metronews.ca
Loading....
Loading...
Local
Loading...
|
Canada
Loading...
|
World
Loading...
|
Business
Loading...
|
Sports
|
Entertainment
|
Movies
Loading...
|
Columns
Loading...
|
Blogs
Loading...
|
Life
|
Games
|
x

Crooked as they come


SOUND CHECK
November 20, 2009 11:04 p.m.
       Text size          
The world HQ for Them Crooked Vultures hides in plain sight:  an anonymous building on an ordinary street in Burbank.  

It’s only after you step inside that you realize that it’s as fortified as a North Korean bunker.  That Bob Hope Airport is a short walk away is a good thing, given the private jet requirements of the band.

This is Pink Duck Studios, Josh Homme’s playground, a studio where Queens of the Stone Age and Eagles of Death Metal albums take shape and also where he worked on the material he produced for the Arctic Monkeys’ Humbug album.  The main room of the studio also serves as TCV’s rehearsal space.  

The amount of gear is staggering. I have a half-hour audience with all three members before band practice.  Josh takes his seat in the main control room chair. Dave Grohl flops face down into some pillows on the sectional next to me. Meanwhile, John Paul Jones — the quiet one in Led Zeppelin — is true to form, content to let his bandmates do all the kibitzing as he eases into the chair he’s brought from another room.  He sets himself up between the two.  “This is my spot,” he says.

Although the idea of TCV first surfaced years ago, it only became reality this past January when JPJ suddenly found himself with some free time.  

“I’d spent quite a few months rehearsing with Jimmy (Page) and Jason (Bonham) trying to form a new band that wasn’t going to be called Led Zeppelin,” says JPJ, “and it was just coming to an end when Dave mentioned this idea.”

“It just sort of fell together,” says Homme.  

“This is the kind of thing that if you don’t grab it by the neck and run with it, it’ll just turn to vapour.”  

Dave chimes in. “I wanted to be musical and be home at the same time.  The last thing I wanted to do was start another band and go back out on the road.  I thought we could just play in the studio and make something good.  I honestly didn’t imagine we’d be doing this.”

But now that they’ve started something, now what?  How far can they take this?  Dave props himself up against some pillows on the sectional. A big grin spreads across his face.  “As far as it will go.”

More about Alan Cross
Don't be greedy, share this article:                                       

User Comments & Ratings Comment as guest
more comment stories

Afghan army dropout rate poses 'challenge' to Canada's exit strategy

KANDAHAR, Afghanistan - They are supposed to be our exit strategy.

Air Canada dismisses crew concerns depressed pilot threatened to ditch plane

TORONTO - An Air Canada pilot may have said he had nothing to lose but did not threaten to ditch his plane in the Atlantic during a dispute with the chief flight steward, the airline said Thursday.

New Brunswick Premier Shawn Graham accuses media of unfair scrutiny

FREDERICTON - The premier of New Brunswick is blaming the media for what he says is unfair coverage of his government.

Warm, dry weather reduces flooding threat in Manitoba

WINNIPEG - People in Manitoba's Red River Valley should be able to breathe more easier this spring than the thousands who have been trying to hold back rising waters upstream in North Dakota.

Community leaders fear terrorist group targeting Canadian-Somali youth

TORONTO - The Canadian-Somali community is reeling following reports that a Toronto teenager said to have been recruited by a terrorist organization was killed.

editor's picks

Blood-hurling Thai protesters vow to stay in capital indefinitely

BANGKOK, Thailand - Leaders of Thailand's anti-government protesters, who have hurled their own blood at the offices and home of the prime minister, said Wednesday they will remain camped out in capital indefinitely, though in smaller numbers.

Mock reality TV electrocutions probe power of TV

PARIS - A state-run TV channel is stirring controversy with a documentary about a fake game show in which credulous participants obey orders to deliver increasingly powerful electric shocks to a man, who is really an actor, until he appears to die.

Brazilian president places wreath at Arafat's tomb, risking Israeli ire

Brazil's president placed a wreath on the tomb of the late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat on Wednesday and sharply criticized Israeli policies, leading Israeli officials to suggested he was not being evenhanded.

Desperation amid abortion crackdown in former 'Abortion Republic'

SEOUL, South Korea - Having a third child wasn't in Mrs. Kim's plans. She and her husband are already struggling to get by.

Saskatchewan NDP calls for release of Tommy Douglas security files

REGINA - The Saskatchewan NDP wants the federal government to fully disclose decades-old intelligence gathered on socialist icon and former premier Tommy Douglas.


F E A T U R E D   S P O N S O R S

READ THE PRINT
EDITION ONLINE:
LOCAL GUIDES