Evil Elvis is back in 2026 with his new album Atomic Psycho, but you can get a taste of the new tunes on his new compilation: Evilest Elvis! KC Carlisle is a Toronto psychobilly artist who has a reputation for a hot live show, great musicianship, and horror-inspired lyrics. The tunes range from punky spunk to loungy rock.
The songs:
“Cat Woman” from 2017’s Undead Or Alive: The rambunctious chorus of “Here, kitty kitty” will keep you rocking while that bassline keeps things moving!
“Zombified” from 2001’s Evil Elvis: Now we’re on a slow nocturnal groove, perfect for those spooky nights. This smooth, smoky tune has an intoxicating quality.
“Evil Love” – new song from 2026’s Atomic Psycho: The master of the drum, Cleave Anderson from Blue Rodeo, makes his Evil Elvis debut here. It is incredible to think that this veteran drummer from one of my favourite bands is now burning down the house with Evil Elvis. On this one, EE channels the original Elvis a bit on the chorus, but in ways the King could never have foreseen. “I’ll kill your fuckin’ parents and make it look like suicide!” he growls. “Evil Love” indeed! Cleave absolutely proves his punk rock mettle here. A promising song.
“Too Fast For You” – a 2015 single that ended up on Undead Or Alive, is a personal favourite. There’s an Alice Cooper vibe here, of the Detroit variety.
“Surfin’ To Hell” – from 2011’s Tattoo’d Fuckwit. This adds surf rock sounds to the repertoire. The guitar solo is manic panic fun.
That concludes “Side Eh” of the album, and on to “Side B”:
“My Evil” from 2017’s Undead Or Alive: A jaunty number with organ and a shuffle beat. This impressive song has lush backing vocals, on a chorus that reminds me a little bit of Big Bad Voodoo Daddy. Possibly the best track on the album and a song which deserved to be a hit somewhere somehow! “GO!”
“I Wanna Wed (The Undead)” is a funny title, from 2001’s Evil Elvis. This has the most traditional rock and roll sounds, like something out of a 1950’s graveyard. Just pure fun, with a Halloween dance party vibe.
“Wolf Woman” – from 2006’s Viva Las Vampire: If you have a thing for a woman with body hair, you will probably love this ode to werewolf love!
“Heavenly Body (From Outer Space)” is the second of the new songs to come from 2026’s Atomic Psycho. The bassline plays a bit of the Twilight Zone theme before Cleave rings the band in with a thumping beat. We’re off to space this time! The backing vocals provide a the hooks on the chorus. Once again, the musicianship and singing are really top notch here. The guitar solo is way fun!
“Let’s Make Sin” from 2011’s Tattoo’d Fuckwit: “Come on baby, let the sinnin’ begin!” Vampire love is fun way to end the album. But wait!!
There’s more! Two “XXXtra Tracks” bring the total track count to 12.
“Backseat Love” – from 2017’s Undead Or Alive. A fun duet with one foot in the 1950s and the other in the grave!
“Hey Space Girl!” – from 2001’s Evil Elvis. The roughest, most garage-y song on the album. An ode to a woman from Mars that’s here to stay. “Hey space girl, wanna see my laser gun?”
This album was dedicated to photographer Ron Boudreau, a staple of the Toronto scene who took pictures of many of the bands I loved. Rest in peace Ron.
50 Years of IRON MAIDEN episode 26: Dance of Death
With special guest Lana Teramae
GRAB A STACK OF ROCK #127
Brave New World was a new beginning for Iron Maiden, but the real test to any reunion (or new lineup, for that matter) is “can they do it twice”. Dance of Death was Iron Maiden’s chance to repeat or exceed. The road-seasoned lineup was hot with new ideas and got back to work with Kevin Shirley producing once again, but the new album was no re-hash. The band pushed boldly on.
Joining us for the first time on Grab A Stack of Rock is Lana Teramae, an old friend and writer for Metal Express Radio. Time zones once again collide in new ways, as Lana is the only guest from the state of Hawaii to ever join us! Harrison and I have not worked with Lana since our old show (the LeBrain Train), so it is wonderful to have her on with us once again. Her interviews with many of our heroes on Metal Express Radio might make us jealous, but when we started this series we wanted to include Lana. She chose Dance of Death of the albums up for grabs. In her words:
Check me out on Grab A Stack of Rock with Michael Ladano and Harrison Kopp as we discuss one of my favorite Iron Maiden albums, Dance of Death! The episode is set to premiere on YouTube on Friday, November 28, at 2:00 p.m. Hawaii Standard Time. I’m nowhere near as educated as these lovely gentlemen when it comes to Iron Maiden. I was just there for moral support!
Lana offered a new perspective that we have not often seen on the show: that of a fan that is not a “super-fan” like Harrison and myself. Lana may prefer Judas Priest to Iron Maiden, but she brings a new voice to the series and several insightful observations on this album that might be considered one that sometimes falls through the cracks.
After finishing an exhausting discussion on the 11 album tracks, we break down every B-side from the three singles: “Wildest Dreams” (including DVD single), “Rainmaker” (Japanese CD single with two extra tracks), and “No More Lies” (boxed single with unlisted bonus track). There is a lot to talk about with these B-sides as they included rare Iron Maiden jams, exclusive live versions, and unusual remixes.
As usual, Harrison takes us through the tour, though not too too much, since we will cover the live album Death on the Road in a future episode with special returning guest Jex Russell. And, of course…we have to address the atrocious cover art.
On a personal note, this was the final episode recorded at the cottage in the 2025 season. Will 50 Years of Iron Maiden still be going when we re-open in April 2026? It might be possible as there is still a flurry of albums, live records, singles and compilations left to go.
Join Mike, Harrison and special guest Lana Teramae tonight. We always try to comment along with you.
Friday November 28 at 7:00 P.M. E.S.T., 2:00 PM Hawaii Standard Time. Enjoy on YouTube.
The big plastic bin of garbage lay before me, to take out as I go. We had a bathroom pipe break the day before, so in the plastic bin was not just your average garbage, but also an impressively rusted bathroom drain pipe. I tucked my two cell phones (work and personal) into my shirt pocket as I always did, and picked the plastic bin up with the legs. Navigating the simple act of taking out an awkward bin of garbage is tricky at age 53. Carrying the brunt of the weight against my chest, I walked the garbage out to the dumpster.
I opened the lid a crack, struggled a bit, and heaved the trash into the dumpster. Job done, and off to work.
I’m a nervous nelly and I’m always checking my pockets. Right front pants; keys. Left front pants; wallet. Front right shirt…front right shirt.
Shit.
My phones. Both of them. Gone.
I ran back to the dumpster and opened the lid in the pitch black. Fortunately, one of my phones was lit up. They must have fallen in with the garbage, when I dumped the contents of the plastic bin into the dumpster.
I’ve never gone dumpster diving in my life. I have zero experience in this. Well, I was about to get my wings. I calculated the risk as I lifted myself up. I got my right leg up.
“This is easy,” I actually thought to myself. “I wonder if they design these things so you can get in if you have to.”
I lifted my whole body over the edge, and lost control of the situation quickly. I tipped over to the left and landed with a mighty crash on my left side.
“Fuck!” I might have shouted. I don’t remember. That’s when the adrenaline kicked in. Even though I could not see, one lit-up phone led to another, and I retrieved both. Nothing gets the adrenaline flowing like being stuck in a dumpster, and so I somehow lifted myself back up and out. I landed on both feet this time. I truly do not know how I did it, but as soon as I hit the ground, I began slowly walking it off and focusing on breathing. It only occurred to me later what would have happened if I landed on something sharp.
I was convinced that nothing was broken, so I got in the car and went to work. When I got there, I felt the adrenaline wearing off and more pain settling in. I tried to move a box of documents to be shredded and couldn’t even budge it. That’s when I changed my mind and decided to go to the hospital.
According to my notes, I was admitted right around 7:30 and discharged at 1:00; not a bad turnaround.
The nurses and attendants with all very helpful and sympathetic. They helped me out of my chair when I needed a lift. Between all the nurses and doctors, I think I told my story five times. Each time, it was hard not to laugh at the stupidity. That’s when I realized how much it hurt to laugh. It was a fairly easy wait. I bought with me a book, which was noted by the triage nurse. “Oh, I see you brought a book, smart!” I mumbled something about thinking ahead, but what came out was more or less gibberish. The book I had with me was, of course, dystopian fiction: 2546: Harbinger of The Equinox by Australian writer Violeta M Bagia. I ripped through the first 60 pages before I was let go.
X-rays were thorough. Nothing broken. It’s not as simple as that though, as this is an injury that can get worse if not cared for.
They gave me three yellow pills and three white pills. I could definitely feel their effects as breathing became easier. Getting up? Not so easy. Still working on that. It requires a system of sequential movements that I haven’t quite mastered yet.
I got myself home. My mom bought me a sandwich. It was the first food I’d had all day.
I can’t see any marks on my body, but I sure bet that will change in the coming days.
Having sat long enough, now I move to go lay down a while. Wish me luck. I’m sure this isn’t the end of this story.
GRAB A STACK OF ROCK With Mike and the Mad Metal Man
🅻🅸🆅🅴 Episode
Episode 126: Solidarity Forever: The Art and Soul of Stevie Van Zandt
With author Robert Lawson
Robert Lawson is a talented author (and music researcher) and friend, who actually appeared on our old show the LeBrain Train back in 2021. Tonight is his Grab A Stack of Rock debut, and his first time meeting the Mad Metal Man, Harrison Kopp.
When Robert was the LeBrain Train, it was to discuss his book Still Competition: The Listener’s Guide to Cheap Trick, a thorough and essential read. He has also penned detailed books on Nazareth and the Guess Who. This time, we’re talking about Stevie Van Zandt, the subject of Robert’s new book Solidarity Forever. This is a subject about which Robert is intensely passionate for reasons musical and spiritual. As Robert says, writing this book was “his job”.
“Little Steven” Van Zandt is a fascinating figure in rock, from his instantly recognizable stage visage, to his popular role on the Sopranos. This book will teach you about the solo career of Little Steven, and breaks down “every album, every single” just as we collectors want. Robert is also knowledgeable on many other artists in genres from jazz to rock, and we will doubtless stray off track spontaneously. And that is half the fun.
Tune in tonight and ask Robert your questions live, on Grab A Stack of Rock.
Friday November 21 at 7:00 PM EST, 8:00 PM Atlantic. Enjoy on YouTube or Facebook.
SPASTIC PHONO BAND – “Wings Under Japan” (1980 7″ single, Slipped Disc Records)
INVESTIGATIVE REPORT – 45 years ago…
[Editor’s note: the authors of this report have asked to retain their anonymity.]
The year: The harsh winter of 1980, remembered for its deep cold and snow. In the realm of popular music, all four Beatles were still alive, even though the band had been broken up for a decade. One of the Beatles soon found themselves in a wee bit of trouble. This trouble would spill all over the world news, causing rippling effects and ramifications far beyond the shores of England, for that winter in New York State, a band would go on to record a song….
The Beatle in trouble was the still-babyfaced Paul McCartney. It was no secret that he was already known for enjoying the green leaf. Back in 1972, McCartney was arrested in Sweden for possession of Lady Ganja. He was released without charges at that time, but his reputation was now cemented. McCartney wanted to book a Japanese tour in the mid-70s, but the country was very strict about illegal substances and refused Paul permission to play. The fans in Japan would have to do without.
Finally, in 1980, Japan had a change of heart and granted permission for Paul McCartney and Wings to tour in the Land of the Rising Sun.
He just needed to make sure he packed appropriately for the trip.
Paul McCartney is an undisputed musical genius. His songs will last 100 years. That does not mean that Paul always used his head. Despite the scrutiny he was bound to experience upon entering Japan, he decided to bring a stash with him. He was arrested upon discovery at the Narita Airport with 220 grams of Hawaiian green. Reportedly, he didn’t even attempt to hide the electric lettuce, just packing it in his carry-on bag with his clothing. Paul subsequently spent 10 days in the keiji shisetsu (刑務施設); actually the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department. Teenage girls numbering about 50 serenaded the station during Prisoner 22’s incarceration.
Unfortunately for Paul, the nature of this arrest and jailing far away from home meant headlines all over the world. “PAUL IN CHAINS” and “EX-BEATLE ARRESTED IN JAPAN” went the articles, along with a photo of McCartney being escorted by Japanese officials. It was huge news, especially in the UK where it became a bit of a media circus.
The judge in the case determined that McCartney brought the drugs for personal use and not trafficking, and decided that Paul had spent enough time in jail. He was taken to the airport, and flown to Holland, where he was (perhaps surprisingly) refused entry. He still had time for a chat with the press.
“How did you get out?” asked the reporter.
“Walking on foot,” answered Paul in typical cheeky Beatle humour.
The experience was “a drag” for Paul. “I was woken up at six in the morning, then had to sit cross-legged for a roll-call. It was like Bridge on the River Kwai. They shouted out ’22’ in Japanese, and I had to shout back, ‘Hai!'”
The 11 date Japanese tour was cancelled at the cost of 2.5 million dollars and 90,000 tickets.
Did he learn from his experience?
“Now I have made up my mind never to touch the stuff again. From now on, all I’m going to smoke is straightforward [cigarettes]. No more pot.” He later acknowledged his own stupidity. “Well, to this day I have no idea what made me do it. I don’t know if it was just arrogance or what. Maybe I thought that they wouldn’t open my suitcase. I can’t put myself back into that mindset now…to this day I have no idea what made me do it.”
Over in America, shortly after shoveling out from a massive dumping of overnight snow, a young songwriter named “Vic Trola” was inspired to write a song. At least that’s how the credits read on the actual record. A recent online theory postulated that “Vic Trola” was indeed a pseudonym, but these writings are mostly found in conspiracy theory discussions. A fringe group that splintered off the main conspiracy theory group added that “Vic” was short for “Victoria”, not “Victor” as previously assumed. These theories are largely dismissed by the other groups. Our own extensive research has failed to unearth any other compositions written by Trola; just the one that you are reading about today. We do know, thanks to documents obtained in the process of researching this article, that after catching their breath from shoveling the drive on that cold winter day, Trola went inside and began writing. The surviving notes from Vic Trola’s respirologist confirm these facts.
Vic Trola’s song, as it evolved into its final form, was the product of on-stage gigging by the mysterious Spastic Phono Band, and that is where our story really begins. Though their names are now lost to time, and their relationship to Vic Trola is clouded, we do know that they consisted of a tight rhythm section. Both the drummer and bassist were exceptional. They boasted a dual guitar configuration, and multiple lead singers including one female vocalist who appears prominently on their sole recording called “Wings Under Japan”.
The Spastic Phono Band had experience. They had already been working on a set of originals and comedic covers. Favourite hits by Santana and the Might Zep were endowed with new witty words, and they found an audience who shared their sense of musical comicality. Encouraged by the audience reception to these songs, the Spastic Phono Band turned their attention to the hot news of the day: Paul’s arrest in Japan. Presumably with Vic Trola’s lyrical input, they started playing bits of his Beatles and Wings hits in a medley. Egged on by the crowd, and adding throwaway lyrics here and there, the song “sort of wrote itself”, according to a maraca player who claims to have been there at the time (and requested complete anonymity). It took only three or four shows for the song to come together as we know it today. The Paul medley became an instant live hit. The crowds ate it up. They learned the words, sang along and shouted for more! Clearly, the song needed to be recorded in a studio, and put out on a record.
Unfortunately for the band and Vic Trola, who were based out of Liverpool (New York, pop. 2400), there were few studios around within the reasonable driving distance of a beaten-up touring van. Their studio of choice would be unavailable for three weeks, and time was of the essence. The Paul story was hot now, not later! Even if they recorded the song immediately, it would have to be mastered and pressed at a record plant, meaning they had to act immediately. The scarcity of nearby studios presented a challenge. Would these young musical minds be able to publish their Paul pastiche in time?
As they used to say, the Spastic Phono Band let their fingers do the walking: They picked up the phone and eventually connected to something that somehow passed as a recording studio. The old schoolhouse that they booked was certainly was not conceived as a studio when it was built in the last decade of the 1800s. The top floor housed the recording space, but in a decidedly inconvenient design and safety choice, it was only accessible via an outdoor fire escape. All the band’s equipment had to be hauled up the emergency exit: drum after drum after drum, followed by amp after amp. Bags were passed from vehicle to musician and up the fire escape, which wobbled with every tentative step. Also, it was winter. Members of the band were not sure if they were going to survive the combination of snow and ice, metal steps, and gravity. To our great fortune, they did.
The studio owner was also the engineer, and his soul still lived in the 1950s. He didn’t grasp the nuance, or understand the Spastic Phono Band’s particular brand of humour. He did, however, have a friendly personality and got along with the band. A good sounding record began to take shape on tape. The band nicknamed the engineer “Eddie”, a reference to a classic Leave It To Beaver character, Eddie Haskell. Eddie’s studio had all the necessary equipment (minus an elevator). He even had an ARP synthesizer which can be heard on two segments of the recording: “Silly Drug Laws“ and “Banned in Japan”. Though the band did not have the budget to spend more time in the studio to do some further work on the guitars, the band climbed down the fire escape holding in their mittens a reel-to-reel tape of their hard-earned work. Physicists specializing in the behaviour of water at low temperatures speculate that the tape was almost dropped once on the way down, but saved from an icy fate in the snow.
The schoolhouse was demolished in 2025 at 131 years old.
Though recorded, the song still had to be mastered and cut to vinyl. With time slipping away, and Paul McCartney finally starting to experience a decline in the media frenzy over his Japanese vacation in the big house, the Spastic Phono Band were in an ever-increasing time crunch. Their song, heavily dependent on McCartney’s imprint in the public consciousness, had to make its way to a physical record that you could buy. Their preferred manufacturer was fully booked and the band could not wait any longer. The track was complete, mixed and ready to be mastered…but where?
Through furious searching and some tense bidding on eBay, we have obtained some of the logs, unfortunately anonymous, detailing the following sequence of events of the recording:
Monday.
Tempus is fugiting. Much to our dismay, the cute Beatle’s troubles in the Far East are rapidly becoming old news. Also with windchill, it is about four degrees today.
The Paul story was soon displaced by other current events. The Iranian Revolution made fresh headlines, and soon came the hostage crisis. Front pages were dominated by the tense 444 day crisis, during which 66 Americans were held hostage at the US Embassy in Tehran. As it happens, another band in the same area as the Spastic Phono Band, a trio, were working on a song referencing these events. One of the songs in their regular set, popular in some of the local Irish venues around the area, was Jerry Jeff Walker’s “London Homesick Blues”. It featured the unique chorus of “I wanna go home with the armadillo.” (Who wouldn’t?) This was easily adapted into “I’ve had enough of the Ayatollah”. The clever lyrical substitute worked, and the band approached the club owners documented only as “The Brothers Three”. The Brothers actually owned three clubs, which seemed poetic. The Brothers Three liked the song, feeling that it tapped into the sentiment of the day. The reached into their pockets and financed a studio recording of the Walker cover. They were now in the record business.
The Spastic Phono Band, who were familiar with the trio in question, learned of this. Realizing it was a good idea, they decided to make their own pitch to the Brothers Three.
Wednesday.
They went for it. Sure, they argued a bit and the oldest one may have smacked the youngest one, but we did get a unanimous decision. The Brothers Three are going to allow us to use the disc maker where they pressed the Ayatollah record.
The record would be made in a little postage-stamp sized record plant (if you could call it that) in Connecticut.
Tuesday.
One of the Brothers Three picked me up in his MG convertible today. We took the tape to a dumpy little record pressing company. Mission accomplished. We ordered 300 copies to be made. Then headed home, but my companion driving the convertible decided to put the top down. It may be February thaw, but it was so cold I still don’t have feeling back in my nose. Considering calling an otolaryngologist.
Frozen noses aside, when the boxes containing 300 copies of “Wings Under Japan” finally arrived, the McCartney story was equally cold.
Friday.
Believe it or not, there isn’t a lot of demand for a record by a band that nobody’s heard of.
The records were delivered to stores, who tried their best to push it, but were fighting an uphill battle. The record was not a hit. The 300 copies did eventually end up in the hands of the public. There are no documents detailing any sales, so we do not know if the band sold them at shows, or by mail order, or any of the other quaint methods available in 1980. Mr. McCartney never stumbled upon the record, as far as the evidence suggests. At least, we know he hasn’t sued. But could he even locate the Spastic Phono Band if he wanted to? We could not. Vic Trola has pulled a DB Cooper: Taken the money (if any) and flown.
Though only the original 300 copies were made, we were able to track one down for this article. It was clearly loved in its previous home.
Housed in a yellow-brown sleeve (the original?), the 45 has a nice maroon label, stating this is on Slipped Disc Records. Charmingly, the song “Wings Under Japan” is split over the two sides…sides 3 and 4. (It has been suggested that this release, with sides 3 and 4 instead of 1 and 2), gave George Lucas the idea to number The Empire Strikes Back as Episode V instead of Episode II as expected. With that film releasing in May 1980, we cannot completely dismiss the claim.)
The track is just over seven minutes combined.
Leavin’ on a Japanese roadtrip, Headin’ down a London runway, Paul said ‘I need to bring along some good weed, Because it helps me relax when I play.’
Guffaw! The song begins with a spoof of “The Ballad of John and Yoko”, now called “The Ballad of Paul and Linda”, with a similar structure, but words about Paul. “The way things are gooooin’, they’re gonna scrutinize me!” And they did…but not long enough for the Spastic Phono Band. The song continues.
Staring at the man with the baggie. Paul said, ‘Maybe I’m amazed! It only amounts to less than half an ounce, Why do you have to get so carried away?’
In perhaps the most obvious yet fun twist, the song then goes into Wings’ “Hi Hi Hi”…but re-written as “High High High”. This is funny because it’s so obvious, it had to be done. It’s amazing nobody else did it. Incidentally the harmony vocals in this section are rich and excellent.
Next up in the Paul medley is “Silly Love Songs”, redone as “Silly Drug Laws”. “What’s wrong with drugs, I’d like to know, ’cause here I go again! I’m in jail…” Another example of great singing by the Spastic Phono Band, but listen to that 1970s groove and the dexterous bassline! This is some serious playing.
Side “3” ends, and so we flip to side “4”. Fortunately in the modern era, we can use our digital capture software to seamlessly edit the two into one track! Next is “Band On the Run”, revised as “Banned In Japan”. In this case, the original song is almost a medley of different sections itself. The Spastic Phono Band do several of them here. “Stuck inside these stone walls, might be here forever!” There is a poignant moment coming here, frozen in time. Little did they know that John Lennon had only months to live, for in December of 1980, he would be murdered in New York. So to hear the line, “I’ll join with Ringo, and George and John and we’ll put the reunion on,” reminds us that finite period of time when such a thing was indeed possible.
A brief pause and then, just like on Abbey Road, wait for a Beatles-y coda.
“Wings Under Japan” is, quite frankly, one of the best parody medley songs (or however you want to describe it) you’ll ever find, for three reasons.
The mystery. Who are the Spastic Phono Band anyway? We may never know. (Or, more accurately…we may never tell.)
The musical prowess. There is some serious playing and singing on this brief single, and your life would be richer if you heard it.
Though depicting events before some of you were born, the lyrics are still hilarious due to the timeless nature of weed jokes.
Like ships passing in the night, once again I cannot seem to hook up with Logan Collins at the same time and place! Logan and I did, however, contribute to this fantastic episode of Tim’s Vinyl Confessions.
With the loss of Ace Frehley fresh in our minds, the three of us go through our Ace Frehley CD collections. There are certain items in my collection you may not have seen before, such as a promo single for “Do Ya”. We engaged in deep discussion on each album, the key tracks, and the specific versions we have on display. Most of us, we miss the Ace and spend most of our time just talking about how great he was.
Check out this episode of Tim’s Vinyl Confessions, which will premiere later today.
From the album Live In Ontario, here is the second music video from the CD: “I Don’t Advocate Drugs”. This video was painstakingly animated, using real Lego bricks, by hand. No AI here folks. Bricks were collected to create these characters including all four members of the band: Max the Axe (lead guitar), Uncle Meat (lead vocals), Mike Mitchell (bass), and Dr. Dave Haslam (drums). Depicting a druggy trip and a stage performance by the band, look for several easter eggs referring to past Max the Axe songs, or even Dr Dave’s well-stated hatred of Transformers.