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EP #166 Interview with True Villians

EP #166 Interview with True Villians
Aug 17, 2021 · 28m 49s

True Villains are a rock & roll powerhouse. Fueled by anthemic choruses, percussive punch, amplified riffs, and the larger-than-life vocals of frontman Beau Lastavich, they make hard-hitting music that revitalizes...

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True Villains are a rock & roll powerhouse. Fueled by anthemic choruses, percussive punch, amplified riffs, and the larger-than-life vocals of frontman Beau Lastavich, they make hard-hitting music that revitalizes the swagger of their heroes for the modern world.

It's a sound that owes its supersized stomp to the collaborative songwriting and road-tested chemistry of True Villains' five members. Raised across America and headquartered in Nashville, bandmates Tim Venerosa (guitar), Barry Conaway (bass), Matt Carter (drums), Greg Herndon (keys), and Lastavich have paid their dues as a working-class live act, playing four-hour hometown shows multiple times a week. In a town filled with solo artists and country stars, they've become something refreshingly different: a genuine band, rooted in the dark, driving sounds of rock & roll's heavyweights from the 1960s, '70s, and '80s. Assimilating those familiar influences into a sound that's fresh, True Villains have also built their audience the old-school way: gig by gig, song by song, and hook by hook.

It was during one of those hometown shows that the band first caught the attention of Grammy-winning producer Nick Raskulinecz, a modern-rock icon who'd previously worked with Foo Fighters, Velvet Revolver, Alice in Chains, and others. Impressed with True Villains' songs, Raskulinecz extended a rare invitation to the group, offering his services as producer and mentor. A partnership bloomed. Before long, True Villains were working with Raskulinecz in his Music Row studio, recording singles like "The Villain" with a producer whose enthusiasm for electrified, energized rock matched their own.

Filled with modern-rock muscle, pop hooks, rhythmic breakdowns, guitar heroics, and vocal harmonies, True Villains' songs salute the influence of a bygone era while updating that sound for a new generation. This isn't a nostalgia act. It's no retro revival. Instead, it's the sound of rock & roll in the 2020s: big, burly, and just the right amount of pissed-off. If you've been worried that rock is dead, look no further. These True Villains are about to be your new heroes.

Author Credit: https://truevillainsnashville.com/about
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Author Sebastian Cosme
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