Please go to your post editor > Post Settings > Post Formats tab below your editor to enter video URL. Interviews STARE NAPALM DEATH interviewed by Metal Assault November 18, 2012 1 min read Los Angeles magazine Metal Assault conducted and interview with Mark “Barney” Greenway from UK grind legends NAPALM DEATH. See the video below. Mark was interviewed at the House of Blues in Hollywood CA on November 14th, 2012: Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: death metalgrindcorenapalm death 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 MUNICIPAL WASTE interviewed by Exclaim.CA Next Story IGNOMINY interviewed by Hit The Stage magazine Latest Sicily’s MOTHER GIRAFFE map late-capitalist anxiety and turn repetition into pressure on “Food Is a Necessity” Baltimore’s emo alt rockers STILL BONES turn frustration into motion on collaborative EP “Start/Stop” KNUMEARS turn “Directions” into a map of change, family, and SoCal screamo THE SADDEST LANDSCAPE confront time, loss, and unfinished thoughts on “Alone With Heaven” – an interview Emo math rockers PASTEL stretch a decade of doubt into “A Lovers Manifesto,” a record shaped by instability and stubborn continuity
Sicily’s MOTHER GIRAFFE map late-capitalist anxiety and turn repetition into pressure on “Food Is a Necessity”
Baltimore’s emo alt rockers STILL BONES turn frustration into motion on collaborative EP “Start/Stop”
THE SADDEST LANDSCAPE confront time, loss, and unfinished thoughts on “Alone With Heaven” – an interview
Emo math rockers PASTEL stretch a decade of doubt into “A Lovers Manifesto,” a record shaped by instability and stubborn continuity