Bleeding Through Release Comeback Single And Video – Set Me Free


After a lot of teasing, Bleeding Through have dropped trou on their new music! The band has announced a comeback album, officially titled Love Will Kill Us All, due out on via SharpTone Records. Check out the debut video for the new single, ‘Set Me Free’ now!Continue reading


Bleeding Through Teases New Music For Their Rumored Comeback Album


Bleeding Thorugh has been touting a huge comeback to their die-hard fans over social media. Mostly Instagram. Amazon briefly had details about a new full-length album from the band. Love Will Kill All is the unconfirmed title of their new release, tentatively due out on May 25th via Sharptone Records, a sub-label of Nuclear Blast Records. In the meantime, while we wait for a proper announcement, Bleeding Through frontman Brandan Schieppati has shared a snippet of new music on his person Instagram account. Continue reading


Light the Torch – Revival


Revival, huh? That seems a bit on the nose, don’t you think, Devil You Know? I mean, Light the Torch. See, it’s a Revival (Nuclear Blast), because it’s the first album since Devil You Know was forced to change their moniker due to legal troubles with a former drummer. Fucking drummers, man. Also, it’s a revival of sorts because Light the Torch is taking their sound to novel and interesting places. Continue reading


Carnifex – Slow Death


Carnifex – Slow Death album cover ghostcultmag

Carnifex’s latest LP, Slow Death, is nothing if not about getting down to brass tacks. Quick off the blocks, the San Diego natives jump into the two strongest bangers of the batch, ‘Dark Heart Ceremony’ and ‘Slow Death.’ While doing so, they also set the template of what else to come in the remaining 29 minutes; Carnifex gonna be Carnifex.Continue reading


Back On The Loose – Dan Jacobs of Atreyu


Atreyu band shot

Since coming off of their hiatus, Orange County metalcore stalwarts Atreyu have released their latest album Long Live. They had just completed a string of European festival appearances and an array of one off shows, testing the waters of where they stood as a band.

Guitarist Dan Jacobs spoke about the band’s return, and figuring out the band’s relevance in the current scene. What they discovered was a lot more than what they expected.

We knew people wanted it. To an extent we weren’t really sure, but we were seeing it via social networking and what not. People kept hitting us up ‘when are you guys coming back’ the entire time we were gone. So let’s see what this is like. So we went and came back and the first show we sold it out literally within seconds. We’ve never done that before. That alone was the catalyst of ‘we need to keep going.’

Photo Credit: Jason Walton (via Facebook)

Photo Credit: Jason Walton (via Facebook)

He admitted that he was the one who got things in motion, in terms of restarting Atreyu and getting the wheels in motion.

I was knocking on everyone’s door the entire time we were on and ended up waiting until everybody was on the same page at the same time. We eventually got back.

Nearly a year ago was their big return at Knotfest 2014 in Devore, CA and fans greeted them with a huge welcome. Expecting the unexpected, Jacobs said that things had surpassed his expectations.

The whole thing is very surreal. It feels like time travel and it’s like snap my fingers and the band’s on hiatus; and snapping my fingers again and we’re back all of a sudden. Snap my fingers again and a year and a half later we have an album out, and the response has been incredible. It’s just crazy to be sitting here at a sold out show at the Troubadour. The whole thing is very surreal. I don’t think however long I ever do this I will ever be able to wrap my head around how I ever made it to this point.

Photo Credit: Tim Cayem

Photo Credit: Tim Cayem

He also spoke about their rabid fan base helping them selling out a number of their return shows on several stops. Unlike before their hiatus, Atreyu appears to have gained more popularity than before and Jacobs had a different approach at seeing where they stood in the present.

In a way I think there’s a different level of respect for our band that wasn’t there before. People appreciated it but I feel us taking this time off and people getting to ingest what’s out there. I hate to say this but a lot of what’s out there isn’t very good these days, especially in our genre of music in particular. So I think it’s refreshing for people to hear a band like us to come back and go ‘oh wow…this is what this kind of music is supposed to sound like. This is it done right.’

He explained on Long Live, they went back to the basics and took the best parts of their career, making it into the highlights of each era. Working with Fred Archambault (Avenged Sevenfold, Alice Cooper, Device), he helped get the best performances on each song and show what they have learned about themselves and their sound. The album took a huge step up and it shows why their fans were eagerly awaiting their return.

With Atreyu, especially on our first few albums, we sounded a certain way. There’s an evolution there but we sound a certain way. We took a left turn on Lead Sails Paper Anchor, and even on Congregation [of the Damned] we were still on that weird path. Finally we got that out of our system. So let’s go back to what we love doing, or originally were doing and what we do best. That’s what we’re most confident with. It took us doing all of these other things to own that.

So now that we’re going into writing it, it came out very naturally and it sounds way bigger and better. You can hear the confidence in it. The response we’re getting on is incredible. It’s working which is awesome.

The last song on Long Live, “Reckless,” took a left turn and returned to their earlier, more abrasive sounds. Letting their guard down, Atreyu threw down some meatier sounds that have been left off of some of their recent recordings.

It was just let everybody loose. A lot of our songs we put to a typical song structure – verse, chorus, verse, chorus, bridge, chorus… – we wanted to have one song kind of like some of our earlier records where it wasn’t as structured. We didn’t want to go down too much. When you have too much structure, it gets weird. It’ll lose that vibe and flows in there. We wanted to have at least one song that has that. It’s something that is where we came from. So that is what ‘Reckless’ is.

Following their last two albums (2007’s Lead Sails Paper Anchor and 2009’s Congregation of the Damned), they experienced being on a major label (Hollywood Records) and entering the world of rock radio. They quickly learned where their strengths and weaknesses lay and they did not fit into that world the way many had envisioned them at the time.

The radio aspect of it really pushing the singles was a little frustrating for us. For us, writing singles was not something we aim for. It’s just that we have certain songs that shine more than others and those were the singles. We preferred to write that way so we’re not trying so hard to get that single.

I think we also learned a lot over the years with all of the record labels we’ve been on, all of the records we’ve put out, all of the producers we’ve worked with, and all of the tours we’ve done. We know who we are. We know what we like. We know what works for us and what doesn’t work. This album is a collective effort of that.

Photo Credit: Timmy David Farmer

Photo Credit: Timmy David Farmer

One positive from that era was working with producer John Feldmann (Black Veil Brides, The Used) and how the band learned how to be aware of capturing certain sounds and how to arrange songs.

Because of our experience with him, we don’t need to work with producers any more. In a sense, if someone needs to arrange our songs, we learned so much from him we know how to do now. We get it. We already kind of got to before working with him, but he solidified it and he put a spotlight on things we didn’t realize we were already doing and were very important. From there, we’re into it and it’s a whole another beast because of it.

He spoke about what each member had been consumed with during their hiatus. Drummer Brandon Saller had been busy as the frontman in Hell Or Highwater, but the other members kept themselves busy with music as well as other ventures.

Our singer Alex [Varkatzas] had a project called I Am War that he was doing with Brendan Schieppati from Bleeding Through. He also has a gym called Planet Crossfit. He’s also a tattoo artist now. He’s doing pretty well with that.

Our bass player Marc [McKnight] – he’s the one that designed all of our album artwork. He’s a very talented artist. He does stuff with web design, design t-shirts, albums cover art…anything to do with art.

Our other guitarist Travis [Miguel] played in Trapt. He toured with them for a little while. Myself I have a merchandising company called Rockworld Merch. We make merch for Monster Energy Drink, Rockstar Energy , Kat Von D and people like that. I also have a company called PlugInz Chains, which is these little mini amp keychain holders. It looks like a little amp peg but it’s a keychain holder.

We’ve been running our own business with this band since we were out of high school and even when we were in high school. We’ve always had an entrepreneurial mindset. This is doing this with other things associated with this going hand and hand.

atreyu pluginzkeychains

While Atreyu were away for five years, Jacobs said that the band realized what they had accomplished over the year and found more appreciation towards what they had.

I think just our knowledge of how this whole process works, as well as our appreciation for it. We appreciate it a lot more now. Before we were jaded to everything, and now we know what we need to be doing or shouldn’t be doing. We know who we are as people, inside and outside of the band. The collective effort of all of that is what makes the album and makes us do what we’re doing and do what matters. That’s what makes it feel and sound the way it does.

He also said the band’s outlook onto the future of Atreyu has also changed, and the appreciation of what they have factors greatly into their decisions.

I think I appreciate and understand the value a lot more than I did before. I think all of us do. I think that’s what we’ve all been humbled over our time off. A lot of the things we get it. We understand it a lot more. We can see a lot more clearly now. I think that’s what makes it a lot more enjoyable and we know what to do with it, instead of flaying our way through our career.

Lastly he shares his thoughts on the Orange County metalcore scene Atreyu was part of in the early 2000s. “It was incredible. It was a tough time in itself. It was a very definitive time for us to shine and make our mark. The time was special and even now nostalgic to an extent because of how much went back to the scene. It’s cool and it’s a shame the scene’s got so watered down unfortunately but it’s cool to see it’s still going. It’s become its own beast.

Does he think Atreyu will inspire some of their recently defunct peers to give it another go? “Hopefully – if that’s what they love doing – that’s what we’re here because we love doing it and that’s why we’re back. If they love doing it too, hopefully they take note and do it as well. Treat themselves to themselves.

By Rei Nishimoto


Jona Weinhofen of I Killed The Prom Queen Talks Australian Hardcore


i killed the prom queen 3

Australian metallic hardcore crew I Killed The Prom Queen are enjoying their time on the Vans Warped Tour, in support of their latest album Beloved. While on the tour, they quickly learned about the other fellow Aussies who will be taking part on the tour with them.

Guitarist Jona Weinhofen spoke about some of his fellow country people, and how he detects if that person is actually Australian. “I know there are but I can’t remember the names. They’re bands I don’t know personally. It’s the thickest accents. You can hear it within ten meters from where you are.”

i killed the prom queen beloved

Being that he is currently situated in the United States, he found himself getting more in touch with his Australian roots. He shared his thoughts on staying true to that plus how he sees his home country from afar.

“Honestly since moving away from Australia, I think I found myself a little more patriotic. It’s one of those things – you don’t know what you’ve got until you’ve lost it. It goes with the place you’re living as well. When I moved to America – I love it here in California. There’s so much opportunity, beautiful weather all the time and so much cool stuff to do all the time, but I did find myself missing certain things about home and that made me appreciate things about my home country a little bit more”.

“If you hear me around Warped Tour putting on a thick Aussie accent, that’s me trying to regain my patriotism,” he said, with a smile.

In recent years, he also spoke about another band he is very familiar with – Deez Nuts. The band features two former members of I Killed The Prom Queen – frontman JJ Peters and bassist Sean Kennedy. Weinhofen explains the connection between the two bands and his thoughts on his former bandmates’ new venture.

“He was our original drummer, JJ Peters. He was in the band with the reformation in 2011 and when we wanted to go full time again, he was already doing Deez Nuts full time. They have a huge following in Europe, so he left Prom Queen to focus on Deez Nuts. We’re totally cool with that. Our old bass player Sean Kennedy left the band for personal reasons and joined Deez Nuts the second time.”

“The Aussian music industry, especially with the heavy music with punk rock, hardcore – is quite incestuous. Everyone knows everyone, everyone’s played in everyone else’s bands. Our bass player Ben [Coyte] played in Deez Nuts. Our singer Jamie [Hope] played in Deez Nuts. I played one show with Deez Nuts. Everyone’s good at maintaining friendships no matter what band’s doing what.”

I Killed The Prom Queen’s newest bass player comes out of Day of Contempt, a veteran of the Australian hardcore scene. “Our bass player Ben used to be the vocalist of this band called Day of Contempt from Adelaide. We basically grew up and they were our idols. They were the Adelaide band we had to play with. I think they were the first Adelaide band to sign to an overseas hardcore label, the first Adelaide/Australian hardcore band to really come over and tour the US hard. I know they did some tours with Terror, Bleeding Through, 18 Visions and even Good Charlotte. They did some really good tours. They were a band we always looked up to. When he approached us to join the band, we were like ‘duh – let’s do this!’ “

By Rei Nishimoto


I Killed The Prom Queen – Rejoining The Court


i killed the prom queen

For veteran guitarist Jona Weinhofen, his musical journey has come together at a good time as his recently resurrected band I Killed The Prom Queen will be spending the summer on the Vans Warped Tour.

I Killed The Prom Queen is the band he founded back in Adelaide, Australia in late 2000 until 2008. Weinhofen landed an opportunity to join Orange County metallic hardcore outfit Bleeding Through (2008-9), with whom he recently also took part on one of their final shows at the Glass House in Pomona, CA. He later joined British modern metallers Bring Me The Horizon (2009-13) until he parted ways with them to do I Killed The Prom Queen again.

“It was real coincidence that I played those Bleeding Through shows. I just happened to be in town at the time and they needed someone to do those shows. It was fun,” he said.

He also talked about what led to their hiatus and the new members who helped revamp the new lineup.

“We had a bunch of issues the first time around. I think we let it sit around for enough time to where we’re all passionate enough to come back to it. We have a somewhat new lineup with a couple of new members. We reinvented the band a little bit. It keeps it a bit more fresh. It’s myself and Kevin [Cameron, guitars], who are the main songwriters since the second EP (2003’s I Killed the Prom Queen / Parkway Drive: Split CD).”

“It was cool having us two who are the core sound of the band and couple of new guys bringing in a fresh influence when it comes to writing and how we sound live. Plus having a couple of new guys makes touring fresh and different as well. The new guys – Jamie [Hope] our vocalist, Ben [Coyt] our bassist and Shane [O’Brien] our drummer – have been playing in other bands but we’ve known them for years. It wasn’t like we were getting some random guys in the fold and saying ‘let’s see how touring goes’ and ‘see if we hate each other.’ They were like dudes we were friends with for years.”

Jamie Hope of I Killed The Prom Queen.

Jamie Hope of I Killed The Prom Queen.

While Weinhofen is now based on Southern California, his band mates are scattered around the globe.

“Three of guys currently live in Melbourne, Victoria, even though the band is from Adelaide. Our drummer Shane lives right outside of Birmingham in England, in a place called Wolverhampton. He met a girl there. I live here in California in Orange County. I lived here previously when I was a member of Bleeding Through. I have a bunch of friends here. I actually met a girl here as well, and coupled with the fact that Epitaph Records is based out here and our management company has an office here in LA now. Our booking agency has always been here in LA. It’s always been cool having me on the ground here and in between the rest of the band getting things going in the US.”

Jona Weinhofen on I Killed The Prom Queen.

Jona Weinhofen on I Killed The Prom Queen.

While I Killed The Prom Queen is making its Warped Tour debut, Weinhofen has previously taken part on this with Bring Me The Horizon and had positive experiences.

“This is my second Warped Tour but first time with I Killed The Prom Queen. I’m stoked to be part of it again. I think it was 2010? We have just recorded There Is A Hell. I remember showing the guys from Parkway Drive around while we were on that tour. We weren’t actually playing any material from it yet but it was an awesome time.”

“It’s five years later so I don’t know really what’s changed. I heard there’s comedians on it this year and all sorts of different demos on it. I think the core of it will be pretty much the same thing. I’ve always loved the Vans Warped Tour.”

Aside from performing on the tour, he shares his first time attending as a fan.

“I actually went to the Vans Warped Tour in 1998 in a town called Ulladulla in New South Wales in Australia, which is when they first brought it out to Australia. Deftones played with Suicidal Tendencies. I’ve been around the tour since I was teenager, and have been a part of the tour. I know what it’s like to be on the tour. I don’t think there will be that much difference between 2010 and 2015. I know that the barbecues are always fun and hanging out with your mate’s bands you get to be on the tour together, and finding weird watering holes, bike tracks and mini motorcycles. That’s the stuff I look forward to. That’s the social side to the band. The performances themselves will be amazing. It always is.”

So what should fans expect to see from I Killed The Prom Queen this summer? “We’re gonna be flying a full spread of really old stuff, stuff from Beloved, which is our most recent album, and a couple of new songs as well.”

By Rei Nishimoto


Mike Milford of Scars Of Tomorrow – Scenes Then and Now


Scars of Tomorrow

Scars of Tomorrow

Scars of Tomorrow made their return in 2014 and brought back their brand of metalcore that helped them establish their name within an Orange County scene made up of peers such as 18 Visions, Avenged Sevenfold, Throwdown and Bleeding Through.

They completed a run of weekends on the West Coast this past summer supporting Bleeding Through on their farewell shows. While they enjoyed returning to doing something they love, frontman Mike Milford shared his thoughts on the band’s return in 2014.

“It’s been good. The shows aren’t what they used to be back in the day when any time we’d play it would be the craziest shows we’ve ever played. But they’re still fun. It’s cool that a lot of people from the past that have been coming out,” he said.

“It brings back all the old fun memories of touring. Some things I might have forgotten – ‘wow I forgot about that. This was awesome!’ Those were some of the best times of my life. We made money for a while but the most you get out of touring is life and experiences. It won’t happen any other way. I’ve been to places I would never go if I had a regular nine to five job. I’ve met people all across the world, touring internationally. I wouldn’t have had that any other way. It’s cool and seeing old friends again I haven’t seen in a long time.”

“Yesterday was the first time playing on stage at Chain Reaction since 2006. It brought back a lot of memories. I have a lot of close friends here. They used to let me work here in between tours. I’d get home from a Scars tour, come and work security and work the door here, and help some good friends. It’s good to be back.”

Mike Milford of Scars of Tomorrow. Photo By Keith Chachkes.

Mike Milford of Scars of Tomorrow. Photo By Keith Chachkes.

He shared his memories of coming out a scene where they were the underdog band within a scene of their peers were gaining bigger exposure doing bigger support slots on arena tours and much larger sales numbers overall. Despite all of the hype, Milford is proud of his band’s accomplishments. “All of those bands got to the point where they were selling hundreds of thousands of records. We sold about 70,000 records. I’m proud of that. 70,000 records is a lot of records. We did a lot of high profile tours. We did some sold out headline tours. We didn’t get the commercial success of some of those. We still had success that was greater than a lot of bands even get the opportunity to tour. I’m thoroughly proud of everything I did.”

He recalled one of their first big touring moments. “Showing up to our first show in Germany to a sold out show with us headlining was like ‘wow!’ It’s awesome. Our era of metalcore is popping up out of here – there’s Atreyu, Avenged Sevenfold, 18 Visions, Throwdown, Bleeding Through…all the bands sound different too. A lot of bands nowadays sound the same. Every band sounded different. Everybody blew up. Everybody was able to go out and represent the area.

Bob Bradley of Scars of Tomorrow

Bob Bradley of Scars of Tomorrow

Hoping that comes back around again. There’s some bands who are willing to dare to take some new sounds and effects and all of that. It’s slowly coming around. The good old days…makes me sound old but they were. Scars were the birth of that whole scene, which is what some of these bands are doing now. 1500 people a night and crazy touring and it’s spawned off of stuff bands in Boston were playing 100 kid shows. When it’s here it’s 1500 kid shows. Metalcore blew up and now it’s so commercialized. It’s cool and I’m still working in that industry. I’m just trying to keep them level headed.”

“Even some of my bands are doing crazy numbers are some of the most humble people and I love it. Because when they were smaller, it helped bringing them up the right way. It helped them have careers. Now they’ve been bands for about six or seven years, still going strong and still growing as a band, when some bands will come around, be around, be big for about two years and then bounce out already. That sucks. I’d rather have a long career. I had a long career. Made some good money for a while, got to tour around, and stayed in the biz.”

As for Scars of Tomorrow’s return and their first shows since 2006, Milford wanted a low key approach upon getting the word out about the band’s happenings. They chose the Bleeding Through’s final shows for sentimental reasons, and the irony of them calling it quits while Scars of Tomorrow making a return on the same billing carries a lot of meaning to Milford.

bleeding through west coast final shows

“It’s kind of cool. The reason I wanted to do these shows so bad [was] when they were putting together these last dates and I asked if we could do them…I got to see Bleeding Through’s first show, even before they were Bleeding Through. I was there and for me I was at all of the early shows. I was friends with all of them too. It was such a big part of my coming up through high school and afterwards for years and years. It was such a big part of my life. Those early 2000s I wanted to be part of it.”

“I wasn’t trying to make such a big deal about our coming back too because we shouldn’t have broken up in the first place. It should have been ‘we’re going to take a few years off for ourselves.’ I wish we wouldn’t have officially broken up. I know it looks weird when bands break up and then get back together.”

“We didn’t make an announcement about it. We went out on a good note. We did the headline tour and the tour did very well, but at the same time I saw that…that’s when Myspace started taking off and all of the Myspace bands started popping, getting their 100,000 plays a day. We started taking out a couple of those newer hype bands. We saw what the new generation was doing. I don’t want to be one of those bands that goes out there and bleeds the promoters dry because he’s not making his money on us drawing kids any more. I didn’t want to be at a point where 400 kids were at the show and only 100 stayed for us. I didn’t want that.”

“I felt that we stopped at a good point and I think that’s one of the reasons why when we did come back and started playing shows again, it wasn’t like ‘oh that band’s shot. They’re not gonna draw anybody.’ We never let it get to the point where we weren’t drawing kids anymore. We were still drawing a good amount of kids and still doing well. It was just time. I saw it was our time. I didn’t want to be that band with a bunch of 30 year olds playing to 30 kids and ‘we sold this many records…’ and we need $3000, and have promoters lose money. I hate when promoters lose money. They do a good job…and that’s where it was at.”

“That’s why we subtlety came back, put out a new record and do the Bleeding Through shows. There’s so many memories with good friends.”

As for the future, Milford isn’t ruling out touring completely. International touring could be a possibility, where he mentioned shows could happen in the near future.
“I’ve actually been getting offers for Scars to go do some of the festivals over there. The festivals over there are awesome. I went over there last summer. I’ve been over there a couple other times for it. Playing in front of 30,000 people…yeah I’ll go do it.”

“We’ll probably go do a couple festivals. I can’t stay gone too long. I’ve got kids and everything now. I hate being away from them. I don’t want to take time away from my record label. We’ll probably do some overseas stuff. I’ll never do a full US tour. It just won’t happen. Some of my bands want my band to go out with them. The newer kids don’t get my era. If we would do a tour, I’d rather go out with Unearth or one of the older bands where we see the older crowds who are still there, in front and having a good time. It’s the crowd that likes us. The younger kids don’t get our era.“

“I’ll do a week here a week there. We’re already talking about doing more Cali shows coming through after this. These shows were focused around Bleeding Through. It may be cool to do shows focused around us or bands around our era.”

Interview By Rei Nishimoto