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Dale co-manages Palmerston with Greg Brooks of (Serling, Rooks and Ferrara - New York).
Dale co-manages Psychotic4 with Greg Brooks of (Serling, Rooks and Ferrara - New York).

www.myspace.com/psychotic4
It took two continents, three countries, and 237 singers to make Palmerston.

No, really.

Hear the band, and you'll believe it. An unlikely collision of worlds fuels their kind of rock'n'roll: hot meets cool, mind meets guts, the northern sensibilities of two Portugese-Canadian brothers fuse with the Bay Area boho of one explosive singer.

Let's take it from the top, when Gabriel and Basilio Fernando Ferreira started jamming in (where else) a garage in Toronto, Ontario. They rounded up a singer, released an EP, and rolled through the narrow roads and massive festival stages of Europe. There was a Top 10 single on Portugese radio, tens of thousands of European fans, and opening slots for bands like Weezer and System of a Down.

For less driven rockers, this might have been enough. But the Ferreira brothers needed to kick it up a notch; they needed a change of scene. They packed their bags for Los Angeles, while their singer stayed behind in Canada: Palmerston would be born anew in the city of angels.

At first, there was culture clash: bright lights and big city, Canadian modesty confronted by a thousand guys who swear that next year, they'll be bigger than Tom Cruise. But the Hollywood dream suited the Ferreira brothers just fine. "We thrive on competition," Gabriel says. "The spirit of success is very much alive in Los Angeles."

To capture that success you need a singer, so Gabriel and Fernando put out a call for auditions. Exactly 237 rock star wannabes showed up. None of them could sing; at least, not with the kind of heady combination of raw power and lyrical sensitivity that the Palmerston project needed.

Not, that is, until they heard French.

It was his voice that captured them first: huge, visceral, taut with passion. But French had other gifts to offer, like the perspectives of a self-described poet, artist, dreamer; a former juvenile delinquent who had grown up on the beach, testing the limits of perception (and, sometimes, the law) while feeding his ears on experimental rock soundscapes.

Fused with the Ferreira brothers' instrumental talents, French's expansive creativity would give birth to Palmerston's deliciously unpredictable live show. Sometimes, in the middle of a set, spurred by the energy of the crowd, he'll paint a painting, or invoke a furious recitation of spoken word.

This is why Palmerston's audiences never forget them, and why recent release of the band's debut album was so eagerly received by fans across the world. (Those fans, by the way, included EA Sports, who named the single Addicted as the feature track on their bestselling NASCAR '08 video game.)

True, you can't see the live show on that eponymous new CD. But you can feel it. Produced in Vancouver by internationally renowned producer Dale Penner (Nickelback) and mixed by Mike Fraser (Metallica, Aerosmith), Palmerston's full-length is an explosive exercise in huge guitars, hooky riffs and a relentless search for melodic freedom.

For these elements, French calls it a new experiment in modern rock. It's radio-friendly but not derivative, visceral but not angry. It started in a garage in Toronto and was transformed forever by the heady, cerebral subcultures of southern California, resulting in something that hasn't quite been done before. Check it out  for yourself  www.myspace.com/palmerston
PSYCHOTIC4 - BIO
BANG YOUR HEADS TO THE NEW REVOLUTION!"  With this as their battle cry Psychotic 4 charge onto the scene with no chance of mercy. Their debut album Lightning is the product of a die-hard stick to your guns philosophy. In a time of dilution in rock Psychotic 4 distill until the product is a thunderclap of catchy in-your-face-more-make-up-than-your-sister-but-still-fucking-her metal tinged rock. These guys don't need magazines to tell them they're the next big thing, they've had the biggest things on their scene for a while. All this said of intensity their new record promises to deliver something once lost but now found: pop tunes that still rock. Hoping to get a new generation laid and headbanging all at the same time singer/guitarist Diamond Dean, guitarist Jimmy J, bassist P.J Stagger and guitarist Dave Ablaze ask not what rock and roll can do for them but what they can do for rock and roll.

Building on the long standing musical relationship with P.J, Diamond Dean brought in co-writter and fire breathing lead guitarist Jimmy J when he was only 16. With Psychotic 4 as Jimmy's baptism into music they released Unlocked, Unleashed, Unzipped. The single from the afformentioned EP, No Sorry, debuted in January 2004 and went on to 6 weeks of rotation on Much Music, 13 weeks on Musiqueplus (reaching the top of the english countdown leaving Britney and 50 Cent in their dust) and 15 weeks on Much Loud! By that time they had toured with the Musiqueplus 123 Punk, rock mainstays Nashville Pussy, gigged with the likes of Andrew W.K, Simple Plan, Sum 41 and Jersey among others made an appearance on the Vans Warped Tour, lost drummers to crack and celebrity, had there singer die twice and vowed never to steal from bikers ever again!

The Montreal-based foursome bring Motley Crue, Ozzy and Judas Priest to a punk party and don't leave till they're thrown out! Having had a long history of drummer vacancy (Spinal Tap would be proud) in 2005 they decided to do the only logical thing: add another guitarist! With the addition of metal powerhouse Dave Ablaze on shred guitar they are now ready to release their three-pronged guitar assault. Being from the creative sinkhole of the Montreal art scene has made Psychotic 4 fight to brand themselves apart from the herd. Rock that's pop? Pop that rocks? Metal? Whatever it is look forward to ear fucking them in the near future.

contact information shawn@paradise-alley.com