings on your fingers, a hat, sunglasses and your best suit coat.

    Here’s a transcript of the text:

    Just because you’re not a drummer, doesn’t mean that you don’t have to keep time.
    Pat your foot and sing the melody in your head when you play.
    Stop playing all that bullshit, those weird notes, play the melody!
    Make the drummer sound good.
    Discrimination is important.
    You’ve got to dig it to dig it, you dig?
    All reet!
    Always know
    It must be always night, otherwise they wouldn’t need the lights.
    Let’s lift the band stand!!
    I want to avoid the hecklers.
    Don’t play the piano part, I am playing that. Don’t listen to me, I am supposed to be accompanying you!
    The inside of the tune (the bridge) is the part that makes the outside sound good.
    Don’t play everything (or everytime); let some things go by. Some music just imagined.
    What you don’t play can be more important than what you do play.
    A note can be small as a pin or as big as the world, it depends on your imagination.
    Stay in shape! Sometimes a musician waits for a gig & when it comes, he’s out of shape & can’t make it.
    When you are swinging, swing some more!
    (What should we wear tonight?) Sharp as possible!
    Always leave them wanting more.
    Don’t sound anybody for a gig, just be on the scene.
    Those pieces were written so as to have something to play & to get cats interested enough to come to rehearsal!
    You’ve got it! If you don’t want to play, tell a joke or dance, but in any case, you got it! (to a drummer who didn’t want to solo).
    Whatever you think can’t be done, somebody will come along & do it. A genius is the one most like himself.
    They tried to get me to hate white people, but someone would always come along & spoil it.

    #Jazz #Thelonious_Monk

  • Madga is a DJ very talented, I am very lucky to be one of her friends.
    https://www.mixcloud.com/magdabrandortizdezevallos/female-jazz-composers-5

    Female jazz Conposers 5 / Magda Brand-Ortiz de Zevallos.
    This time: a lyrical start with the wonderful Rachel Flowers, young multi-talented instrumentalist; impressing technique, style and musicianship (on her first album –Listen– she recorded all the parts, instruments and vocals). British-Bahraini trumpeter Yazz Ahmed, “transforming what jazz means in 2017”. Talented Nubya Garcia, amazing saxophonist and Jazz beat connoisseur. Alice Coltrane, who was a unique, powerful musician and remarkable talent (pianist, harpist, organist, singer). Lynne Arriale: brilliant, expressive, and stunning pianist (Omer Avital on bass!). Allison Miller: extraordinary drummer and innovative compositional voice. Cecile McLorin Salvant: a jazz phenom with a subduing voice (will perform in Zürich next November!). Closing the selection, Black Classical Music with the unforgettable Nina Simone. Relax and enjoy.

  • https://karlrecords.bandcamp.com/track/parish-of-tama-ossuary-dub

    When PAINKILLER started in 1991, their first two albums “Guts Of A Virgin” and “Buried Secrets” (both released on extreme metal label Earache) were heavy attacks blending #grindcore and #free_jazz that brought together the musical backgrounds of the three protagonists: drummer Mick Harris had just left grindcore legend Napalm death, John Zorn explored new extremities with his NAKED CITY project while Bill Laswell had as a member of roaring free jazz quartet Last exit (Peter Brotzmann, Sonny Sharrock, Ronald Shannon Jackson) proven that he was not only a visionary producer but also an accomplished bassist. But it is their 1994 double album “Execution Ground” that remains the opus magnum of the brilliant trio: ZORN’s unmistakable shrieking saxophone, HARRIS’ pounding drums and LASWELL’s growling sub-bass lines were given heavy mixing desk treatment, resulting in extended tracks that are no less intense than their early works but display the full range of the musicians’ skills. Soaked with reverb and delay, avant-jazz, grindcore, dub and ambient melt into eerie tracks of haunting atmospheres.

    #Painkiller #Bandcamp
    source : https://daily.bandcamp.com/2018/03/12/new-grindcore-list

  • Manufacturing Bob Marley | The New Yorker
    https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/07/24/manufacturing-bob-marley

    No one metric captures the scale of Bob Marley’s legend except, perhaps, the impressive range of items adorned with his likeness. There are T-shirts, hats, posters, tapestries, skateboard decks, headphones, speakers, turntables, bags, watches, pipes, lighters, ashtrays, key chains, backpacks, scented candles, room mist, soap, hand cream, lip balm, body wash, coffee, dietary-supplement drinks, and cannabis (whole flower, as well as oil) that bear some official relationship with the Marley estate. There are also lava lamps, iPhone cases, mouse pads, and fragrances that do not. In 2016, Forbes calculated that Marley’s estate brought in twenty-one million dollars, making him the year’s sixth-highest-earning “dead celebrity,” and unauthorized sales of Marley music and merchandise have been estimated to generate more than half a billion dollars a year, though the estate disputes this.

    At this point, books about Marley tend to be self-conscious about the risks of further mythologizing him, even if they end up doing so anyway. Steffens tries to avoid this by framing “So Much Things to Say” as four hundred pages of “raw material,” drawing from interviews he conducted over three decades with more than seventy of Marley’s bandmates, family members, lovers, and confidantes, some of whom have rarely spoken on the record. Occasionally, excerpts from interviews and articles from other authors are reprinted, too. What emerges isn’t a different Marley so much as one who feels a bit more human, given to moments of diffidence and whim, whose every decision doesn’t feel freighted with potentially world-historical significance.

    Yet Marley was troubled by the demographics of his growing number of disciples. In September, 1980, he arrived in New York. He was touring “Uprising,” his most religious album yet. He was scheduled to open for the Commodores at Madison Square Garden—a strange booking, given that Marley himself was world famous. He had already played more than thirty dates in Europe, including a concert at Milan’s San Siro stadium that drew a hundred and twenty thousand people—more than the Pope had drawn a week earlier. The Commodores, meanwhile, were on the downside of a career highlighted by the featherweight soul hits “Easy” and “Three Times a Lady.” But they still drew the predominantly African-American audience that Marley craved. His failure to dent the black-radio market in America had been one of the lingering frustrations of his career.

    Part of this failure had been by design. In the seventies, Blackwell marketed Marley to white, college-educated rock fans and maturing hippies, who were drawn to reggae as earthy and authentic. But in return for performing with the Commodores, Frankie Crocker, arguably the most powerful black-radio d.j. and programmer of the late seventies, promised that his station would play Marley’s new single, “Could You Be Loved,” every hour on the hour for three months. And Marley, who was sandwiched on the bill between Kurtis Blow and the Commodores, was confident that his live show would eviscerate everyone else’s. He was right. As Alvin (Seeco) Patterson, the Wailers’ drummer, recalls, “I remember when Bob finish, everybody walked out.”

    #Musique #Bob_Marley #Reggae

  • Echoes: Space and Time
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/historias-minimas/echoes-space-and-time-2

    Nico, Cyrilet Dj Barabba exploreront la scène underground londonienne de ces 25 dernières années au travers du label mythique Ninja Tune.

    Intro – Coldcut – Beats and Pieces

    Dj Food Turtle Soup The Herbaliser – Mission improbable Up, Bustle and Out – Hip hop Barrio Blockhead – The Strain

    Tapis – Cinematic Orchestra – The Man with the Movie camera

    Fink – Pretty little thing Bonobo Days to Come Romare – Motherless Child Luke Vibert – I Hear the Drummer

    Extrait: Clyde Stubblefield – The original Funky Drummer 00.00-00.40

    Extrait2: Clyde Stubblefield – The original Funky Drummer 02.20-fin

    Tapis – Funki Porcini – It’s a long road

    Amon Tobin – Nightlift Flying Lotus feat. Kendrick Lamar – Never Catch me Coldcut feat. Roots Manuva – True Skool

    Clôture – Kate Tempest – Europe is Lost

    http://www.radiopanik.org/media/sounds/historias-minimas/echoes-space-and-time-2_03287__1.mp3

  • PASS presents : Circadian Clocks - YouTube

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ZqhW-H2MAg

    C’est recommandé (chaudement) par Chimurenga en Afrique du Sud, ça ne peut-être que très bien.

    Ajoutée le 29 oct. 2016

    This episode of Stories About Music in Africa presents Cara Stacey, accompanied by Reza Khota (guitar) and Brydon Bolton (double bass). This is the sixth installment of the series recorded live at Chimurenga HQ, Cape Town.

    Cara Stacy is pianist and plays southern African musical bows (umrhubhe, uhadi, makhoyane). Cara is a founding member of Inclement Quartet and collaborates with percussionist and drummer Sarathy Korwar in the project Pergola.

    “Stories about Music in Africa” is an ongoing project of the Pan African Space Station, produced with the kind support of Pro Helvetia Johannesburg with the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC).

    Stories About Music in Africa | Pan African Space Station
    http://panafricanspacestation.org.za/stories-about-music-in-africa

    Stories about Music in Africa is a series that presents concert-lectures and audio/visual stories recorded at the Chimurenga headquarters in Cape Town as well as satellite locations across the African world.

    The Pan African Space Station plays host to genre-busting music outfits from global Africa dedicated to exploring new musical territory.

    #musique #afrique #chimurenga

  • 9月2日のツイート
    http://twilog.org/ChikuwaQ/date-160902

    The latest Papier! paper.li/ChikuwaQ/13277… Thanks to @StuartElden @bahiaflaneur @BetweenTheWords posted at 09:18:06

    Top story: When I’m Mistakenly Put on an Email Chain, Should I Hit ‘Reply All’ … www.nytimes.com/2016/09/02/tec…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 09:15:12

    Top story: Les autorités fédérales américaines se penchent sur les “éditeurs-pr… www.actualitte.com/article/monde-…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 04:55:28

    RT @song_tree: 09/01/1946 Happy Birthday, Greg Errico, drummer of Sly & The Family Stone, and then some @TheFamilyStone2 pic.twitter.com/wbCG8TgneY posted at 00:01:11

    エウレーカ2016 blog.goo.ne.jp/kuru0214/e/33c… posted at (...)

  • Brian Eno Explains the Loss of Humanity in Modern Music | Open Culture
    http://www.openculture.com/2016/07/brian-eno-explains-the-loss-of-humanity-in-modern-music.html

    In music, as in film, we have reached a point where every element of every composition can be fully produced and automated by computers. This is a breakthrough that allows producers with little or no musical training the ability to rapidly turn out hits. It also allows talented musicians without access to expensive equipment to record their music with little more than their laptops. But the ease of digital recording technology has encouraged producers, musicians, and engineers at all levels to smooth out every rough edge and correct every mistake, even in recordings of real humans playing old-fashioned analogue instruments. After all, if you could make the drummer play in perfect time every measure, the singer hit every note on key, or the guitarist play every note perfectly, why wouldn’t you?

  • Giggling Inuit Throat Singers Delight At Trudeau Swearing In Ceremony
    http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2015/11/04/inuit-throat-singers-trud_n_8473152.html

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBg1vfe8P1g

    This was already a historic election for indigenous Canadians with 10 newly elected MPs entering Parliament. And then 12-year-old First Nations drummer Theland Kicknosway led Justin Trudeau, his family and his incoming cabinet into Rideau Hall to be sworn in.

    But the best — or at least most adorable — part of the ceremony came courtesy of 11-year-old Inuit girls Samantha Metcalfe and Cailyn Degranpre. They not only performed traditional #throat_singing but also broke out into infectious giggles once they were done.
    […]
    For the record, throat singing, known locally as katajjaniq, is an ancient tradition among Inuit women, often performed as a competitive duet. As National Geographic notes, it’s “a mixture of husky chanting and low growling...in which the first person to laugh, stop, or run out of breath loses.”

    • Chant de gorge inuit — Wikipédia
      https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chant_de_gorge_inuit

      Le chant de gorge inuit (ou plus exactement jeu vocal) est un chant diphonique ludique pratiqué par les femmes inuits dans l’Arctique canadien. Contrairement aux chanteurs de gorge d’autres régions du monde, tels que le Tibet, la Mongolie ou la République de Touva, les artistes inuits sont généralement des femmes et chantent le plus souvent en duo. Traditionnellement, le chant inuit est un jeu, une sorte de concours amusant, où les femmes se relancent afin de voir qui survivra à l’autre.

  • 11月7日のツイート
    http://twilog.org/ChikuwaQ/date-151107

    Top story: Ben Carson admits fabricating West Point scholarship - POLITICO www.politico.com/story/2015/11/…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 04:44:43

    Top story: Cloud Of Abundance - Luiz Santos | NYC Brazilian Drummer Percussion… www.luizsantos.com/store/p58/Clou…, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 02:39:27

    Top story: Finally revealing my $2,556 a day system gsniper.com/?hop=pmwatch, see more tweetedtimes.com/ChikuwaQ?s=tnp posted at 00:23:56

  • Radio Panik---Sonic Youth’s Steve Shelley interview & music
    http://www.radiopanik.org/emissions/moacrealsloa/sonic-youth-s-steve-shelley-interview-music

    Tonight we have a talk with Steve Shelley, he was the drummer of Sonic Youth and is still playing with al the members of SY. The list of all the musicians with who he has played together is very long ..... Playlist : Lee Ranaldo & The Dust (Alan Licht, Steve Shelley, Tim Luntzel) : live 1 (...)

  • Hearing Hadrons, and Doing Research by Ear - Facts So Romantic
    http://nautil.us/blog/hearing-hadrons-and-doing-research-by-ear

    Animation of data from collisions at the LHCCERN Several years ago, particle physicist Lily Asquith was hanging out with a few musician pals in London after a band rehearsal, doing impromptu impersonations of what she thought the various elementary particles might sound like, and encouraging the drummer to recreate them electronically. Another band member asked if it would be possible to create sounds based on actual data from an accelerator, and the LHCsound project was born.LHCsound is a (...)

  • A Ripple Conversaton with The Iron Maidens
    http://chewbone.rickshide.com/2013/10/26/a-ripple-conversaton-with-the-iron-maidens

    Kirsten “Bruce Chickinson” Rosenberg on vocals, Linda “Nikki McBURRain” McDonald on drums, Courtney “Adriana Smith” Cox and Nita “Mega Murray” Strauss on guitars, and Wanda “Steph Harris” Ortiz on bass. I spoke with Bassist Wanda Ortiz and drummer Linda McDonald of the Iron Maidens ,fresh from their tour of South America. As the world’s number [...]

    #Singles