LAMB OF GOD Post Studio Gear Pics On Instagram, Frontman RANDY BLYTHE Checks In - "I'm Trying To De-Mystify The Whole 'Rockstar' Thing Because It Is Bullshit"
April 26, 2015, 9 years ago
Photos posted on Lamb Of God's newly launched Instagram page here indicate the band has started work on their next studio album. Comments from frontman Randy Blythe via his own Instagram page suggest that something is indeed in the works.
Blythe: "Most of you know I don't ever talk about my day job here - it's not me being a dick, or snotty - in fact I interact with fans here quite often and openly discuss just about everything under the sun except my band.
This is for two reasons: #1 Talking about my band is boring as hell for me. Imagine talking about your job all the time. I know people who are not in bands who talk about nothing but their job all the time, and it makes me want to tear my hair out listening to them - SHUT UP ABOUT WORK. IT'S JUST WORK. Let's talk about life, and, #2 In showing different aspects of my life and what I am interested in other than being a band dude, I'm trying to de-mystify the whole 'rockstar' thing, because it is BULLSHIT.
No one, no matter how hard they try to portray themselves as some sort of rockstar, is anything other than a human being. The rockstar crap just means you have a sometimes interesting job (and I do stress the 'sometimes' aspect strongly, because a lot of the time being in a band is boring as hell).
So, this is not a Lamb Of God account, I don't post Lamb Of God photos or talk about my band here, and I ain't about to start. However, there is a Lamb Of God Instagram account now, and it is an official one: @lambofgod. So anyone with band questions or wanting to see band stuff - go there and post away to your heart's content. Someone (and it's not me putting up posts - that is the truth) has started posting new stuff there starting today, or so I am told via the band grapevine. Hmmmmmm..."
Follow Blythe via Instagram here.
In 2010, a 19-year-old super-fan rushed the stage during a Lamb of God concert in Prague. To protect himself, Blythe pushed the fan away. Unbeknownst to Blythe, the young man hit his head on the floor when he fell and later died from the injury. Blythe was promptly incarcerated on charges carrying a prison term of five to ten years.
Thirty-seven days later, he was released on bail to await trial. Although legal experts told him not to return to the Czech Republic to face the charges, Blythe explained that he “could not run away from this problem while the grieving family of a dead young man searched hopelessly for answers that [he] might help provide.”
After a five-day trial, he was acquitted on March 5th, 2013.
In Dark Days, Blythe tells the story of his incarceration and the wild life that led up to it. As he explains, “Most substance abuse books end with the author getting sober. My book starts there.”
Dark Days will be released on July 14th via Da Capo Press. Random House will release the book in the UK and associated territories. Pre-order at this location.
Randy Blythe has announced his upcoming photography exhibition, D Randall Blythe: Show Me What You’re Made Of, taking place from May 2nd – June 30th at Sacred Gallery NYC. The opening reception will take place on May 2nd from 8-11pm.
Sacred Gallery NYC is located in Manhattan's SoHo District at 424 Broadway on the northeast corner of Broadway and Canal.
In addition to his work with Lamb Of God, D. Randall Blythe is the author of the forthcoming memoir Dark Days, a music critic at the highly acclaimed TheTalkhouse.com, has acted in movies filmed in America and Asia, and periodically composes music for the Richmond Ballet.
Sacred Gallery NYC was established in December of 2009 by gallery director Kevin Wilson. The gallery’s mission is to exhibit a diversity works and artists. Over the last five years, Sacred has featured graffiti artists, painters, photographers, print makers, comic book artists, documenters, and many other types of artists using a variety of mediums, including blood and live performance graffiti. The gallery prides itself on the accommodations that are provided to the diverse communities of artists that New York City and the world have to offer.