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08-07-07--CATCH DROWNING POOL ON OCTANE
This week join Octane host Kayla and Texas rockers DROWNING POOL on a special Elements. Hear all about their new album, Full Circle, in stores now, new beginnings, their support for our troops overseas and whatever else these dudes want to throw at ya only on Octane!
If you have SIRIUS radio check out Octane on Channel 20, TODAY at 6 pm EST, and again on SATURDAY at 12 pm EST, and SUNDAY at 5 pm EST.
Hey:
TODAY IS THE DAY! We are excited to announce the release of our brand new album, FULL CIRCLE! Break those piggy banks open cause you finally got something worthwhile to spend your money on. You’ve heard some tracks, now hear the whole thing. Get your hands on a copy cause we put our heart and soul into this and we want to share it with you. We are proud and ready to take FULL CIRCLE worldwide so get onboard and let’s make this HUGE.
DP
SIGNED COPIES STILL AVALIBLE @ Swagrox.com!
08/6/2007
Guest Blog: Drowning Pool Keep it Slamming For Soldiers
It’s kind of ironic that Drowning Pool have become one of the biggest poster boys for the USO considering the hit they took after 911. At the time, the public misinterpreted their song “Bodies” to be about death and murder. It was, in fact, a description of the mosh pits at their shows, but no amount of explaining could convince radio programmers to support the song again. Actually, it was never the U.S. soldiers that condemned the band, and, according to Drowning Pool, many members of the military would listen to Drowning Pool’s 2001 album Sinner to get them pumped for combat. In the years since, Drowning Pool have taken an active role in supporting the troops. They’ve performed at military bases in the Middle East numerous times and recorded and expressed the power of the shows in the song “Soldiers” which is included on new album Full Circle. You’d think Drowning Pool might be tired of talking about their involvement with the USO by now, but its just the opposite. And when Headbangersblog.com asked bassist Stevie Benton if he would write a guest blog about the significance of his experiences performing for the USO, he had the whole thing penned practically by the next time we checked out email. It seems even peripheral military involvement makes a guy nothing if not punctual.
My first exposure to the United Service Organization (USO) was as a child when my parents watched Bob Hope entertaining the troops overseas during the holidays. Back then, those USO TV specials played annually just like “Frosty the Snowman” or “A Christmas Story.” Being that I am a huge Dallas Cowboys fan, I was aware that the Cowboys’ Cheerleaders do a great deal of work with the USO, but up until 2005, that was my only exposure to the USO.
Drowning Pool released “Bodies” in 2001 and it became an instant hit with the U.S. military. While touring over the next few years, we met a lot of servicemen and women who expressed to us how important the song was to them. Whether on training videos or to keep them on their toes while on missions in Iraq or Afghanistan, “Bodies” was an integral part of keeping up troops’ morale.
We spent the next couple of years trying to make the necessary connections to be able to play for our troops stationed overseas. Every attempt was a dead end. That is, until August of 2005. Jessie Jessup, the afternoon DJ at KDGE in Dallas, invited us to be on her show to announce Ryan McCombs as our new singer. Unbeknownst to us, Jessie had spent the prior few months doing all the necessary work to go to the Persian Gulf to interview and entertain the troops. The band she had originally planned to take got cold feet and backed out. So there we were… right place, right time.
Of the thousands of shows we have played over the years, none come close to the enthusiasm and excitement of the USO shows for the troops in the Gulf. The tension in the air around a crowd of people who put their lives on the line every day is impossible to describe. The appreciation for having a little piece of home brought to them there in the desert is similarly impossible to explain. But the experience was unbelievable.
Being able to give something back to the people that do so much for all of us was the most rewarding undertaking of my life. It was this initial USO tour that led us to write our current single “Soldiers” as a tribute to the troops we met along the way.
One show in particular was special for the band. It came during our second tour in the Gulf. After the tragedy of September 11, “Bodies” was banned on radio stations across America. A song written about a mosh pit was suddenly associated with the most horrible event in our nation’s history. Members of the US military, however, made the song their anthem for getting through a time of war. So, on the fifth anniversary of 911, we were doing a show for the troops in Iraq, playing the very song that had been banned. And that’s why we decided to cal our new CD Full Circle.
Our next USO tour will take place during the Christmas holidays. By being so vocal about our participation, we hope to encourage other rock bands to get involved with the USO. The troops are real men and women and they need our support. Also, anyone can support the troops by going to thisisforthesoldiers.org and signing an online petition to speed up a bill to provide funding for mental health care for returning vets. From there, you can link to the USO or the IAVA and find out what else you can do to help out the troops.
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Drowning Pool, IAVA & Lizzie Palmer Launch ‘This Is For the Soldiers’ Campaign
Rock Band, Veterans Group and Ohio Teen Ask Young People to Support America’s New Veterans
NEW YORK – In what may seem like an unlikely alliance, hard rock band Drowning Pool, non-profit organization Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America (IAVA) and 15 year-old YouTube video producer Lizzie Palmer are teaming up to encourage young people to support expanded health care for veterans returning from Iraq & Afghanistan. They are launching a campaign called ‘This Is For the Soldiers’ and asking Americans to support legislation currently before congress which addresses the urgent need to get better mental health care for veterans. The campaign includes a website (www.thisisforthesoldiers.org) which hosts a petition urging congress to support the Lane Evans Mental Health Care Reform bill along with a powerful music video created by Palmer.
While ‘This Is For the Soldiers’ officially kicks off the week of July 4th, supporting the troops is nothing new for anyone involved. Rockers Drowning Pool toured with the USO and performed for troops in Iraq, Kuwait and South Korea in 2005 and 2006. "We have had the opportunity to meet the troops overseas, come back to the states and get invited to different bases in difference cities. We have spent countless time with soldiers who do what they do without question and you can’t help being touched by that,” said Drowning Pool lead singer Ryan McCombs. The campaign’s title, ‘This Is For the Soldiers,’ comes from a line in the Drowning Pool song, “Soldiers,” that the band wrote based on their experience. Bassist Stevie Benton remarks, “After returning from Baghdad, our priority was writing a song about our troops, for our troops. I hope they will accept the song as a show of our respect and thanks for all they do for our country.” Drowning Pool named their upcoming concert tour after the campaign and plans to donate fifty cents from each ticket sale to IAVA and fifty cents to the USO. IAVA, founded by Iraq veteran Paul Rieckhoff, has been advocating since 2004 on behalf of returning servicemembers. It is the first and largest group representing veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Even Ohio teen Lizzie Palmer has taken action before. “Remember Me,” her previous music video honoring U.S. troops, has gotten over 12 million hits on YouTube. Her latest video, for Drowning Pool’s “Soldiers”, will be released on July 4th.
Now it’s time to get other people involved.
“Whether you’re for the war or against it, everyone has an obligation to support the men and women serving our country,” said Paul Rieckhoff, IAVA Executive Director. “Our alliance with Drowning Pool and Lizzie provides a great platform for raising awareness among young people about the challenges veterans face. At least one in three Iraq veterans will cope with a serious mental health issue, like depression or Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. It’s crucial that we put systems in place now to help them.” The trio is encouraging supporters to send a petition to Representative Bob Filner, Chairman of the House Veterans Affairs Committee, asking him to take action on the Lane Evans Bill, H.R. 1354, currently pending in the House. This bipartisan legislation would require mandatory counseling for combat veterans and ensure a better transition for troops leaving the military. A letter written by the band has already been sent to members of the House and Senate Committees on Veterans Affairs and was recently read before the President’s Commission on Care for America’s Returning Wounded Warriors. “This Is For the Soldiers’ gives young people a chance to make a real difference in the lives of our country’s newest generation of veterans,” said Rieckhoff.
View the video at http://newmedia.10thst.com/troops/video.wmv
Members of Drowning Pool, Paul Rieckhoff and Lizzie Palmer will be available to the media from leading up to and during the week of July 4th. To arrange an interview, please contact:
Claudia Chung
Ken Sunshine Consultants
(212) 691-2800
chung@kensunshineconsultants.com
--1.5 million people have served in Iraq and Afghanistan.
--1 in 3 Iraq veterans will have a mental health problem like Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or depression.
The mental health problems veterans are suffering from can lead to drug and alcohol abuse, homelessness and even suicide. |