Please go to your post editor > Post Settings > Post Formats tab below your editor to enter video URL. Interviews STARE ARMORED SAINT and FATES WARNING bassist interviewed by Metal Sickness, March 2012 July 7, 2012 1 min read Metal Sickness conducted an interview with Joey Vera, who plays bass in ARMORED SAINT and FATES WARNING, on March 8, 2012 interview in Paris, France. Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: armored saintfates warningheavy metalprogressive metal Karol Kamiński DIY rock music enthusiast and web-zine publisher from Warsaw, Poland. Supporting DIY ethics, local artists and promoting hardcore punk, rock, post rock and alternative music of all kinds via IDIOTEQ online channels. Contact via [email protected] You might be interested in February 10, 2013 BAD RELIGION bassist interviewed by AMP Magazine, February 2013 February 10, 2013 STCIK TO YOUR GUNS interviewed by I Want My C TV February 9, 2013 PARKWAY DRIVE interviewed by PitCam February 9, 2013 The Self-Titled Magazine talks to HOT WATER MUSIC Previous Story NILE interviewed by KASC The Blaze 1330 AM, July 2012 Next Story SUICIDE SILENCE interviewed at Tuska Open Air fest 2012 Latest IF THESE TREES COULD TALK break their no-vocals rule on “Blurry Creatures”, “The Hidden Hand”, first album in a decade coming up! Australian synth post punks SCREENSAVER send a mid-tour dispatch from Europe, reflect on community, landlords, and why creative expression matters Swedish post rockers OH HIROSHIMA talk T.S. Eliot, church organs, and pulling tracks out of the archive on their new album Milwaukee noise rockers PRIMITIVE BROADCAST SERVICE explain the field recordings, fire escapes, and ICE response that shaped “Monsters” MISERE debut “Lichtschacht”, a German-language post-hardcore track about strength in togetherness
IF THESE TREES COULD TALK break their no-vocals rule on “Blurry Creatures”, “The Hidden Hand”, first album in a decade coming up!
Australian synth post punks SCREENSAVER send a mid-tour dispatch from Europe, reflect on community, landlords, and why creative expression matters
Swedish post rockers OH HIROSHIMA talk T.S. Eliot, church organs, and pulling tracks out of the archive on their new album
Milwaukee noise rockers PRIMITIVE BROADCAST SERVICE explain the field recordings, fire escapes, and ICE response that shaped “Monsters”