Since its debut as a photocopied fanzine handed out at a punk show in 1985, AP has been the publication where the honest word, the correct word, the authoritative word has been spoken on new music and youth culture.
Features, articles, and more from this issue.
IN THE RAG
COVER STORY: HEAD AUTOMATICA
Daryl Palumbo and his band of brothers are on a mission to take pop music away
from vacant silicone-enhanced tarts and accountants. And he’s going to
continue the fight, even if it kills him. And no, we’re not exaggerating.
SPECIALS
BACK TO SCHOOL
In addition pimping the dopest in gear and gadgets, AP is dishing out a history
lesson of...
AP’S CLASS REUNION: THE CLASS OF ’96
We take a look back at 10 classic albums celebrating their 10th anniversary
this year, including influential discs from Weezer, Texas Is The
Reason, MxPx, Less Than Jake and more, and ask some of
today’s biggest bands-including Simple Plan, Yellowcard, Relient
K and Taking Back Sunday-to vouch for their favorites.
THE ORAL HISTORY
OF GORILLA BISCUITS
In the late ’80s, this self-proclaimed group of “retards” helped
change the face of American hardcore. Kyle Ryan talks to the members of Gorilla
Biscuits and their associates before they head out on their late summer reunion
tour.
A WANT OF UNDERSTANDING
Ray Lemoine and Jeff Neumann were fixtures in the mid-’90s hardcore scene,
full of DIY attitude and a seemingly insatiable wanderlust which led them to
Iraq during the beginning of the war. The duo talked with Anthony Pappalardo
about their book, Babylon By Bus, and how it feels to be contacted by
Mel Gibson’s production company.
LOST IN
TRANSLATION: SILVERSTEIN’S INTERNATIONAL
TOUR DIARY
Silverstein bassist Billy Hamilton fired off hundreds of photos during
his band’s recent tour of Japan and Australia, so we asked him to
give us a peek of what life is like in the Far East.
FEATURES
30 SECONDS TO
MARS
Jared
Leto has earned his fair share of accolades in movies, but it’s
taken America a little longer to come around to his band. Fortunately, he’s
not going anywhere. THE
PINK
SPIDERS
Will
the person who knows how to say “Fake it till you make it” in
Latin please print it on the Spiders’ coat of arms? Thank you...
CURSIVE
Tim
Kasher’s self-fulfilling prophecies regarding his bands are frustrating
to fans who hang on every note he plays. But these days, his music-and
his headspace-are reaching new highs.
HATEBREED
The roles of producer, label boss and MTV personality make Jamey Jasta the
hardest-working man in hardcore. But rest assured, his band is still job one.
THE CASUALTIES
Walk
a mile in the Docs of these street-punk veterans and see if you can go the
distance. Don’t worry, we didn’t think you
could, either.
SECTIONS
INCOMING: LOVE LETTERS, HATE MAIL & SOUND ADVICE
OPINION Dr. Frank from the Mr. T Experience gets literary in Op-Ed;
and we ask everyone from Ignite to Deicide (and you, of course)
just how serious MySpace has become in the AP Poll.
NEW RELEASES/IN
THE STUDIO
We preview upcoming efforts from Walls Of Jericho, Over It and
more; and go In The Studio with Good Charlotte, Hot Hot Heat and Copeland.
WIRETAPPING
Our AP:DIY section is an exclusive guide for budding musicians, complete
with even more exclusive pointers from rockers who’ve been around the
block. This month, we get up close and personal with members of the Dillinger
Escape Plan, Gatsbys American Dream, MxPx, Jack’s
Mannequin, Eighteen Visions, Smoke Or Fire and the Distance,
as well as the techs, personal trainers and other experts who keep ’em
in shape, musically and otherwise. Elsewhere, we give the monthly Lowdown on Young
Love, Meg And Dia, Cute Is What We Aim For and others; Chalkboard
Confessional talks inspiration with Vaux guitarist Chris Sorenson; Drive-Thru
Records gets the Label Profile treatment; and Fuse VJ Steven picks
his all-time favorite bands in his AP-exclusive Untitled Rock Column.
SCREENING Elisha Cuthbert refuses to Quiet down; Blake Lively is stoked she’s Accepted;
Sarah Carter might be wanted D.O.A.:Dead Or Alive; plus, Tegan
And Sara try their hand behind the camera for their new DVD, It’s Not Fun,
Don’t Do It; and Now Showing checks out what’s new in theaters
and DVD players this month.
REVIEWS The AP Record Store is open for business, and our crusty clerks have
the scoop on new releases from Cursive, Billy Talent, Unearth, Set
Your Goals, Hellogoodbye, New York Dolls, Comets On
Fire, Gym Class Heroes and others; exclusive In-Store Sessions with Sufjan
Stevens, Helmet and Stone Sour; and respective punk- and
classic-rock history lessons on Peter Frampton and Mission Of Burma.
All that plus reissues, rarities, and the recent discs our staffers are raving
about in Listening Station.
10 ESSENTIAL
Wondering what the 10 most crucial moments in breakdown history are? Read on.
And no, we’re not referring to bands’ vans...