BUSH: Epicenter Twenty Ten – Line up and Schedule
The official Epicenter Twenty Ten line up and schedule is out – BUSH will be playing the Main Stage on Saturday at 6:05pm.
BUSH: Epicenter 2010 VIP Tickets
Enter today for a chance to win VIP tickets to see BUSH at Epicenter 2010.
We’ve teamed up with the Epicenter Festival to give one lucky winner a chance to see Eminem, KISS, Blink 182, Bush, Rise Against and more live at this year’s Epicenter 2010 Music Festival. The two-day event will be held on Saturday, September 25th and Sunday, September 26 at Auto Speedway in Fontana, CA, just 35 minutes from downtown Los Angeles. The winner will receive a pair of weekend passes along with backstage passes.
Tickets can now be purchased at www.ticketmaster.com/epicenter for the two-day event. For more information about weekend VIP passes, two-day value passes and single day tickets, stop by www.epicenterfestival.com. Log on and follow twitter.com/epicenterfest all summer long for a chance to bring home free tickets and hear about other special offers! EPICENTER Twenty Ten is presented by Right Arm Entertainment. Enter now for your chance to win!
Bush reunites for album and tour | Reuters
DETROIT (Billboard) – Gavin Rossdale has reunited with Bush drummer Robin Goodridge for a partial reunion of the British band that struck it big in the ’90s with such songs as “Everything Zen” and “Comedown.”
Even though it’s been nine years since the release of the group’s last studio album, “Golden State,” the singer/songwriter feels like the band never ended.
“I felt the other stuff was cool, but it was more default than by design,” said Rossdale, referring to his 2005 side project Institute and a 2008 solo album.
After touring in support of that album, “Wanderlust,” Rossdale re-formed Bush for the new disc “Everything Always Now,” which he says will most likely be out in October.
“That whole time I was thinking, ‘Man, why is it not Bush? This is so crazy.’ I’m so pleased because I’ve got my voice back. To be in Bush, the band you’re basically born to be in, it’s like a suit of armor. It’s very exciting.”
The current incarnation of Bush also features guitarist Chris Traynor (who replaced Nigel Pulsford in 2002), and bassist Corey Britz in place of Dave Parsons. Rossdale says he reached out to Pulsford to be part of the group again, but the guitarist “doesn’t want to travel anymore. He’s doing his own thing.”
Bush recorded “Everything Always Now” with producer Bob Rock, who also worked with Rossdale on “Wanderlust.” The group laid down 19 tracks, with 12 making the final cut. The first single, “Afterlife,” is already out, while most of the other songs were written especially for the project. Only one — “Lost in You,” one of several Rossdale co-writes with Dave Stewart while making “Wanderlust” — has been around for awhile. Another, “Heroes Never Die,” was not originally intended for the set but was added at the insistence of mixing engineer Spike Stent.
Rossdale describes the new music as “heavy” in Bush tradition but says it’s not a repeat of 1994′s multi-platinum debut “Sixteen Stone” or any of the group’s other albums.
“It’s tricky,” Rossdale explains, “because you want the band to evolve and you want to make songs that people really care about, but you also don’t want to repeat yourself. I was mindful of that. My musical vocabulary is better all the time — I get better at playing guitar, I think this is the best I’ve ever sung, so I want the record to reflect that.”
Rossdale — who also sings on the new Apocalyptica single “End of Me” and covered T. Rex’s “Bang a Gong (Get It On)” for the new Santana album, due out September 21 — says Bush may issue an EP prior to the new album’s release, featuring “two tracks from the album and two or three other songs just to bridge the gap and … start to build it.”
But the group plans to take its time before hitting the road; it’s currently booked to perform at the Epicenter Festival on September 25 in Fontana, Calif., and Rossdale says there will be handful of other “special” shows, but no full tour until 2011.
“The idea is to do stuff in a way you’re not super-exposed,” he explains. “The idea is to let the album come out, let people reconnect, let’s appear at big festivals, let’s do some good press, let’s get the word out there and let the momentum take it a little bit. And then I think a proper, substantial tour starts next year.”
via Bush reunites for album and tour | Reuters.
Gavin Rossdale Interview | Billboard.com
Gavin Rossdale feels like Bush has never ended, even though it’s been nine years since the release of the group’s last studio album, “Golden State.”
“I felt the other stuff was cool, but it was more default than by design,” Rossdale — who released an album with the group Institute in 2005 and a solo album, “Wanderlust,” in 2008 — tells Billboard.com. After touring in support of “Wanderlust,” Rossdale re-formed Bush for “Everything Always Now,” which he says will most likely be out in October.
“That whole time I was thinking, ‘Man, why is it not Bush? This is so crazy.’ I’m so pleased because I’ve got my voice back. To be in Bush, the band you’re basically born to be in, it’s like a suit of armor. It’s very exciting.”
The current incarnation of Bush features original drummer Robin Goodridge, guitarist Chris Traynor (who replaced Nigel Pulsford in 2002), and bassist Corey Britz in place of Dave Parsons. Rossdale says he reached out to Pulsford to be part of the group again, but the guitarist “doesn’t want to travel anymore. He’s doing his own thing.”
Bush recorded “Everything Always Now” with producer Bob Rock, who also worked with Rossdale on “Wanderlust.” The group laid down 19 tracks, with 12 making the final cut. The first single, “Afterlife,” is already out, while most of the other songs were written especially for the project. Only one — “Lost in You,” one of several Rossdale co-writes with Dave Stewart while making “Wanderlust” — has been around for awhile, while another, “Heroes Never Die,” was not originally intended for the set but was added at the insistence of mixing engineer Spike Stent.
Rossdale describes the new music as “heavy” in Bush tradition but says it’s not a repeat of 1994′s multi-platinum debut “Sixteen Stone” or any of the group’s other albums. “It’s tricky,” Rossdale explains, “because you want the band to evolve and you want to make songs that people really care about, but you also don’t want to repeat yourself. I was mindful of that. My musical vocabulary is better all the time — I get better at playing guitar, I think this is the best I’ve ever sung, so I want the record to reflect that.”
Apocalyptica Records Naked, Recruits Rossdale for ’7th Symphony’
Rossdale — who also sings on the new Apocalyptica single “End of Me” and covered T. Rex’s “Bang a Gong (Get It On)” for the new Santana album, due out Sept. 21 — says Bush may issue an EP prior to the new album’s release, featuring “two tracks from the album and two or three other songs just to bridge the gap and…start to build it.” But the group plans to take its time before hitting the road; it’s currently booked to perform at the Epicenter Festival on Sept. 25 in Fontana, Calif., and Rossdale says there will be handful of other “special” shows, but no full tour until 2011.
“The idea is to do stuff in a way you’re not super-exposed,” he explains. “The idea is to let the album come out, let people reconnect, let’s appear at big festivals, let’s do some good press, let’s get the word out there and let the momentum take it a little bit. And then I think a proper, substantial tour starts next year.”
Rossdale adds that making “Everything Always Now” also provided a bit of an antidote for the latest rumors about he and his wife, No Doubt’s Gwen Stefani — primarily reports that she’s pregnant with their third child. “There’s rumors about anything and everyone the whole time,” he says. “You just roll with the stuff. Some things are more daft than others, and some things can strike home. You’ve just got to go about your business, that’s all.”
via Gavin Rossdale Calls Bush Reunion ‘Exciting,’ Says Family Rumors Can ‘Strike Home’ | Billboard.com.


