{"id":41615,"date":"2016-01-08T13:00:34","date_gmt":"2016-01-08T19:00:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.toiletovhell.com\/?p=41615"},"modified":"2016-01-08T12:27:53","modified_gmt":"2016-01-08T18:27:53","slug":"pants-stains-in-flames-jeans","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/pants-stains-in-flames-jeans\/","title":{"rendered":"Pants Stains \u2013 In Flames Jeans"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Are those In Flames<\/strong> jeans, because your ass has gone steadily downhill since 2002.<\/p>\n

Whether you love them, used to love them, hate them, or just ignore everything said and just rush to the comments section to post a Burzum<\/strong> video, it’s hard to deny In Flames. They’ve been around for over two decades, have put out eleven studio albums, three EPs, toured all over the world, won a bunch of awards, and helped spearhead an entire subgenre of metal.<\/p>\n

Of course, a band of this size playing live isn’t just the musicians on stage;\u00a0it takes stage managers, sound engineers, guitar techs, drum techs, lighting techs, stage designers, and plenty of assistants. These are the unsung heroes of concerts. They’re at the venue hours and even days before the show starts, and they’re there long after the final song has been played. It’s hard and sometimes dangerous work that you may not notice unless something goes wrong. Broken strings, monitors shorting out, mics dying, sets falling. Anything can happen, and they are all potentially show stopping catastrophes.<\/p>\n

In Flames teamed up with Swedish \u201cwork wear\u201d company Blaklader<\/a> to put out a documentary on their crew entitled \u201cBuild It Up And Tear It Down<\/a>\u201d. It’s highly commendable that the band would want their fans to know about all the help they receive from their crew. It may seem a bit odd, but the documentary is only about 11 minutes long and can be seen in its entirety here:<\/p>\n