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CMW: Hollywood Undead


with Abandon All Ships
All Ages

$22.50 advance

From the Promoter

Hollywood Undead were born in the underground.

They survive there, they thrive there, and they will die there. Ever since they clawed their way into the mainstream with their 2008 near platinum-selling debut Swan Songs and its acclaimed 2010 follow-up American Tragedy, the masked Los Angeles collective—Johnny 3 Tears, J-Dog, Charlie Scene, Danny, Funny Man, and Da Kurlzz—never lost sight of where they came from. Their third full-length album Notes From The Underground emerges directly from that same place behind the curtain, underneath the veneer, and inside the darkest heart of their city. These are their Notes scribed in tears, blood, and truth.

The group did not waste any time getting to work. While finishing up a final tour supporting American Tragedy alongside Avenged Sevenfold, the members commenced writing on the bus in December 2011. Throwing conventions and expectations out the window, the band approached the creative process with the same freedom that is been embedded in their music and ethos since day one. Naturally, they distilled heavy rock, sly hip-hop, grimy industrial, and swaggering punk into a potent brew all their own.
"We didn't scrutinize what we did," affirms J-Dog. "We wrote from our hearts. I feel like we got back to something pure. We're making music because it's what we do." Johnny 3 Tears agrees sharing, "This was probably the best time we had making a record. It's still Hollywood Undead, but we've grown, and that’s what we want to continue to do.”

The band regrouped in Los Angeles with producers Griffin Boice, Sam & Sluggo, and Danny Lohner to cut what would become Notes From The Underground last winter. The results display Hollywood Undead show no signs of slowing down on explosive new anthems like "We Are" and "Dead Bite." The latter slips from a skittering groove into a snappy beat, while the production warbles like a '60s B-movie horror soundtrack. Johnny 3 Tears, Charlie Scene, and J-Dog trade hilarious and hypnotic barbs as Danny pristinely croons, "Good night, sleep tight, don't let the dead bite." It's perfect for any zombie dance party.

Nevertheless, that is the reason the group continue to connect with an entire generation. That loyal fan community will only strengthen with this record because of Hollywood Undead's unflinching honesty.
"Nothing could change us or our music," assures J-Dog. "We may change the method but not the message."

Hence, the title Notes From The Underground. An homage to the Fyodor Dostoyevsky novel—a Johnny 3 Tears personal favorite—the moniker alludes to what is really under the mask.

"We've maintained an underground identity," he goes on. "When we write songs, we're coming from a place people don't like to look at or talk about openly. As people get older, they get used to lying. We have a bond with so many kids because they have a trace of that honesty. They don't know how bad some things get yet. We tell them the truth."

That truth has defined Hollywood Undead since day one. As a result, Swan Songs has moved well over 900,000 copies, and American Tragedy debuted on the Billboard Top 200 at #4 with first-week sales exceeding 67,000. They have played sold out headline shows all over the world as well as rousing appearances at festivals such as the UK's Download and Rock on the Range, Epicenter, and more in the U.S. Their music has also received prime placements everywhere from the trailer for Paramount's hit film, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra to Madden NFL 2009.

Even as the legend expands, Hollywood Undead will never lose their roots in the Underground.
"We stay true to who we are musically," concludes Danny. "If even just one kid identifies with what we do, we've done our job." — Rick Florino, August 2012

Hollywood Undead recently played a sold-out show at Virgin Mobile Mod Club.

Promoter

Live Nationlivenation.com