Idag var de ytterst nära att jag skulle missat bussen, sov längre än vad jag tänkt !!!! glömde ställa väckaren, men jag kom i tid till jobbet!
Nu e allt fixat inför festen imorrn, ska bli såååå kul , ska försöka komma ihåg att fota i massor, idag hade jag glömt kameran när jag rusade ut ....men förhoppningsvis kommer party bilder här framöver !!!
Puma övervakade städningen !!!
Ha nu en trevlig helg mina läsare , jag ska ta tag i bloggen till veckan så här kan den ju inte se ut !
VINCE NEIL Says He Bought An Airplane To Transport His Dogs...
When Motley Crue's lead singer Vince Neil releases his first solo studio disc in 15 years, you might expect there to be some good stories behind it.
Especially for a guy who's been married four times, and in the last four months alone was separated from Wife No. 4 and arrested for drunk driving in Las Vegas.
But Neil's disc, titled Tattoos and Tequila, is mainly a collection of '70s covers by such artists as Sweet, Cheap Trick, Aerosmith, Sex Pistols, Elvis Presley and Elton John.
"I just wanted to make a really cool party album," said Neil, 49, in Toronto earlier this year.
"The thing with these songs, each one has a memory attached to it. This whole thing is like a window into my life. Every single song has a memory attached to it. I could picture in my mind what I was doing listening to these songs. I was a young kid going to see bands on the Sunset Strip and it takes me back to those days."
Still, he has at least one good tequila tale.
"Falling off my horses in the Agave fields," he said laughing. "It gets hot in Mexico. So I'm on my horse, I have 2,000 acres of Agave in Mexico, and fell off. I didn't hurt myself but I got really lucky I didn't fall (into the Agave). They're like nine foot spears and if you fall on one of those, that could really hurt."
For the record, he has six tattoos, the most precious being one on his chest of a sacred heart bearing the name of his daughter Skylar, who died of cancer at the age of four in 1995.
"Tattoos and tequila -- it's just my life," he said.
Neil, who has two originals on the disc including the Nikki Sixx-penned Another Bad Day, a reject from a past Motley Crue album, says the long break between solo records -- he actually released a live solo album seven years ago -- is mainly due to his day job.
"I just haven't had the time to do it with all the touring that Motley Crue's been doing and different businesses that I opened," said Neil.
Among his businesses are his own brand of tequila and a Mexican cantina, both called Tres Rios; two tattoo parlours, Vince Neil Ink; two private jets for lease at Vince Neil Aviation, and two bar/restaurants called FeelGoods.
Still to come is CrueFest 3 next year, commemorating the veteran glam-metal outfit's 30th anniversary.
"That's when they start calling you legendary and icon when it just really means old," he said with a laugh. "For Motley to still be viable and selling out arenas and festivals 30 years later, it just shows that we weren't just a flash in the pan. We're very multi-generational now. You see, not only the fans that grew up with you, that are in their 40s, but with their kids, 12-year-olds with Shout At the Devil shirts on. I see a lot of dads with their five year olds on their shoulders taking them to their first rock experience. And attorneys standing next to tattoo artists. It's everything, that's the beauty of being of being in Motley right now."
Neil is also planning to release his own biography, called Tattoos & Tequila, that follows the warts-and-Crue biography, The Dirt, which came out in 2001.
"That book was written about four guys," he said. "I had a voice in it but I just touched on subjects. I touched on my youth, you know growing up in Compton, and witnessing murder after murder and thinking it was normal, and the tragedies with my daughter and the car wrecks (his best friend was killed and Neil, who was driving, served jail time for vehicular manslaughter), getting into music and my high school days and being in Motley Crue. The Dirt is 10 years old so a lot of stuff has happened in the last decade. It's just really the first time I've really told my story."
Neil bought jet for dogs
Cakes and Crackers, Vince Neil's two cocker spaniels, led to the Motley Crue frontman starting Vince Neil Aviation, a private jet company with two planes for lease.
"Those are the kids," he says pointing to pictures of the dogs on his blackberry.
"I mean just because of them I had to buy a jet. I bought an airplane for the dogs 'cause I have a home in San Francisco and Las Vegas and my (fourth and soon-to-be ex) wife won't put them on the crate so I bought a jet to get my dogs back and forth. I would have to charter planes for the dogs all the time and it was getting so expensive that I realized it was cheaper to buy a plane than to keep chartering it."
If that sounds just a little lavish, you're not alone in thinking that.
"Life's fun," he said, flashing a Dunamis watch that cost a cool $500,000.
Hey, I had to ask the cost with all those sparkling diamonds staring me in the face.
Börjar med dom goda nyheterna, igår fick jag hem min efterlängtade
MÖTLEY CRÜE MILLENIUM AWARD !
Signerad av alla utom Tommy !
Jag & missarna var ute på en lite skogspromenad idag !
Nu e vi lika knäckta allihopa !
Verkligen en jävla förkylning de här, igår kändes de rätt ok inatt har jag
haft ont halsen som f-n ... jag är så less på sitta här och bara käka
massa skit medicin och vänta på bli bättre......men inte så mycke att göra
får väll ringa doktorn igen på måndag om de inte blir bättre!!!
Ska läsa ut boken om Bruce Dickinson, den var seg som kola i början så den har bara
blivit liggande ...men snart kommer denna bok som jag ser framemot att läsa,
behöver jag säga att den handlar om en del Mötley medlemmar bla !!!
Singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and political activist Serj Tankian was interviewed on a recent edition of "Sixx Sense", the new national radio program hosted by MÖTLEY CRÜE bassist Nikki Sixx. You can now listen to the 21-minute chat below.
"Imperfect Harmonies" is the second solo effort from the SYSTEM OF A DOWN frontman. As with "Elect the Dead", Tankian produced the new CD himself at his home studio in Los Angeles.
What set Mötley Crüe apart from other bands of the era?
Back in the old days, any money we made — which wasn't a lot — we put back into the band, with theatrics. Like lighting Nikki on fire — no other bands did that kind of stuff. We were always about "$10 ticket, give them a $100 show."
You and Axl Rose and David Lee Roth all have this high-pitched, reedy delivery. What influenced that?
It's just the way my voice comes out. Nothing I can do about it. I wish I had a Ronnie James Dio or a David Coverdale voice, but I don't.
So why don't you think people sing like that anymore?
Bands change. The different generation of bands in the '90s, they were writing songs in different keys. That changes the way you would sing it.
How do you feel about grunge? There are a lot of hair metal people who don't like grunge at all.
Well, it was something new, when it came out. I don't particularly like the style. I'm an arena guy. I think as a singer you should run around and try to excite the crowd. Their style is to stand there and play — really no show. And that depressed me.
There's a saying that opens the book: If you remember the '80s, you weren't there. What was it like in the '80s, for the parts you remember?
Well, that's the same thing they said in the '60s. The funny thing is, it was always the people in their early 20s in the '60s that said that, and the people in their early 20s in the '70s said the same thing. I was in my early 20s in the '80s. I think if you're in your early 20s, you're not going to remember anything.
Exactly. But for the '60s, we've generally decided what the decade was: civil rights, Vietnam, hippies. The '80s are more unwritten.
It was a scene. I was born and raised in L.A. and all of a sudden the music scene just burst into Hollywood. And we were lucky enough to be one of the young bands that were up and coming at the time. It was a cool scene. The streets were packed with guys who were in bands or wanted to be in bands, and with girls who wanted to meet a guy who looked like he was in a band. So it was fun for everybody.
You say in the book that your favorite thing about being a rock star was that you got a lot of girls. Is that a fair assessment?
That's the only reason guys get into music — because you get girls and free beer. It wasn't about fame or anything. You want to get laid and you want to get drunk.
There's an old saying: Whatever you would do with yourself if you had $1 million is what you should do with your life. What would you do with yourself if you had all the beer and women you had as a rock star?
Right now, I still love being in a band and I still love singing. But back then? If you asked me when I was in high school, I would have said, "I'll just lay on the beach — give me the girls and the booze."
In the book, you mention that you would want to open a jet-ski shop.
Somebody asked me what I would be doing if I wasn't a rock star. I said I'd be the guy that rents out the jet skis to you. When I'm on the beach at a resort and there are the guys doing that, I'm thinking to myself, "What a great job." The only thing in the world you have to worry about is whether those jet skis are running or not. To have a life with those kinds of problems? That'd be pretty cool.
You're semiestranged with the rest of Mötley Crüe, but you're still the front man of the band and you still tour with them all the time. How does that work?
We're still family. We still, basically, love each other. It was a business decision for me. When I was — depending on how you look at it — fired or I quit the band [in 1992], I was a part of Mötley Crüe Inc. And I chose not to come back into that [in 1997]. I looked at myself as a free agent on a football team. I didn't have to be worried about any corporate decisions. All I had to do was show up and sing.
In 2005, you had a reality show on VH1 about getting plastic surgery. Not many people from your generation have been so open about it. Why were you?
Mötley Crüe's Vince Neil on Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll
It was a point in my life where I wasn't doing anything. I remember getting a phone call, I was sitting at the pool at the Ritz-Carlton, drinking — which I'd been doing for the last few months — gaining weight and not doing anything productive. And the phone call [to do the show] came and I was like, "Maybe this is the fire under my butt that I needed." And it worked. It was nothing to be ashamed of.
Your book has a happy ending. If you're not riding off into the sunset, it's at least you more stable and more mature. But since you've written it, you've gotten divorced and had run-ins with the law. [Neil was arrested for a DUI in June.] Do you think that undercuts the message at the end?
No, because you're really only getting one side of a story on things that have happened to me recently. Until you get the full facts and stuff, you can't go by that. Things have been great in my life — except I'm getting divorced. That's the main one.
I guess you can't rewrite the ending of the book, but is there anything you would say differently now?
When you're a couple and you've been together for 10 years, things happen. I wasn't going to say, "Oh, I've got a book coming out, so we can't split up." Or, "Hold the book! Let's rewrite some stuff here." You can't do that. It's life.