 And you know what, I should record this too. So we have a recording just in case. Recording in progress. And there we go, live on the Metal Voice today. Yeah, you know the first time, Gary you've ever been on the, you have never been on the Metal Voice, it's tankered. It's Gary from Tankered, frontman, vocalist, main man. And of course co-host today, the one and only Neil Turbin. So we've got three different countries here. I'm in Canada, Neil's in the US and Gary, of course, you're in beautiful Germany, Frankfurt, Germany, correct? Yes, correct. Hi, nice talking to you. Nice talking to you too. First question, we got the box set that's coming out. For a thousand beers, noise record years, box set the luck, celebrating the band's 40th anniversary to be released on February 25th, which is about two weeks from now. I guess the first question is, why now or explain to us what this box set includes for the people who don't know? Yeah, so all the rights are at BMG from the albums we did with noise records. And yeah, a couple of years we get in contact and yeah, so it was able to bring out all the old albums a couple of years ago. For us, that is very important that especially the younger kids are able to get our old stuff. And then BMG came up with the idea, yeah, you're gonna celebrate your 14th birthday, unbelievable, 40 years of fresh metal. What do you think about, yeah, as a little birthday present, bring out such a box with all the noise albums inside and some special items like a little book, like a very funny bootleg video from 87, we played in Eindhoven in the Netherlands. It was our very first show outside from Germany. And then you have the live DVD inside the show in East Berlin from 1990, a couple of months after the wall came down and we played in front of 6,000 crazy East German metal fans. And yeah, we have some sound recordings from 88. So there are some special stuff inside the vinyl edition special colors of the LPs and yeah, so I have a box, but I didn't open it till yet because maybe I opened one, I ordered five because I'm a big collector of everything. And so for the people don't have the old albums, it's yeah, it's kind of how to learn to know the band. It's quite a good idea. And yeah, it's a good starter in our celebration year. Neil, congratulations, Gera. That's awesome to have the 40 years. I know kind of what it feels like sort of kind of, but I think it's great. And you know, I had the opportunity, the great opportunity and memory to play with you guys at Headbangers Open Air 2009, if you remember. Ah, okay. Yeah, I can remember. Now I can remember. You know what he told me right before? He goes, yeah, first full of metal. Yeah, first full of metal. What a great album. So where is the re-release? Yeah, well, my solo band's gonna re-record it, so that's the only hope for a revamped version or a modern, an updated version. But what I wanted to change the subject on for a second is I noticed that in the tankered early music, especially the first album and that zombie attack, right? That album, to me, it kind of reminds me in some aspects of the early days. So when I think of Anthrax, Metallica and some of the interactions, you know, because I did a lot of shows with Metallica back in the early days, like I'm hearing these inspirations, these influences. And I'm looking at, you know, the current tankered and kind of how you guys evolved over the albums and over the years. And I just hear, you know, familiar sounds to me. There's some things in the old school that you guys are original, but it's like you can hear influences there. And I think it's an amazing thing to hear a band that, you know, that captures that and captures it from the beginning of their career. So congratulations. Yeah, so we were really grown up with the new wave of British heavy metal in the end of the 70s, beginning of the 80s. Of course, the big bands like Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Saxon, Saxon was my first metal show I've ever been to. Also smaller bands like Tank, Jaguar, and then, then the first Metallica, the first Exodus, the first Anthrax, the first Slayer. And don't forget the first Exciter album, Heavy Metal Mania. There it is, there it is. Yeah, that is one of my top five albums ever. From Ottawa. From Ottawa, Gary. And beside the first Anthrax, of course. And yeah, that was like, wow, what the fuck is that? And so, yeah, of course we were influenced by that. And I think Zombie Attack, the first album, the songs on the first album, some of the songs were already a couple of years old. And then the step to chemical invasion, then it was, chemical invasion was more fresh influenced and Zombie Attack was a little bit punk influenced, I would say. And yeah, those were the times. Not looking in the internet, not streaming something, not using Zoom, just go to the record store and look at records. What the cover, that could be a metal band. Okay, I gotta buy it. Yes! Tell me, I wanna know more about this. Anvil, Exciter, how did you come across these albums all the way in Germany? These Canadian iconic bands that, you know. Yeah, we had always, every day after the school, we went to a record shop in the near of my school and they had a lot of metal stuff. And so, they had also a lot of imports. And yeah, so we were able to listen to the records over there with headphones. And so, we learned to know all these bands. And at that time, I can remember I wrote a letter to the heavy metal maniac fan club in Canada, Exciter. Exciter, but yeah, still waiting for an answer after 20 years. It's okay, we'll hook you up, we'll hook you up with the guys from Exciter. 40 years later. Do you ever meet Metallica? Do you ever meet the guys in Metallica and anybody from the early, like the Anthrax, the Metallica, the Slayers, did you meet them over the years? So that's very funny, a couple of days there. Some crazy, I don't know, some crazy maniacs, they posted a photo from Lars Ulrich and James Hadfield and me. 84, they played as a support act in Frankfurt supporting Twisted Sister. And after the show, yeah, I met these guys and yeah, I don't know who took the pictures, I was 16, 17, I don't know, very funny pictures. And we, at that time, we had one of our first shows in Frankfurt and the show was entitled At War with Breakdancers. And they saw this kind of poster, they were laughing like hell, because at that time, the third Venom album At War with Satan, and so we did At War with Breakdancers. Heavy metal, I don't know, very funny. Yeah, so, but that was really the only time I met them personally. Yeah, it's cool, very cool. I noticed you're talking about your early metal influences and I just wondered, the thrash band influences, I just wanted to ask early on, what were some of the punk rock influences that you guys had and where that influence came from? Was it all the band? Was it some of the members? And was it vocally, lyrically, or was it musically throughout the whole band? How that element, and that's also a thrash element because you guys have pretty fast songs, high tempo, BPM beats per minute. So, and I really liked that because it's a lot of energy. It's right out of the grooves of the record. Boom, just hits you and you want to get up and thrash around because it's got that energy. So, I mean, the early band has that element which I think is a beautiful balance. So, our former guitar player Axel, who was the founder of the band together with our bass player Frank, he was a big punk fan, exploited UK subs, GBH and all these bands. And so this was the reason why the first album was, yeah, I mean, it's not a punk album, but there are some punk elements on it. And I think this was the main reason. Forget about the lyrics of the first album because we were, I don't know, 15, 16 years old writing about horror movies and lyrics. And I can't remember when we went the very first time to the studio and the record company asked us, please give us your lyrics. We have to give it to an American to check it out if everything is cool. And yeah, if this guy saw the lyrics, he said, no, this kind of rubbish, I don't want to read. So, the lyrics of the first album are very, yeah, on a low level, I would say. And then we had an American friend who really helped us on beginning from the second album to write lyrics for us. And yeah, so it's getting better with the lyrics. I got to say, it's quite commendable, like English is your second language. And you know, still, you know, to this, like you can write lyrics, right? So it's quite commendable that as a second line, it's not easy as a second language. I'm pretty sure, right? Do you, you have to think of the different words and the different meanings and the different phrases. Yeah, so we have our old, old guitar player Andy Bulgaropoulos, he writes lyrics for us still. So I have an idea how the melody line is, what I have to sing. And then they get some ghost lyrics like Satan and Hell, Die Kill, I don't know. Yeah, very funny. And yeah, then we talk about what the song could be about. And so we have, and our roadie Harold also write lyrics for us. So we have good people helping us. Okay, good. Of course I, of course I should be, do it by my own but I have a full-time job and I have not so much time and it's great that we have people which are very close to the band helping us. It's not easy, it's not easy. Yeah, it's not easy to sing what they write about. So right at the moment we finished recordings for our next album. That's what I was gonna ask you next. Yeah, go ahead. Ah, I know what you're gonna ask me. It's okay, you're faster than we are. Okay, so let me ask you a question then. Where are you at on the next album? So faster than the speed of light. This song is from which band? Raven. 100 points, thank you. You're welcome. Okay, we should. So are you called the metal voice? We're called the metal voice for a reason here. But also Bonnie Tyler also has a song called the same title. Yeah. I think Vey Malvsteen. Yeah. So go ahead. Yeah, I go ahead. So we just finished recordings for the next album now doing the mix and it will be out in September. Okay. On Ripper Entertainment, so we left Nuclea Blast and yeah, this will be the second highlight this year for our 14th birthday. So if you're gonna tell somebody what this is gonna sound like, the musical direction of this album, what is it gonna sound like? Oh, this is, it's not so easy to describe because the album is not finished. Of course, it sounds like Tankert. I think we have some, yeah, some melodic chorus reference and yeah, but it's fast and heavy and yeah. It's all the, if there are some Tankerts fans, they will not disappoint it, I guess. So there's beer. A lot of beer, lots of beer, is that it? There will be beer. We don't sing about beer. Every Tankert. So listen, if you go through our lyrics, I mean, okay, we created this kind of image with a second demo tape, alcoholic metal, chemical invasion the morning after, okay. Then in the middle of the 90s, we want to get rid of it a little bit, but it totally failed of course. Nowadays, we make a lot of jokes about this kind of image, but yeah, some people just reduce Tankerts to the band singing about beer, but the music is seriously and serious, yeah. And beginning from the second album, we also have a lot of serious lyrics. So on this new album, there will be again a good combination of really funny and really serious stuff. So one song will called Lock Down Forever. It has, it said something to do with this new virus. I forgot the name, I'm sorry. And Corona 19. The Spanish Blue 2022. So, and this song is about, you have to stay at home forever. You're not able to go out anymore. It's a lockdown forever until the end of your life. What you're gonna do, you have to listen to all your metal records. Oh, yeah. From A to Z, and again and again. So this is a little bit funny song. A second punishment. From Anthrax to Zebra. Go ahead, go ahead. But Anthrax, it's not the first band. It's something like ACTC also not. I have to watch, I don't know. ABBA. ABBA, ABBA, yes. Go ahead. And yeah, this is a, yeah, again, a funny story. Don't, but we have also some serious stuff on us. Like, yeah. What kind of wars will happen in future when the water is getting less? Such topics we also have on the new album. It will, the album is entitled, Pavlov's Dark. Is that the real title? Yeah, the new title. But Dark is written like DAWG. DAWG. Okay. So is that the song title or the album? I didn't see the cover till yet. I don't know. Is this the name of the album or the song? Sorry. No, no, it's both. It's the name of the album, but we also have a song. Pavlov's Dark. Okay. Yes. And yeah. So at the moment it looks like at the weekend we went to the studio again to do some more vocal stuff. And now the recordings are finished and now we're gonna see what's gonna happen with the mix. Perfect, perfect. Yeah, and then we are gonna look forward that maybe there will be some shows take place in the next couple of months. At the moment, all the clubs are closed in Germany. No concerts. And yeah, I guess from April, May, maybe it's getting better and we really hope for the festival season. And of course we have to play in Canada for the first time. So... You've never played in Canada? We never played in Canada. There was no offer till yet and that would be really amazing. Anvil, Exciter, Razor, all they have to play. Razor? I'm good friends with Razor. I'm good friends with Anvil. So we're good. Exciter, Neil and me are good friends with. So we're all friends. We're gonna hook you up. Get on the horn. We gotta support them. That would be awesome. That would be awesome. That would definitely be awesome. So we have been a couple of times in South America and in a lot of countries and the Thresh Metal Maniacs in South America they are totally crazy. Like especially in Colombia, in Chile. And yeah, we played once in El Salvador. That was very funny. There is... In front of every supermarket there is a guy with a pump gun. So... Memorable. Memorable. Yeah, memorable. And in Guatemala too. So yeah, then we... Then we flew to Bogota, Colombia and we said, oh, civilization again. You know what? Shmir said he's trying to get you guys for it. He's trying to get creator, Asadam tankered and destruction for that two tonic tour. He's always saying he's always trying. He's always trying. What's the status here? What's going on? The Canadians, maybe a nice two tonic German tour or maybe for the US or anywhere else. What are your opinions? Yeah, my opinion is if there is something as planned we always would say, yeah, we're going to do that. I mean, we are the first band playing at that building. It would be awesome. Yeah, every band has other plans. It's not so easy. I mean, Creator of course is... It's the biggest band, Thresh Band in Europe. And of course they are the total headliner. But I really would love to do some shows outside from Germany to put these four bands together. That would be really awesome. But I'm not the organizer. You know, we had also some split albums covering. We covered some Iron Maiden songs. I think there are two big Toytonic 4 split albums. So each band covered other stuff. And yeah, my idea would be that every band should cover one song from the other band. So Tanker plays three songs of the other three bands and go on. So we had a full album, 12 songs. That would be awesome. That sounds like a lot of fun for the fans, too. Yeah, but there are a lot of ideas, but it's always not so easy to realize them. Of course. Neil? Yeah, I just wanted to ask about early on with Chemical Invasion. I noticed in the music structure of the songs, you have these intros. And there's some great musicianship and creative input in the building of the songs and the writing composition. And I noticed that you have a blues jam on one of the songs. And I liked it so much. I was hoping the whole song would be more in that realm. But I noticed that you guys had a certain way that you approached writing intros and then going into the song and then of course it's a full-on thrash assault. Any thoughts about that and how the songwriting has kind of evolved? And also in the subject matter, to kind of make it a two-part question, in terms of the lyric content and the song subject, you're writing obviously about a lot of alcoholic consumption to say the least. But also you have serious song topics, very serious titles, I mean lyrics and concepts. So I just wondered, there's kind of a balance between, there's a sense of humor there and there's also a sense of seriousness. And I just wondered that perspective and also kind of the, not only the blues, but also there's even some neoclassical influence or classical, I would say. There was a song I was listening to that had that kind of intro. So I just wanted to ask you about that, Gira. Yeah, I think you mean the title track of the second album, Chemical Invasion, with that kind of intro. I really can't remember whose idea it was, but live it is very funny. I always try to get a girl on stage and dance with her. And yeah, as you said before and then after a while, then it's very fast and fresh metal. Yeah, and also Empty Tanker, this kind of part at the beginning and the end. But that was not really a plan. If we're going to write new songs, we don't plan anything. We just start writing and then at the end we're going to see what kind of result we have. So I really can't remember whose idea it was to do such parts into these kind of songs. And yeah, about the lyrics, Tanker was always a band or is always a band trying to try to combine fresh metal and this kind of humor because we don't take ourselves too seriously as persons. And so, I mean, if we would bring out now an album totally serious with a really evil heavy metal cover and no funny lyrics, nobody would believe in us, come on. So yeah, this kind of humor, it really fits to us as persons. And so, I mean, you can, if you play a song live with a really serious or dark lyric, you also can have fun. That's my opinion. And I think Tanker stands for this kind of combination of fresh metal and having fun. You know what? So Tanker, you had like these three amazing monumental classic albums right at the start. What do you think went right and what do you think it was timing? Do you think you didn't have the right record company to bring it to the next level, that massive global level? When you look back, what do you think? What would you have done differently if you could? Maybe we had, I mean, there was a decision not to live 100% from the music. Maybe at the end of the 80s, we really should have come over to the States for a longer tour or something like that. But in the end, looking back 40 years, I mean, we started as friends in a school and we are still here. We never split up, especially in the hard times in the middle until the end of the 90s when metal in general was not very popular and fresh metal was not really dead, but less people came to the shows. So we never gave up. No reunion, something like that. We are here since 40 years. That makes us proud, of course. And I mean, now we bring out the 18th album, looking back at everything is cool. We had so much fun traveling around all over the world. And I don't know, with that kind of music, it's not so easy to get really, really big, I would say. And I don't know, we are really satisfied. Then that's fine. You guys, to your credit. And we are ready for the next 40 years. Yeah, that's good. Good for you. Good for you. Well, to me, I remember the 90s full of grunge, but you guys are still going. You're still going cranking out the heavy metal. You're holding the heavy metal flag. Yeah, there were a couple of bands still going and yeah. So I mean, it was shitty times to have three shows in a year because nobody is booking you. It's like nowadays with this virus, I forgot the name again. Corona 19. Corona 19. And yeah, but never gave up. And we never thought about to end the band. So we did meet at the practice room and played our stuff. And yeah, so I think then the Tankert album, the last album for noise in 1995. It was a little bit outstanding album. It was a lot of melodic parts and comparing to the other albums. And I think it's a little bit underrated. And then 98 it was really, really, yeah, back to the back to the roots with disco destroyer that's very hard, very fast songs, very, very hard vocals. I mean, that were the time nobody. Yeah, not not a lot of people were listening to that kind of music. And I really love, you know, the expressions in the lyrics where, you know, you're saying things like, you don't like rap and threat and hip hop drives you crazy and stuff like that. Metal on metal. Yeah. It's fun to, you know, it's a solid position, you know, it's like they're not, you know, tankers not making any excuses. This is how they feel about it. You know, that to me, that that's a purity. You know, you guys are the real deal from the beginning, you know, just really a raw thrashing assault and and staying true to your guns, you know, and throughout your whole career. I mean, the sound of the band has not changed drastically, you know what I mean. And to your credit here for the whole band, the fact that you guys don't need to have a reunion because you never split apart, you're always together for all this time. It's just, it's an amazing thing. And obviously, you know, you guys work together as a team. I mean, I think there's a team effort in there and the communication is good. Would you say that that's always been the case with the band members and, you know, you guys have always been able to work through stuff. I'm sure everyone doesn't always agree on everything there is, but just, you know, being able to be civil and work through stuff. I'm sure you guys have had moments where people got upset about certain things, but whatever it might be. But you can tell me, tell us more about what that might be, you know, because I mean there's obviously bands out there that, you know, they air their laundry all over the media and all over everything. And, you know, this is not just, this is big bands and metal bands and, you know, there's always these feuds and things in the media. So I just wonder how you guys are able to go the opposite way and really keep it together as a family and a team. So now we are together since 98. I mean, it's a long time. And of course we are friends. And yeah, everybody knows what what the other's going to do or what kind of ideas we have. So yeah, of course, sometimes there is a, I mean, if you hang around for 10 days in South America the whole day. Sometimes, yeah, the other guys get on my nerves. I get on their nerves, of course. Yeah. But I would say we are, we are friends, as you said, it's like a little family. And yeah, so that's the way how function it. I mean, you have a lot of bands, they changing all the time their members, you know, and. Yeah, now we are, we are together since 98. This is, I don't know, 24, 23, 24 years now. Yeah, I need to get along. This is a long time. Yeah. That is a long time. And yeah, as you said, it's like a family and it's still a good feeling. All right. So, okay, on the last note, oh God, I think I just lost everybody. I lost everybody for a second. Whoa. Really disappeared. Okay, everybody's back. Okay, good. On the last note, wait, on the last note, just tell us a little bit more about the new album and when could fans expect it? You said September, I think that that's the release date or is that the completion date? That is the release date. Okay. So we, we hope that the album is finally mixed in, in March. Okay. And as I told you before, I didn't see the cover till yet. Okay. But there is one, but there is one. So there will be a cover. Okay. I hope so. I hope so. Yeah. Oh, what a new idea, an album without a cover. That's, that's a, that's a funny idea. Let's write a song about that. Yeah. It will be, it will be out on Reaper Entertainment. Okay. So we left, we left nuclear blast because they sold over 90% of the company they sold. And all the people we were working together with at nuclear blast, they're gun and we kindly ask them to let us out of the contract. And they say, yes. I mean, we have never been the biggest band at nuclear blast. So I think that was not the big problem. And our farmer promoter. Florian milts. He's the owner of the Reaper Entertainment label. And he's a good friend of us. He's a tank at fan. And I think that will be a good work together again. And a lot of promotion. Yeah. Maybe there will be another box. There will be. Yeah. No, there will be a special limited edition of the new album also. Okay. This vinyl and the original two demo tapes and something like a e-book in and, um, yeah. And of course as normal CD and as vinyl and, um, Yeah. And I think it's Pavlov's dog Pavlov's dog Pavlov's dog. Yeah. D DAWG. And don't ask me what this song is about. I don't understand the lyrics until today. Now it will be a good mixture of funny stuff and serious stuff. And there will be. Yeah. Some melodical parts, but it will be heavy. It will be tank it. Yeah. Is there any special guests, any special guests? Like Dora or somebody else? No, we're just, just you guys. Just us guys and no, no special guest on this album. I mean, Dora was 2012 on an album that was another funny story. And, um, yeah, this time. No next time, Neil Turbin, please. Yes. That'd be great. I love you guys. I have a crazy question for you here. I wanted to ask, um, now this may be a stupid question. So I hope it's not. But I was looking through the different videos on YouTube of the band because I, you know, got a promo from Jimmy that had a number of albums and I, you know, heard songs before, but I really had to do my homework, you know, because I think it's kind of, you know, it's kind of messed up when a music journalist, they don't do their homework. You know, they don't listen to the band. They don't even know what they're listening to or talking about or all that. So I was doing some homework and I was, you know, digging, doing a little deep dive and I was checking out some of the tankered videos, you know, some of the ones in a nuclear blast, you know, kind of, they were pushing those, those were the main videos out there. But then I started coming across stuff and you know how YouTube or these video channels will suggest this one and that one. So one comes across tank, what is it, tank water. And I don't know if that's anything to do with you guys, but I noticed that it looked like one of your guys or I'm just trying to understand it. It was all in German, but I, but I thought it was really cool because there was a Samba song or something. And I don't know if that, like I'm trying to understand what is that so I can understand it in respect to the band. If it's, you know, someone's solo project or kind of. No, that, that was, that was a side project of tank art. Okay. And tank what means the guy working at a gas station. So it's a little bit of a word game tank, what tank art. And the first album came out in 94. And yeah, we just covered German songs from the 80s. There was a special new German wave. It was called beginning in the 80s. So we, we covered some songs and 96. There was a second album covering songs, German songs from the 70s. So it was just a, yeah, it was just a fun project. And a lot of people asked me, yeah, is this project that at the moment there are no plans to bring out a new album under this name, but never say no. Maybe one morning I wake up and have a great idea for the next tank art album. And we will see, but these were just a side project, a funny side project of tank art. All right. And that was a, and you saw, you saw one video clip tons of summer with me. This was the cheapest, the cheapest, the cheapest video clip we ever did. What I thought was also cool about it is that, you know, when you guys, you know, kind of break out of the straight thrash, you know, where you have other musical influences. So I mean, just the fact that's in the title of the song Samba, and that's probably a cover song, but, at the same time, you know, just the fact that you guys are playing Samba, you know, interludes it, you know, intros, what have you, and also doing, you know, the blues and doing these different styles, it really shows off the fact that, you know, you guys are not one dimensional. You have multi facets to your musical input and also the sense of humor obviously is great. And, you know, I guess there's a bit of the German sense of humor. So to try to understand that as a, you know, kind of coming from, you know, America, you know, where they have a different style of humor. Of course, British is another interesting style of humor, right? Yeah, they have great humor. They have great humor. I mean, we are, we are all listening to metal. I don't, I don't, I mean, 99% I'm listening to metal. I prefer traditional metal, speed metal, fresh metal. I'm not a big fan of death and black metal. I mean, they are quite really cool bands, but I'm not really 100% into that kind of music. And these are my main influences. Fistful of metal and heavy metal maniac. That's all you need. That's all you need. Is there any bands that, that you've heard, you know, in the last decade or recently that you said, you know, because I know that, that some people have the, the perception that, okay, well there's nothing, there's nothing good coming out. There's nothing new that's good. And I guess it depends on how you're looking at that, you know, because for someone like an Uli Roth, who we've spoken with at the metal voice a couple, you know, a few times, a number of times, he, one of the things he mentioned was, well, you know, he's not really moved by the new music. But, you know, if you're looking at classical composers like Bach and Beethoven and Rachmanov and, you know, Chopin, you don't really have new music in that genre. But in terms of metal, you know, it's just like anything. It's changes and things are different. And, you know, doing the same stuff and regurgitating it a different way might be one aspect, but there are new bands. And with so many bands and so much saturation out there, it's kind of hard to pick, you know, to find the cherries, the ones that are whole versus the ones that are broken. So I guess from your perspective, you know, since you have an old school perception, it's, you know, and I can relate to that. I just wanted to ask, you know, is there any bands that you have personally found to be, you know, ones that you really do like to listen to or that do the band might like or, I mean, and that's not to say that, you know, you're writing music. I still buy physical music, especially CDs and, yeah, a lot of metal stuff. And of course, my favorite bands are the bands I was grown up with, of course, yeah. But like as I told you before, Anvil, Andrax, Overkill, Omen and all these stuff. But we have also a lot of good, good, new, fresh, young, fresh bands like Lost Society from Finland. I don't know what they're doing at the moment. At the moment, they brought out three brilliant albums at Nuclear Blast. We have a couple of smaller German fresh bands like Space Chaser, for example. So it's not so easy to pick out all the bands and I don't have so much time to listen to all to them. But of course, I have to have the albums. But yeah, it makes a lot of fun to order a lot of stuff and to pick out some great songs. That's a little bit like in the 80s going to the record shop and oh, that could be a heavy metal cover. That could be a heavy metal. I'm going to buy it. On that note, for a thousand beers, the Noisiers, Deluxe Box set coming out February 25th. And you know, it's a great package. It's a great package. You know, we heard all the songs. I mean, they're from the remastered. They're remastered, I think in 2017, 2018, right? All the albums have been remastered now, correct? I think so. I hope so. I hope so too. They sound great. And you know what? For the people out there in Canada who have not heard tankered, do yourself a favor and check it out. Check out at least the first three albums, which I think are. Reminds me of suicidal tendencies sometimes. You know, you got the thrash, the punk. It's kind of mixed in there. It's just super exciting. I love it. I love it. Thank you so much, Gar, for being on the show. Neil. Thank you. Amazing. And you have to organize a show for us in Canada. Yeah. That's what I'm seeing. I'm seeing Neil Turbin on the bill. I'm seeing tankered. I'm seeing Exciter. And I'm seeing. And who? Racer. And of course, Razor. Oh, yes. Razor. An Anvil. An Anvil would be great. I love Germany meets Canada. It'll be called the German Canadian tour. Thrash tour. Yeah. That will be awesome. Is this a deaf dealer t-shirt? Sir, you got it right there. Ah, okay. Great band. Great band from, you know, where we're from here in Canada, from Quebec, close to Montreal. Yes. The first two albums, phenomenal. The first. The only two. Yeah. They're great band. All right, my friend. Thank you so much for being on. We'll have you on again. Have a nice stay and hope to meet one day and have a orange juice together. Yeah. That's right. The Prostage.