Here's the last batch of clips from our recent interview with Mastodon guitarists Brent Hinds and Bill Kelliher. Read more...
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Posted 4/27/09 11:15 am ET by JonW in Video Interview
Here's the last batch of clips from our recent interview with Mastodon guitarists Brent Hinds and Bill Kelliher. Read more...
Posted 4/24/09 12:58 pm ET by JonW in Video Interview
Time to crack the Mastodon fortress just a little more with part 2 of three posts of interview snippets with the band about its latest album, Crack the Skye, which is still in heavy rotation on our personal stereo system and will likely hold fast as our album of the year. Then again, it's only April, but the bar has been set mighty high. Click "more" to watch. Read more...
Posted 4/23/09 9:07 am ET by JonW in Video Interview
Right now, Mastodon are lumbering through Canada and will reach American shores with openers Kylesa and Intronaut on April 29. The tour will wrap up with a hometown show in Atlanta on May 15, then Mastodon will be off to Europe to open for Metallica. To show our support, we'll continue to blast the band's video for "Divinations" from atop the rafters. And we've also got a batch of new interview clips to roll over out the next few days. Here's the first installment. Read more...
Posted 2/25/09 3:16 pm ET by JonW in Exclusive Video
Prog metal heroes Mastodon have just announced a special iTunes package that offers fans an instrumental version of their entire new album Crack the Skye along with the regular version. Sounds sweet to us. And here's something else that's pretty sweet: The behind-the-scenes video "The Making of Crack the Skye: Episode IX," in which the band members discuss how they tracked lead and background vocals for the record. Behold! Read more...
Posted 2/19/09 12:36 pm ET by JonW in Exclusive Video, Watch This
Last week, we brought you Episode I of "The Making of Mastodon's Crack the Skye". Today we follow up with Episode VIII. What happened to the other six episodes, you ask? Well, Mastodon drummer Brann Dailor and guitarist Bill Kelliher are huge "Star Wars" fans, and those movies didn't come out in sequential order; hence, Episode VIII, in which Mastodon discuss guitarist Brent Hinds' 2007 brush with death and how that inspired the songs on Crack the Skye. Click "more" to watch the clip. Read more...
Posted 2/12/09 5:57 pm ET by JonW in Exclusive Video, Video Interview
If you've heard Mastodon's new song "Divinations," you've gotten a taste of the progressive songwriting and psychedelic otherworldliness of the band's upcoming album Crack the Skye, which comes out March 24. But just wait 'til you hear the ominous, trudging "Oblivion" or the miasmic, intoxicating 13-minute epic "The Last Baron." Yup, there's no question in our minds that when the time comes to pick the best albums of 2009, Crack the Skye will be perched right up there near the top if not at the top. We'll be bringing you much more from Mastodon in the coming weeks, but for now we present "The Making of Crack the Skye: the Beginning of Crack the Skye: Episode I." Read more...
Posted 1/27/09 5:15 pm ET by JonW in Listen Here
Check out the freaky-deeky artwork for Mastodon's upcoming album Crack the Skye. If that doesn't look like a concept album about Rasputin, we don't know what does. Actually, Rasputin does figure into the album lyrics, but only to guide some lost astrally projecting dude safely through a wormhole and back into his crippled body. And lyricist/drummer Brann Dailor says he doesn't do acid anymore. Click "more" to listen to the first single from the album, "Divinations." Read more...
Posted 7/18/08 4:39 pm ET by JonW in Exclusive Podcast
Don't believe everything you read.
Over the past month or so, there have been various reports that Mastodon's yet-untitled new album will be a concept record about Grigori Yefimovich Rasputin. Those stories are entirely inaccurate, bassist and vocalist Troy Sanders has revealed to HeadbangersBlog.com. Yes, band drummer Brann Dailor drew a mad-eyed image of Rasputin with the band's name tangled into his untamed beard. Yes, the band used the image on t-shirts, posters and stickers. But no, Rasputin won't be the subject of Mastodon's next epic prog-metal opus.
"One big rumor gets out there, and it kind of spreads quickly, which is cool," says Sanders. "I'm glad people are speculating on what the record's gonna be. We want to keep some of the mystery behind it until the record hits the stands. But the record is not based on the life of Rasputin."
That a major band can maintain an element of mystery and intrigue in an era of media saturation is admirable. Like Tool and maybe Radiohead, Mastodon feed off the voracious hunger of their fans, and their followers give them some leeway, knowing full well that whatever the group surprises them with will be exciting, energetic and escapist. After all, Mastodon have developed an impressive track record.
Their 2002 full-length debut, Remission, was fierce and pummeling, packed with twisting guitar lines and tumbling drum fills. 2004's Leviathan, a concept album about Herman Melville's novel "Moby Dick" was even more astounding. The music was more tuneful, the riffs more crushing and chaotic -- as if the band was throwing caution to the wind in the quest for its own big white whale.
But it was 2006's Blood Mountain that earned Mastodon respect outside of the metal community. Injecting textural psychedelic squiggles throughout the thunderous Melvins-meets-Neurosis clamor, the band conjured music that acted both as an original, enthralling soundbed and as the backdrop to a science-fiction tale of surreal, lysergic proportions. The J.R.R. Tolkien-influenced story was filled with tree people, psychotic beasts, ravaging landscapes, torrential weather and, we believe, a crystal that had to be inserted in the back of the skull in order to achieve total freedom.
With that in mind, we can't wait to see what conceptual lunacy Mastodon concoct for their fourth full album, which is scheduled for release in January. When the band finishes touring on the Rockstar Energy Mayhem Fest, it will return to Atlanta to finish up the disc with producer Brendan O'Brien.
During our podcast interview with Sanders, we discussed the importance of mystery, the musical direction of the new material, the band's new vocal style, the influence of King Crimson, Yes and Frank Zappa and why Mastodon chose to record in Atlanta. We also addressed the band's work ethic, why they played three new tunes at Bonnaroo and what 2009 holds in store for one of metal's most groundbreaking and mesmerizing giants.
Click more to stream or download the podcast: Read more...
Posted 6/10/08 9:57 am ET by JonW in Metal News, Movies for Metalheads

Today is the day. No, we're not talking about the awesome, gun-toting, experimental Nashville grind band fronted by Steve Austin. We're saying today is the release date for the DVD "Heavy Metal in Baghdad," a documentary about Iraqi band Acrassicauda and their efforts to stay together as their war-torn country is falling apart. For more information about the release and part two of our three-part post of interviews with Mastodon and Neurosis talking about the flick, check out "Movies For Metalheads: Mastodon and Neurosis Discuss the Acclaimed Documentary ‘Heavy Metal in Baghdad’ (Pt. 1)."
The DVD features 90 minutes of bonus features, including five scenes never intended for the film, three deleted scenes, the 45-minute mini-documentary "Heavy Metal in Istanbul," which chronicles Acrassicauda's exile in Turkey, and three live performances.
"Heavy Metal In Baghdad" was directed by Eddy Morretti, head of VBS.TV & Vice Films and Suroosh Alvi, founder of Vice Magazine. Click "more" to watch Mastodon guitarist and singer Brent Hinds and drummer Brann Dailor talking about their first impression of the movie, the way the film portrays Iraqis as people they can relate with, the dedication required to carry on during war and the bond created between members of a band. Read more...
Posted 6/9/08 12:22 pm ET by JonW in Metal News, Movies for Metalheads
After tomorrow, Middle Eastern relations will never be the same. No, the U.S. military is not gonna carpetbomb Iran (at least, we don't think they will), there's still no end in sight for soldiers stationed in Iraq and Israel's definitely not signing a peace treaty with the Palestinians. Still, it will be a historic day for fans of Iraqi heavy metal since the film "Heavy Metal in Baghdad" will go on sale. An insightful, funny and emotional documentary film that follows the Iraqi band Acrassicauda from the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003 to the present day, "Heavy Metal in Baghdad" is both a testament to human endurance and an affirmation of the strength of the spirit.
Being a metal band in a Middle Eastern nation run by a tyrannical dictator was, perhaps, always an exercise in futility, but after Hussein was defeated it became even more difficult. Between 2003 and 2006, as the war raged on, Iraq disintegrated around Acrassicauda and the members scrambled to stay together and struggled to stay alive. "Heavy Metal in Baghdad" vividly captures the frustrations, fears and hopes of a group of young Iraqi headbangers who just want to be left alone to play music and build a fanbase (click "more" to read more and watch Mastodon and Neurosis discuss the film). Read more...