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Watch Eels’ This Is 40 Outtake

- Source: Stereogum

I haven't seen Judd Apatow's new film, This Is 40 , so I can't really comment on its flaws or virtues, but I will say that I'm impressed by the film's deep connection to music.

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NIDINGR: Greatest of Deceivers

- Source: Pitchfork Media

For a musical style designed with the express purpose of aggressively alienating the majority of listeners that might encounter it, black metal has proven to be exceedingly amenable to mixing with other genres.

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God Seed: I Begin

- Source: Pitchfork Media

That's the sunken-cheek frontman of infamous and inconsistent Second Wave crew Gorgoroth in the 12-page spread of Peter Beste's coffee table-bound collection of photos, True Norwegian Black Metal.

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LISTEN: DUDES FROM ANTHRAX, CRADLE OF FILTH, GORGOROTH ARE TEMPLE OF THE BLACK MOON

- Source: Metal Sucks

"Scheduling has been a nightmare for a long time," says guitarist Rob Caggiano about Temple Of The Black Moon. TotBM drummer John Tempesta has been dashing between The Cult and Testament tours; singer Dani Filth's full time job is Cradle Of Filth; Caggiano is bound to Anthrax's rigorous itinerary and his TotBM writing partner, Tom Cato Visnes, plays King Ov Hell in Gorgoroth.

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'Slayer Mag' compiled into a book, Holy Grail & Cauldron are in NYC now, Slayer tickets are on presale

- Source: Brooklyn Vegan

"For twenty-five years, Norway's Slayer Mag published the gospel of black metal and death metal, combining eye-ripping graphics, brutally honest writing, and relentless offbeat humor. With this anthology/memoir, editor Jon "Metalion" Kristiansen unfolds the extreme highs and lows of a life lived for heavy metal. Founded in 1985 in Sarpsborg, Norway, Slayer Mag quickly rose to prominence by championing countless unsigned death metal pioneers. The pages of Slayer Mag exploded along with the extreme metal underground, and as black metal rose to prominence in Norway in the 1990s, Slayer Mag remained the final word on the moods and motivations of those dark times.

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