Saturday, December 26, 2009

Ending the year

Hope you all had a great Christmas, this will be my last post of the year. Next year will be better, HIM on tour and Screamworks coming out, it's going to be great! Have a very Happy New Year Sweethearts, See you in 2010!


Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Helsingin Sanomat Photoshoot



Screamworks Review

First Impressions is a segment where we let you into our early thoughts on a highly anticipated album, This week, we have our early views on HIM’s Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice. It drops February 9th, 2010.
Though the first single ["Heartkiller"] from HIM’s upcoming 7th studio album, Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice was just released to the masses less than 72 hours ago, the UTG offices have been jamming to the group’s most inpsired effort in years for over a week now!
For those of you already familiar with the band, you’ll be happy to learn that HIM is still HIM only now they have more energy and seemingly more enthusiasm about their material than we’ve seen in awhile. Tracks like the haunting “Disarm Me” or the heavy, heavy “Like St. Valentine” pulsate with heartache and musicianship like no other band today is capable of achieving. In fact, much of the album booms with this nearly unfathomable scale of song structure and composition that is destined to set the bar for all other 2010 rock releases to follow. There’s not only your normative dark, ambient tones over fuzzed/distorted guitars, but there’s also elaborate orchestral sections, blazing solos, and so much more that I don’t want to give away just yet as we still have to post a review of the entire album.
For those who only know the group through Bam Margera or perhaps have never actually listened to the band, now is the time to jump on the bandwagon. Once this album impacts, I think everyone will be vying for a piece of these young Finnish rock legends.
For now though, just know this: Screamworks is a heavy, romantic, dark, evil, beautiful, and breathtaking work of art that you definitely won’t want to miss.

Limited Edition Screamworks


SPECIAL EDITION 2 CD WITH LIMITED NUMBERED SCREEN PRINT

SPECIAL EDITION 2 CD INCLUDES:
-Full Screamworks: Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice
-Acoustic bonus disc entitled "Baudelaire in Braille"

-----

Limited number of screen prints entitled 'SAINT SCREAM'
Screen print is hand pressed by Two Rabbits Studio
No two screen prints are alike

Available only at Heartagram.com
ONLY A LIMITED AMOUNT OF THIS BUNDLE!

If your country's pre-order is listed here or on the other product page, your pre-order will be made available soon!

To receive you order on or around street date you must place your order by Jan. 29, 2010

$34.99 for USA

€29.99 for Europe

Other countries will be available later.

Ville Valo wishes you a Very Happy Christmas!

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Monday, December 7, 2009

Villes New Tattoo

Here is Ville Valo's new tattoo
and the photo of Klaus Kinski that inspired him



2006 Interview

This is an old interview I came across on the roadrunner records website, I find no problem with it, but the people leaving comments are extreme, angry, obscene and violent. Pardon my language but it is really fucking upsetting to see what these individuals have wrote.
I shall leave a link HERE directing you to the comments, for now, enjoy the interview :)







May 28, 2006

Years of hard work have launched Finland’s HIM from a band with a modest cult following in the United States into the mainstream. With some help perhaps from their “Heartagram” logo, HIM has become a household name among hard rock and metal fans. At the band’s stop at the 2006 HFStival in Columbia, Md., frontman Ville Valo spoke to Jason Price of Live-Metal.net about the band's song writing process, the status of the band's next album, the struggles of touring in the United States and more. In the end, Valo squashes the solo career rumors and discovers that all roads lead to Black Sabbath.

Live-Metal: What is the biggest misconception about HIM?

Ville Valo: That we are miserable bastards. A lot of people think that we play really melancholy music, people think that we are really miserable. Actually, you know, I think that it is a very cathartic thing. You get your shit into the music and you can be a happy person outside of it, and eat ice cream and listen to the birds sing! [laughs] And watch Jim Carrey movies.

Are you a big fan of Jim Carrey?

No, I hate him. No, I hate comedies. [laughs]

How do you feel that you have evolved as a band through the years?

It is hard to say how we have evolved because I have known the bass player and the guitar player since I was nine years old. So we have grown up together and we were playing in different bands. When we started out we were kids and now we are getting into our mid-life, our mid-life crisis type of thing happening [laughs]. You know the more you do, the better you get, hopefully!

How did the “Heartagram” logo, so heavily associated with the band, come to be?

Let's see. I am turning 30, so it was like, about nine years and seven months ago when I turned twenty. I always draw things, so I was drawing and waiting for the rest of the guys to come to my apartment with kegs of beer and getting ready to start celebrating me turning into a man, so closer to one, and I just drew it down. I have always loved Led Zeppelin, their four symbols on their fourth album and Rob Zombie and White Zombie's visuals and stuff like that. I always wanted to make a symbol for our band, and then we got it.

You have had a slow build in the United States. As you have toured the U.S. for the past few years, how has touring changed you?

Well to be brutally frank, touring in the States is a pain in the ass every now and then because the travel is really, really heavy, especially on this tour. We just flew in from Seattle, tomorrow we are flying to New Orleans, so it is like zig zag, zig zag, zig zag. The distances are so long compared to Europe. Europe is a lot easier. It is like maybe 200 miles a night. You have a bit more time to hang out and sleep better and stuff like that. This is heavy duty traveling all the time. With Dark Light being the first album properly released here, we have been doing some press for it and it's being played on the radio now, thank God. Of course it has changed the vibe. A lot more people know who we are.

What was the biggest challenge in making Dark Light?

In making an album, there are always a lot of little tiny challenges. On Dark Light, I think that the biggest challenge was to try and sing the background vocals while they were shooting a Playboy video at the same spot where we were recording. It was pretty hard because all we could see was naked ladies running about so it was really hard to concentrate.

Understandably! How long did it take to write the album?

I write constantly, so it may take two months to record and a month to mix it. I write all the time, so maybe four years. I usually write a lot of stuff that is not necessarily ready and we start working on it later on. We are not one of those bands that would go into a pre-production stage and write everything there. A lot of American bands, for example, do it.

What is the typical song-writing process for HIM?

I have a hangover and sit down on my bed, I have an acoustic guitar and start strumming and pretending that I am Neil Young. Then we put on the distortion pedals and we rape the song. That's what we do!

How many songs will you normally write in preparation for an album?

Only the good ones. I hate songwriters that write 100 songs for an album and pick up the 10 best, because it is a fucking waste of time. We try and write the stuff that feels really good and we are sure that we want to record it. So if there are 12 tracks on an album, maybe 14 all together.

After listening to HIM, what do you want people to walk away with?

Walk away with the understanding that all roads lead to Black Sabbath in the realm of rock n' roll.

For those how haven't seen HIM live, how would you describe it?

Umm ... We are like a very miserable version of the Backstreet Boys.

You used to do a cover of the Backstreet Boys.

Back in the day we did, yeah. Actually we played "Larger Than Life" at a couple of festivals. We wanted to piss off some goth fans. It was pretty funny to see guys like that know the chorus and be singing and dancing along to it.

What are some of your favorite songs to play live?

Well that is the good thing about being in this band. It differs from day to day because at some places people prefer some songs and when you are playing live it is supposed to be an interaction thing happening between the crowd and the band. So it keeps on changing everyday. That is the only reason to do it or it would be boring.

Do you get a different energy from playing a small club versus a bigger venue?

Well you know, thank God, we use so many strobe lights and heavy lights that I can't see shit nowadays anyway, so it doesn't really matter. I just see the three first rows.

Your music translates very well acoustically. Any plans for a possible future acoustic release?

No, well, no. Umm. Fucking hell, no. I think that there are so many good acts doing great acoustic stuff now and our forte is doing what we do, so not necessarily. Maybe we will incorporate a bit more of acoustic sections in our music in the future, but no, it would be boring. I hated the "Unplugged" series.

Have you started working on your next album?

Yeah. We have about eight songs that I am working on at the particular moment.

So you have been writing while on the road?

Yeah, I carry my guitar with me, so I try to read and write and do everything as much as possible.

What does the future hold for HIM as a band? I have heard that you have contemplated some solo work in the future.

Well, no, no no. I have a few more Pink Floyd-ish things that I have been writing in the past, but we will probably incorporate that into HIM's music, as well. Because at the end of the day when I start writing a song, it always ends up being on our album.

What do you think about the state of rock music today?

I think that the state of rock music is really good. I think there are a lot of good bands that we have had the pleasure of touring with, like a band from Seattle called Aiden on this tour and they're great. Kill Hannah's new album is really good. The Strokes new album is really good, the latest one. I think that there is a lot of good happening, but people think that rock is dead. But it has never went away.

You guys have been on the road for a while now, and toured relentlessly. How has life on the road affected you and your music?

The more you tour, the more liberating it becomes. You don't think about the technical aspect of it anymore. You just have fun. It is a bit more loose, and the hangovers are worse. That is what it does to you! [laughs]

Any stories from your life on the road that you might want to share?

Plenty, but most of it is very X-rated. [laughs] You know, the normal stuff, just watch Spinal Tap and it has all happened to everybody who has played in a rock band and been touring.

Have you ever had any "Spinal Tap" moments onstage?

We, you know, I am always losing myself. I never do soundchecks, so I never know where the stage is, so I always keep on fucking that up. I always walk in the wrong direction. We've had most of it. We never had the cocoons where our bass player couldn't get out and we never had Stonehenge. The rest is very close. [laughs]

What was the first album that you bought?

The year was '84 or '85 it was Animalize by KISS. I still have the vinyl.

What about the last album you bought?

The She Wants Revenge album.

Aside from that, what else are you listening to?

I am listening to Killing Joke and Kill Hannah and everything that starts with a "Kill." I don't listen to a lot of music. I think that nowadays the best music is books. So I am reading a lot of Chuck Palahniuk. I think that is more inspiring than listening to a lot of rock bands or pop bands or whatever. And Damian Marley.

And finally, when do you think Chinese Democracy will be released?

You know, hopefully never. I haven't heard the songs that leaked onto the Internet, but somebody told me that they were shit. I think that they should either do a reunion or you should call it a day.

Is there anything else you’d like to add?

Ummm ... No! [laughs]

Heartkiller on iTunes

The wait grows shorter and shorter... "Heartkiller", the brand new single from Screamworks: Love In Theory And Practice", will be available at iTunes in most of Europe this Monday, December 7. US, Canada, Latin America on December 8, Greece on December 10, France on December 14, The UK on February 1, and in Germany on February 5. Mark your calendars~

TRL Live Germany


New Picture

Saturday, December 5, 2009

New Video

Heartkiller Lyrics

Farewell heartless world
I'll sent you a postcard burnt
In the flames you've tried so hard
To extinguish with the fear of failing.
I'll write down everything I have learned
And edit it to a single word...LOVE
For you I'm waiting anticipating...

Sparks will fly
Beneath the Luna alight
Lazarus at Frankenstein's
Babe I'll be a flatliner for a HEART KILLER.
A little we die
Above the lesser light
For you I'm open wide
Babe I'll be a flatliner for a HEART KILLER.

HEART KILLER...

Top hats off to the return
Of the beat to lick a wound to
Cursed fore some and blessed for a few.
It doesn't have to make any sense at all
Come hither and we'll fall ... in LOVE,
For LOVE I'm crawling out of patience baby...

Sparks will fly
Beneath the Luna alight
Lazarus at Frankenstein's
Babe I'll be a flatliner for a HEART KILLER.
A little we die
Above the lesser light
For you I'm open wide
Babe I'll be a flatliner for a HEART KILLER.

Paint all your sorrows for me to sing:
HEART KILLER
Draw your pain and hear me hum it out.

Sparks will fly
Beneath the Luna alight
Lazarus at Frankenstein's
Babe I'll be a flatliner for a HEART KILLER.
A little we die
Above the lesser light
For you I'm open wide
Babe I'll be a flatliner for a HEART KILLER.

Friday, December 4, 2009

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Australia Shows

They are All Ages now!
Go buy your tickets at metro :)