Saturday, September 21, 2019

Disturbed brings its Evolution Tour to the Upstate

Disturbed brings its Evolution Tour to the Upstate

 

On tour after tour, Disturbed had listened to a heavy metal playlist in the dressing room before its shows. On its last tour, however, that playlist changed.
That change, in part, led to “Evolution,” the band’s new album, which has as many acoustic-rooted ballads as hard riffing rockers.
“Our drummer Mikey (Wengren) always had the all metal i-whatever, iPod, IPhone, but this last tour we started listening to all the classic stuff — The Eagles, Fleetwood Mac, Styx, REO,” said singer David Draiman in a recent phone interview.
“The list goes on and on — Journey — the great classic bands from that era. Those amazing records, they have such an amazing diversity,” the vocalist said. “We were ‘Let’s try to recreate the journey so many of those classic records took you on.’”
There was a second, equally important element that factored in to the making of “Evolution,” a title that describes what has occurred the hard rock/heavy metal band in the last three years as well as the sound on the disc.
“The last record cycle we got to do something that wasn’t really predictable, that looked impossible, to cross over in a big way with something that wasn’t associated with us sonically. That was a very liberating feeling,” Draiman said.
That seemingly impossible crossover was Disturbed’s dramatically anthemic, largely electric guitar-free version of Simon and Garfunkel’s “The Sound of Silence” that was released three years ago.
It went to No. 1 on the “Billboard” magazine Hard Rock and Mainstream Rock charts and became the band’s highest charting record ever on the Top 100 singles. It has sold more than 1.5 million digital downloads, been streamed more than 54 million times.
The success of “The Sound of Silence” let the band give itself permission to do something it had been thinking about trying for years — make an acoustic EP.
“This time around, we just started doing the acoustic stuff and trying to create that,” Draiman said. “When we started creating those songs, they were so strong, powerful and anthemic, it didn’t fit just having it on an EP anymore.”
So, add some hard rock compositions to the acoustic-rooted tracks and you have “Evolution,” a record from a band, and lyricist in Draiman, with something to say — addressing big issues of death, war, addiction and political division.
“Over the past two records, we’ve gotten much more direct, much more storytelling, much less open to interpretation,” Draiman said. “It’s a more honest way, a more open way. It’s an understanding that comes with getting older and seeing the world in a different way and seeing each other in a different way. All we’re trying to do is be honest — true to our heart, the passion of the music and do it honestly.”
Several songs on the new record, including “Ready to Fly,” “Hang on the Memories” and “‘Already Gone,” pay tribute of a sort to Chester Bennington of Linkin Park, Vinnie Paul of Pantera and Chris Cornell of Soundgarden and Audioslave, each of whom died during the period when the album was being written and recorded.
“There are multiple songs on the record that deal with the subjects of pain and loss and addiction,” Draiman said. “Those poor lost souls, my friends, our friends, how could they not be part of the fabric of the record? It had to be there because it affected us so much, not only them, everyone in the band lost someone. I lost my grandmother. It’s a main theme of the record.”
That said, “Evolution” has its share of hard rock assaults of the sort that Disturbed has been making since it broke through with “The Sickness” in 1997. Among them, “Are You Ready,” the opening track that jumped to the top of the charts when it was released as a single in September.
“That’s Disturbed 101 for sure,” Draiman said. “It was not only Disturbed 101, it had one of the strongest hooks on the record. It was an obvious first single for us … and it’s done a lot for us.”’
Draiman was speaking from Honolulu, where he’s recently moved after spending years in Austin, Texas.
‘My kid was ravaged by Austin allergies. He had to live life like a boy in a bubble. It was a nightmare. I got him the hell out of there,” Draiman said, noting his son’s allergies are much better now.
Draiman hasn’t been in Hawaii a whole lot this year, as Disturbed hit the road from January through March in North America before going to Europe from April through June. Now the band is back in the states for a fall run of arena shows.
“This is the biggest undertaking we’ve ever undertaken as just us,” Draiman said. “We have our friends Three Days Grace with us. But we’ve really taking the next step up. It’s going to be ‘an evening with’ a two-hour set that covers our entire career, production that we’ve never had before.
“It’s going to be exciting, not only for the people coming to see it, but, in truth, for us,” he said.
The band will play in concert beginning at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Bon Secours Wellness Arena in Greenville.

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Disturbed to play Amalie Arena

Disturbed to play Amalie Arena

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Amalie Arena welcomes Disturbed Sept. 21.
TAMPA — Disturbed will perform Saturday, Sept. 21, 7:30 p.m., at Amalie Arena, 401 Channelside Drive, Tampa.
Tickets start at $45.75. Call 800-745-3000 or visit ticketmaster.com for tickets. For venue information, visit www.amaliearena.com.
After kicking off the year with a North American tour that saw them playing to more than 200,000 frenzied fans, the two-time Grammy nominated quartet launched the second leg of their North American tour July 21 in Mankato, Minnesota. Select shows, including the Amalie date, will feature special guests In This Moment.
Disturbed features vocalist David Draiman, guitarist Dan Donegan, drummer Mike Wengren and bassist John Moyer. The band is touring in support of “Evolution,” their new album, which hit No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Alternative Albums and Top Rock Albums charts, as well as No. 4 on the Billboard 200.
Disturbed is continuing their campaign to raise mental health awareness. Band members recently teamed with iHeartRadio for a radio special about the stigma of addiction, depression and PTSD. The show, which featured Draiman and Donegan, along with spokespeople from mental health organizations Camp Hope, 22 Kill and NAMI, can be found online at thebuzz.iheart.com/featured/the-rod-ryan-show.
The band has also invited fans to join the conversation and show others they’re not alone in the fight via You Are Not Alone. For information, visit disturbed.lnk.to/youarenotalone. They’ve also launched a Fighter of the Month campaign, honoring those who have shown strength, character and fight, as nominated by their peers. For information, visit www.disturbed1.com/fighterofthemonth.
Disturbed is one of the most successful rock bands in modern history. The multiplatinum-selling quartet accomplished the rare feat of achieving five consecutive No. 1 debuts on the Billboard Top 200. That accolade historically elevated them to rarified air alongside Metallica, the only other hard rock group to do so in the history of the chart.
“Immortalized” (2015) received a platinum certification and spawned the triple-platinum crossover smash “The Sound of Silence,” which garnered a nomination at the 2017 Grammy Awards in the category of Best Rock Performance (it also have over 550 million hits on youtube)..
Since its formation in 1996, the band has sold 16 million albums globally and scored 12 No. 1 singles at Active Rock Radio. Their quadruple-platinum 2000 debut, “The Sickness,” formally announced their arrival as hard rock leaders, with that status solidified by subsequent Grammy Award nominations as well as gold-, platinum- and double-platinum-certified records, as well as countless sold-out shows around the globe. Named Best Rock Artist during the 2017 iHeartRadioMusic Awards, Disturbed continue to boldly forge ahead with the release of their aptly titled seventh offering, “Evolution.”

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Disturbed frontman slams Roger Waters “and his Nazi comrades” for demands to boycott Israel

Disturbed frontman slams Roger Waters “and his Nazi comrades” for demands to boycott Israel

"It’s just Israel that gets this treatment, and I think we all know the reason behind that."
Disturbed frontman David Draiman has defended the band’s decision to play a gig in Israel next month, which prompted criticism from fellow artists such as Roger Waters and the BDS movement, which campaigns for a boycott of the nation.
“I’m a very, very strong supporter of Israel forever and for our people,” Draiman said in response, speaking in a video shared on a ‘Bring Disturbed To Israel’ Facebook page.
“And regardless of whether it’s Israel or anywhere else, boycotting an entire society and an entire people based on the actions of its government is absolutely ridiculous. And it doesn’t accomplish anything.
“I don’t see boycotts happening of Russia; I don’t see boycotts happening of many of some of the countries that have some of the most oppressive, closed-off regimes in existence on the face of the planet, where LGBTQ people are persecuted, where all kinds of minorities are persecuted. I don’t see people boycotting China for what they’re doing to their Muslim population. It’s just Israel that gets this treatment, and I think we all know the reason behind that.”
Draiman, who is Jewish, continued: “The very notion that [Roger] Waters and the rest of his Nazi comrades decide that this is the way to go ahead and foster change is absolute lunacy and idiocy — absolute. It makes no sense whatsoever.
“It’s only based on hatred of a culture and of a people and of a society that have been demonized unjustifiably since the beginning of time. You wanna be able to bring people together? You wanna effect social change on a real level? Bring them together for a concert.”
Artists including Nick Cave and Radiohead have received similar backlash for playing shows in the Middle Eastern country over recent years, while Madonna‘s Eurovision performance in Tel Aviv last month was also met with resistance from the BDS movement.

Read more at https://www.nme.com/news/music/disturbed-frontman-david-draiman-responds-roger-waters-ridiculous-demands-boycott-israel-2504838#WEFO3PpZsQlBBgMd.99