The Official Tony Harnell My Space Site! I love my fans!!!!

Tony Harnell

Last Updated:
Oct 8, 2008

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Monday, September 29, 2008

Updated News!

Hey everyone,
We're in the process of developing a new official site and a new official myspace design will follow.
And thanks to everyone who has ordered the ep Cinematic! It's flying out the door and its great to see so many people digging it. There are plenty of copies left and I will sign every one that goes out! Buy here: http://www.tonyharnell.com/
We're proud to say that Starbreaker finally gets a US release on November the 18th through Blistering/Ryko. So pick up a copy!
More news to come soon including an announcement of a new special album to be released early next year before the solo album...
Love, Tony

http://www.reverbnation.com/c./a4/487061/298712/Artist/298712/Artist/link

7:56 PM - 12 Comments - 22 Kudos - Add Comment

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Starbreaker myspace is ours now:)

Ok folks one of our guys is now running the SBker myspae site so you can go there if you like as well to get the latest on SB. You will also find it here and Magnus Karlsson's site. Be sure to check out Jon Macaluso's and Jonni Lightfoot's sites as well, Drop by and say hi to them.
peace, TH

6:19 AM - 2 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Dad does it again!

Once again my Dad has been nominated for the prestigious Genesis award which he won last year in the journalism category for bringing attention to the Dolphin slaughters in Japan. His stories and photographs have been instrumental in creating a huge reaction worldwide on the subject which hopefully will put an end to this tragic practice. He continues to dedicate himself to this cause. Way to go Dad!

11:09 AM - 17 Comments - 26 Kudos - Add Comment

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Interesting article

Classic Hard Rock Still Strong

07/21/07
.
(antiMusic) It seems that people are opting for classic hard rock and metal CDs over most generic "new" music. This according to a report by the Associated Press. While record companies try to fathom reasons why people aren't buying their "new" product, by ignoring the most logical explanation and looking to court tweens to help pick up their bottom lines, it appears that music from other eras where A&R people took chances on bands that didn't sound like everyone else and bands were allowed to develop a fanbase over several albums is still attracting a lot of buyers.

Twenty-Seven years after its release, AC/DC's Back in Black is still selling almost enough copies a year to qualify for a gold record. Last year while we were treated to dozens of sound-alike emo bands that didn't sell many CDs, AC/DC's landmark album managed to sell 440,000 copies in the US.

While [insert silly multi-worded name here] was struggling to attract the attention of TRL girls, other albums from long-ago were also moving pretty heavy numbers. Metallica's jump to the commercial mainstream, aka The Black Album was added to the CD collections of 275,000 US music fans last year and Guns 'N Roses debut which broke records when it was released in 1987 is still a hot seller, welcoming 113,000 more people to the jungle last year. And the album that killed "hair metal" and touched off the grunge trend of the early 90s (Nirvana's Nevermind) is still going strong with 143,000 copies sold last year.

David Geffen should be proud to have two bands that he took a chance on still selling today and showing us why we need trendsetters and not trendfollowers running labels more than ever. On the other end of the spectrum, when you think of today's blasé music scene, you might think of the "genius" of Clive Davis and while his "genius" isn't selling record breaking amounts of CDs right now, he did manage to give us the best selling CD of 1986 in the form of Whitney Houston's self-titled debut. However, like most things that Clive touches it may sell today but doesn't have much of a shelf life (like real cheese) as Houston's CD only manages to attract about 7,000 new people a year, easily beat by Radiohead's "OK Computer" which turned on 94,000 additional people last year.

There is definitely a lesson to be learned here. But will the people that need to learn it the most, take heed? Probably not, as they are too busy trying to find clones for the few bands of today that manage to sell a decent amount of CDs. That's when they are not working to shutdown online radio, installing rootkits on customers PCs and suing people.

9:20 PM - 3 Comments - 8 Kudos - Add Comment

Saturday, July 07, 2007

A fan letter...

I receive many beautiful letters from my fans every day. I read them all but I don't always have time to respond. But I had to post this letter as it really personifies the reason why I do what I do.

Hey Tony
Have never written a "fan" letter" so this is the closest. The 1st concert I ever saw in my life was the
"To Hell With the Devil" tour. I was like in the 6th grade. Never heard of TNT, but from that night in Topeka, I was hooked. As a songwriter and musician, TNT has been a pillar in my influences. Your voice tells stories without words and can move the helpless and emotionless. Your music has pulled me through every bad, good, unbearable and unforgettable time in my life. REALIZED FANTASIES has NEVER moved from my cd player since the day is was realeased. Everytime I hear LIONHEART I get something new from it.
Thank you so much bro for the years of music, talent and devotion you have dedicated yourself too.
You are truly a rockstar and an influential part of this addicts life.
May GOD continue to bless you and your family and I hope one day to see you perform live again. If you are ever in Nashville, plus let me know.
If it ever seems like what you do is in vain, please rememebr your voice and your music SAVED my life time after time. And for that I am ever indebted.
Keep it up bro.
ROCK HARD and stay gold
Dean Morrison

3:03 PM - 11 Comments - 18 Kudos - Add Comment

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Tony Harnell Press Release

Tony Harnell announces a new STARBREAKER album
for release 2008 through Frontiers Records.

We are happy to announce that Mr. Harnell has once again joined forces with world class drummer John Macaluso, European guitar force Magnus Karlsson and new member, Tomas Johansson, a hard pounding Swedish bass player.

Tony has been spending time with his family but he has not remained still when it comes to his career. In the past year Tony has been writing continuously both alone and with some incredible songwriters in Sweden, New York and Toronto. He is also proud to be participating in Graham and Jodi Russell's Rock Opera "The Heart of the Rose" in it's early stages, playing the role of Robin Hood. In addition, he's been involved in several charity concerts including a huge concert in New York's Union Square for Artists for Human Rights which showcased UN award winner Taron Lexton's incredible short films on human rights. He's also been working on a book with up and coming vocal coach Jaime Vendera.

Tony say's: " I took some valuable time off with my family and have kept busy with several projects I have been wanting to do for a long time. I am ready and excited to jump into Starbreaker again. As I really enjoyed the first album, it felt only natural to do a second one. I met Tomas Johansson while working on my solo material and believe me this guy can handle the bass as well as being a wonderful and funny person".

Tony continues: "the song writing for my first solo album is well under way and I have some killer tracks I am absolutely thrilled with! This is something I have wanted to do for such a long time, I am creating a new chapter of my life right now and it's exciting. I have met so many talented and amazing people on my solo journey and have spent quite some time in Sweden – I can't seem to get out of ScandinaviaJ"


The band will perform some high profile appearances following the release of Starbreaker! Stay tuned for more news in the future…



http://www.myspace.com/tonyharnellonline
http://www.tonyharnell.com/
and check out the new TH fan forum here:
http://www.tonyharnellforum.com/

10:40 AM - 11 Comments - 16 Kudos - Add Comment

Sunday, May 21, 2006

The article that won the award...

...for my dad. In case you haven't seen it, here it is.

'Secret' dolphin slaughter defies protests

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/getarticle.pl5?fe20051130a1.htm

By BOYD HARNELL
Special to The Japan Times

Japan's annual slaughter of thousands of dolphins began Oct. 8 in the traditional whaling town of Taiji on the Kii Peninsula of Honshu's Wakayama Prefecture. These "drive fisheries" triggered demonstrations, held under the "Japan Dolphin Day" banner, in 28 countries. The protests went almost entirely unreported in Japan, where only very few people are aware of what goes on.

The culling, spanning a period of six months, is officially condoned as part of traditional culture, and is described as "pest control" by practitioners. However, it is the inhumane way in which the mammals are killed, by stabbing and spearing them, that especially provokes such widespread revulsion.

Taiji fishermen begin the oikomi (fishery drive) by going out to sea in motor boats to locate pods of dolphins. They then place long steel poles with flared, bell-like ends into the water and bang them to create a wall of sound that amplifies underwater and drives their prey into a narrow cove. Once there, the dolphins' escape is cut off by nets strung across the mouth of the cove. The following day -- after they have rested so, it is thought, their meat becomes more tender -- they are herded into another cove nearby where the slaughter is carried out. Much of the meat is then processed for human consumption -- even though eating it could well be a very foolhardy thing to do.

A video with footage shot at Taiji in January 2004 by One Voice, a French-based animal rights group, and other footage from a similar oikomi in Futo, Shizuoka Prefecture, by a cameraman who requested anonymity, shows dolphins thrashing about wildly as they try to escape and the water turns red.

Drive fisheries appear to be carried out in as much secrecy as possible, and the killing cove in Hatagiri Bay at Taiji is hidden between two mountains. There, a gigantic tarp is strung over the shoreline to cut off the view from land, and paths leading to the cove are closed off with chains and posted with signs reading "No Trespassing!" and "Keep Out, Danger!" said Ric O'Barry an official with One Voice.

O'Barry, a former trainer of the dolphins used in the U.S. television series "Flipper," recently returned home to Miami from Taiji after shooting footage of freshly killed dolphins being lifted onto a pier in the harbor there. Speaking prior to his departure, O'Barry said that the Taiji dolphin-killers are proud of what they do, and boast of a tradition dating back 400 years. "However," he commented, "if they are so proud of this, why do they take such pains to hide their activity?"

O'Barry said he met with the local Taiji fishery group and offered them a subsidy to stop the killings, but was rebuffed and told the dolphins were "pests" that competed with the commercial fishery. Noting that there are no scientific studies showing dolphins are responsible for falling fish stocks in the area, O'Barry cited overfishing as the probable cause.

But it is not just those doing the killing who make every effort to hide it from the world. Japanese officials also strongly discourage outsiders from seeing, recording or protesting the blood-letting.

During a fishery drive on Nov. 18, 2003, two members of the Washington state-based Sea Shepherd Conservation Society were arrested by police from Taiji's neighboring town of Shingu for jumping into freezing waters and releasing 15 dolphins trapped in a net awaiting slaughter. The pair, Alex Cornelisson from the Netherlands and American Allison Lance-Watson, were held without bail and only released on Dec. 9, 2003, after being indicted and fined for "forceful interference with Japanese commerce." Meanwhile, two other Sea Shepherd members staying in a trailer park in Taiji had their cameras, film, computer and some personal belongings confiscated by police, according to an online news release from the group. Undeterred, Sea Shepherd is offering a $10,000 reward to anyone who provides the best footage of the drive fishery.

In response to allegations that the oikomi dolphins suffer from shock and die slowly, in a Sept. 19, 2005, letter to British-based animal welfare and conservation charity the Born Free Foundation, Jun Koda, Counselor of the Japanese Embassy in London, said: "In some small parts of our country we have a long tradition of consuming dolphin meat. Japanese fishermen are careful to minimize suffering as soon as possible and cause as little pain to the dolphins as possible."

Koda went on to say that the dolphin "almost instantly meets its end within a maximum of 30 seconds and does not suffer any pain."

A rebuttal from Born Free said the data in which Koda based his claim is taken from
Faeroe Island dolphin hunts in the North Atlantic, which have not been subject to independent scrutiny and hence have no bearing on the Japanese culls. Koda's assertions are also countered by observers from One Voice and Sea Shepherd, who have reported seeing wounded dolphins writhe in pain for almost six minutes before succumbing to their wounds.

Meanwhile, another Japanese official was equally forthright in countering critics' objections to killing dolphins for food. In a telephone interview this month, Hideki Moronuki, assistant director of the whaling section in the Far Seas Fishery Division of the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, expressed the view that, "If someone eats a cow, why should one object to a dolphin being eaten; they're all mammals."
He added, "If Australians want to eat kangaroos, we don't care. . . . Please do not care what Japanese do. . . . Dolphins and whales are part of Japanese food culture."
Furthermore, speaking in English, Moronuki expressed his view that dolphins are killed humanely in the fishery drives. Then, comparing the slaughter of a dolphin to that of a cow or a pig, he declared: "Killing is killing."

O'Barry believes this is the attitude of most Japanese fishermen. "They don't think of dolphins as intelligent, highly complex animals that love to play and interact with people," he said.

But such sentiments are not confined to welfare and conservation groups.

On April 6, 2005, U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg, a Democrat from New Jersey, sponsored Senate Resolution 99, "Expressing the sense of the Senate to condemn the inhumane and unnecessary slaughter of small cetaceans . . . in certain nations." The submission, currently referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations, not only cites the fact that "those responsible for the slaughter prevent documentation or data from the events from being recorded or made public," but it describes how, "each year tens of thousands of small cetaceans are herded into small coves in certain nations, are slaughtered with spears and knives, and die as a result of blood loss and hemorrhagic shock."

C.W. Nicol, the renowned environmentalist, author, whaling expert and Japan Times columnist, recently made an M.B.E. by Queen Elizabeth II, witnessed the Taiji dolphin slaughter while living there in 1978. Speaking last week, he said: "It's been a cancer in my gut ever since. It's no good to kill an animal inhumanely, and to do so is not to the advantage of Japan."

However, not all the captured dolphins are killed. Every year, an unknown number of healthy young specimens are selected and removed from the killing coves to be sold into the international dolphin captivity industry, to be kept in aquariums, trained to perform at dolphinariums or for swim-with-dolphin programs. At Taiji, those involved appear to reap rich rewards in this way, and O'Barry said he was told there that the fishery drives would stop and those carrying them out would go back to catching lobsters and crabs if they were not offered huge sums for "show" dolphins.

Echoing this, Nicol said he vehemently opposes the dolphin massacre, adding, that "dolphins not selected for dolphinariums should be returned to the sea."

However, in a further, darkly ironic twist, serious health issues would seem to surround meat from the slaughtered animals, which is available at supermarkets in Shizuoka Prefecture and Kyushu.

At present, Hiroyuki Uchimi of the Japanese health ministry's Food Safety Division explained, the provisional advisory safety levels set in 1973, and still in effect for methyl mercury, are 2 micrograms a week for pregnant women and 3.4 micrograms a week for all others, including children, for each kilogram of body weight.

But according to Tetsuya Endo, a member of the Pharmaceutical Sciences faculty at Hokkaido's Health Science University, mercury in a sample of the meat he tested in 2003 from a supermarket in Ito, Shizuoka Prefecture, was 14.2 times higher than the government's maximum advisory level. "It is terrible," he said this month.

Endo's finding was amply supported by those of a 2000-2003 joint survey of small cetacean food products sold in Japan by the Daichi College of Pharmaceutical Sciences in Fukuoka, Kyushu, the university where Endo works, and the School of Biological Sciences in Auckland, New Zealand. Published in 2005, this found that all dolphin food products "exceeded the provisional permitted levels of 0.4 micrograms per wet gram for total mercury and 0.3 micrograms per wet gram for methyl mercury set by the Japanese government. The highest level of methyl mercury was about 26 micrograms per wet gram in a food sample from a striped dolphin, 87 times higher than the permitted level." Methyl mercury is a particularly dangerous form of mercury, a neurotoxic metal.

The paper concluded, "The consumption of red meat from small cetaceans . . . could pose a health problem for not only pregnant women, but also for the general population."

Despite this -- and that Senate Resolution 99, which cites "warnings regarding high levels of mercury and other contaminants in meat from small cetaceans caught off coastal regions" -- health warnings are not posted on the labels of such food products sold in Japan.

In addition, critics of the drive fisheries claim there is little monitoring of government culling quotas, already the highest in the world. At present, these quotas set by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries -- with drive fishery licenses then issued by prefectural governments to local fishery cooperatives -- stipulate that in the current 2005/06 season, 21,120 small cetaceans can be killed, besides those selected for captivity. O'Barry estimates that "more than 400,000 dolphins have been killed in Japan by dolphin hunters over the past two decades."

O'Barry, who added that he is passionate about banning dolphin hunts, said he even reversed his position on hunting cetaceans "to be clowns" in aquarium shows after Cathy, one of the dolphins that portrayed Flipper, died in his arms. As a trainer, O'Barry said he discovered that dolphins were among the very few creatures in the animal kingdom that were not only highly intelligent, but also self-aware, like gorillas and humans, as evidenced by recognition of themselves when they saw their reflection in a mirror or watched themselves on a TV monitor.

Perhaps a similar self-awareness on the part of dolphin hunters would point a way forward. This may already be happening, as film-maker Hardy Jones of the California-based Blue Voice conservation group found last month when he was in Futo, where recently there has been a drastic decline in dolphin catches.

In a phone interview last week, Jones explained that while in Futo he heard from a source close to former dolphin hunter Izumi Ishii that "Ishii has switched from hunting dolphins to conducting 'dolphin watch' tours. So far this year he's taken 2,600 tourists, who pay 4,000 yen each to enjoy seeing dolphins in the wild."

As Jones observed, "With Ishii making more money from the tours than he ever did as a dolphin hunter, he is setting a great example for the Taiji fishermen to follow as well."
Boyd Harnell is a Japan-based journalist who has worked for Time Life TV, UPI, Kyodo
....

3:36 PM - 3 Comments - 5 Kudos - Add Comment

Monday, May 15, 2006

See Pic of Dad receiving his award.

Go to my pictures and check out Dad getting his award, Standing with him is Constance Zimmer of the T.V. show "In Justice".

10:20 AM - 2 Comments - 0 Kudos - Add Comment

Friday, April 21, 2006

Official Press Release

April 20, 2006
Press Release from Tony Harnell of TNT
For Immediate Release
-----------------------------------------------------------
Tony Harnell, the voice of TNT, announces his departure from the band - Tony's final show with the band took place in Madrid, Spain on April 1st, 2006. The show was recorded live and will be released on DVD this coming fall.

I was hoping to have a little good news for TNT fans after a press release was prematurely leaked two weeks ago. Since that leak an attempt was made to put together an amazing farewell tour for the fans and we were hoping to announce that in this official release, but unfortunately the other members of the band turned the tour down.

"It is with a clear mind and a sad heart that I announce my final departure from TNT.
It's been an amazing 22 years and we have created some great music for thousands of faithful fans worldwide. This was a difficult decision, but change is not always a bad thing.

The reasons for me leaving are both personal and professional. It is simply time to open a new chapter in my life in a fresh environment. I wish my former colleagues and friends of TNT all the best in their future endeavors both in life and in music.

To the fans I wish to express my deepest heartfelt gratitude for your many years of love and support and I look forward to share with you the fruits of my future music creations. I will ask the fans to try to focus on the music and the positive things we did together and will now do apart and ignore the rest. I am excited about the future. The work with my solo project is in full bloom and I can't wait to see you all on the road again."

Much Love, Tony

7:22 AM - 23 Comments - 24 Kudos - Add Comment

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Congratulations Dad!!!

Hi Folks,
Well, the verdict is in. Mr. Boyd Harnell, my dad, has won the prestigious Genesis Award. See details on this in previous blog. It's very cool. They will fly him to Hollywood in March for this event. It will be attended by very high profile celebrities and VIP's who care about animal issues. I am really proud of him for using his ability as an artist (photographer and journalist) to raise awareness of issues like this.
From a proud son,
Tony

7:34 AM - 4 Comments - 6 Kudos - Add Comment


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