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Just a couple more days of special "Headbangers Ball" programming on MTV2 before the Epiphone Revolver Golden Gods Awards special telecast rips you a new orifice Saturday night at 11 p.m. Tonight's "Ball," which starts at 11 p.m., will be hosted by Massachusetts mainstream metalcore band All That Remains, and will feature exclusive interview footage and videos.

Tomorrow's special "Headbangers Ball" will air at midnight and will feature 30 minutes with Cali deathcore sensations Suicide Silence and a half hour with Slipknot vocalist Corey Taylor, who deejayed the Golden Gods pre-show.

Stay tuned after Saturday's Golden Gods special for a one-hour post-show special featuring performance outtakes as well as more interviews and backstage footage. Click "more" to see our Golden Gods interview snippets with All That Remains. Read more...

Melodic metalcore band All That Remains have gotten some flack for the euphoric choruses and infectious riffs that made "Two Weeks" a staple of rock radio. But the Massachusetts band's mainstream success wasn't pre-formulated, and, is actually pretty surprising. Their songs might be catchier than those of their peers, however All That Remains latest album, Overcome, still features lots of vicious thrash riffs, Swedish death metal guitar harmonies and enough screaming to keep Throat Coat tea in business. Plus, the band's songwriting is crafty, but hardly conventional thanks to guitarist Oli Herbert's background in classical music composition.

After their soundcheck for the Epiphone Revolver Golden Gods Awards we hooked up with vocalist Phil Labonte, Herbert and guitarist Mike Martin to talk about All That Remains' considerable success, unorthodox writing approach, extra-curricular activities and the difference between touring the U.S. and other countries. We also discussed plans for their next album, the importance of a national metal awards ceremony and the way metal thrives under Republican administrations and. Click "more" to stream or download the podcast. And watch All That Remains' performance on the Epiphone Revolver Golden Gods Awards on our exclusive telecast May 2 on MTV2. Read more...

Of all the obstacles All That Remains have overcome -- multiple lineup shifts, metalcore typecasting, accusations of being Christian rock -- dying, then rocking from beyond the grave might have been their greatest challenge.

In the band's new video for "Two Weeks," the band members are, apparently, deceased. Footage cut from the final video actually shows a newspaper headline that reads "Search Called off For Missing Plane Carrying All That Remains." But the willpower of the band is so strong they manage to broadcast their song to a girl who can only see them playing on a television monitor. Meanwhile, a crew of parapsychologists try to tap into the ghostly energy with all sorts of cameras, seismic devices and other ghost hunting tools. By the end, it's clear that All That Remains have made a connection from the other side. Let's see David Blaine pull that one off.

Click more to watch the "Two Weeks" video, then see it on the big screen on Saturday's "Headbangers Ball." Read more...

For their "Two Weeks" video, All That Remains have teamed up with director Brian Thompson to present a story that should appeal just as much to "Ghost Hunters" viewers as headbangers.

In the clip, the band's plane goes down, but the energy of the group's music is too strong to disappear. The video intersperses haunting performance video with shots of a girl who sees the band "Poltergeist"-style in a TV and paranormal investigators attempting to track All That Remains' ghostly presence.

"Two Weeks" is one of the most melodic tracks on the band's new album Overcome, which came out September 16. "This is the first time All That Remains has done a song that is more singing than screaming," singer Phil Labonte told HeadbangersBlog.com. "In fact, the screaming that is on the song is pretty quiet and the melody is the primary focus. But I'm so happy with this song, I can hardly put it into words. All That Remains is the band that is probably gonna surprise you every disc and this song is one of the surprises on Overcome. The video is awesome. It's sharp n' clean and it's actually [guitarist] Oli [Herbert's] favorite out of all our videos."

Click "more" to watch "The Making of 'Two Weeks'" and come back tomorrow to check out the video's premiere. Read more...

For more than six years now, All That Remains lead singer, Philip Labonte, has been screaming like a man with his fingers caught in an iron door. All the same, he's never claimed he doesn't like melody. In fact, his favorite songwriter is Sammy Hagar. So, maybe it shouldn't be too surprising to hear his voice swooping through the band's new album Overcome (which comes out Tuesday) like a dove circling a demolition site. and there's plenty of screaming as well -- actually, he claims 70 percent of the vocals are screamed -- but it's those towering melodies that stand out most.
Coupled with classical-based guitar harmonies and exultant fist-in-the sky riffs, Overcome is a well-crafted, sonically pristine album that could bring All That Remains out of the underground and into the mainstream.

For old-school fans, this raises a dilemma of sorts. The songs are heavy, sure, and catchy as the flu, but they're no longer rooted in the bipolar, emotionally maladjusted world or metalcore or the brutality-is-king domain of extreme metal. Not that All That Remains were necessarily aiming for major radio airplay. If you believe Labonte, the sound of Overcome just sort of happened without any preconceptions or gameplan. And while it was a bitch to create all those layered vocals, powerhouse rhythms, and delicate arpeggios, the pains of their creation paid off. For those willing to accept a bit more sentimentality with their metal than they may be used to, Overcome is a dynamic slab of granite than carves new paths as it crushes.

In our weekly podcast interview, HeadbangersBlog.com talked to Labonte about the eclectic songwriting on the record, the emphasis on melody and the band's experience working with wingnut producer Jason Suecof. In the process, Labonte addressed the current economic climate, the basic code of morality mankind seems to have forgotten and the misconception that All That Remains is a Christian metal band. Click "more" to stream or download the podcast. Read more...