Inaugural STRYPER Fan Weekend To Include Worship Service With MICHAEL SWEET

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Christian hard rockers STRYPER have announced that the first annual Stryper Fan Weekend will be held in Nashville, Tennessee from October 11 to October 13. The band will host the three-day fan event, which will be packed with exciting events and exclusive access to the band. Stryper Fan Weekend will include a STRYPER concert, an exclusive first listen to the upcoming album "No More Hell To Pay", a sneak peek at the band's upcoming music video, question-and-answer sessions with the band, access to a national radio special taping (with live audience), a Sunday morning worship service with frontman Michael Sweet and much more. To top it off, the entire weekend will be filmed for an upcoming live DVD to be released by Frontiers Records in 2014. Many more surprises will be announced in the coming weeks. Stryper Fan Weekend is on sale now and space is extremely limited. The cost is $777.00 per person (or $677.00 per person with double occupancy), which includes 2 nights at the host hotel (Franklin Marriott Cool Springs), all meals, admission to all events, ground transportation to and from the airport, an exclusive STRYPER gift bag and more. For Nashville-area fans that don't need hotel, a discounted "Event Only" pass is available for $477.00. "No More Hell To Pay" will be released on November 5 in North America via Frontiers Records. The effort will be made available in two formats — standard CD and deluxe digipak featuring exclusive video content. Produced by frontman/guitarist Michael Sweet himself, the set features some of STRYPER's strongest and heaviest material ever. Commented Sweet, "'No More Hell To Pay' marks our 30-year anniversary and what a journey it has been! It's our eleventh studio release since our first album in 1984 ('The Yellow & The Black Attack') and it's quite possibly our best record to date. Why? It's everything you might expect from a STRYPER record — high-octane vocals, layered vocal harmonies, guitar solos galore, driving drums and bass and an energy that hasn't been achieved since our glory days. The message is equally as powerful as it offers hope and inspiration to anyone listening. If you're a STRYPER fan, it'll make you proud to be one. If you're not, listen with caution as you may actually become one. "We've been waving the striped flag for 30 years and we're proud to say that it's an honor to still be making music with you and for you. The best is yet to come and it's coming November 5th!""No More Hell To Pay" includes STRYPER's cover version of "Jesus Is Just Alright", a gospel song written by Arthur Reid Reynolds. STRYPER guitarist/vocalist Michael Sweet said, "It rivals our cover of EARTH, WIND & FIRE's 'Shining Star' — riffs!" "Jesus Is Just Alright" was first recorded by Reynolds' own group, THE ART REYNOLDS SINGERS, on their 1966 album, "Tellin' It Like It Is". It was later covered by THE BYRDS and THE DOOBIE BROTHERS."No More Hell To Pay" track listing:01. Revelation02. No More Hell To Pay03. Saved By Love04. Jesus Is Just Alright05. The One06. Legacy07. Marching Into Battle08. Te Amo09. Sticks & Stones10. Water Into Wine11. Sympathy12. RenewedRegarding the musical direction of STRYPER's new material, Michael Sweet told Screamer Magazine: "The song 'God', which is on 'The Covering'; if you took that song along with 'Bleeding From Inside Out' and 'Blackened' [from 'Second Coming'], and you put it on the same album, that's a pretty good indication of where we are going and where we are at right now. But at the same time this album is all its own."He added: "Every song has a hooky guitar riff. Everything is in minor keys, so it's a little darker sounding and a little tougher. It's definitely our heaviest record and I think people will be pleasantly surprised."The people who do like the poppier side of STRYPER, like 'Calling On You' and 'Holding On', this record isn't going to really give them that. There are a lot of vocal hooks and melodies going on, but it's a little darker, and a little edgier. To reference, there is less songs like 'Calling On You' and more songs like 'To Hell With The Devil'. It's more in that vein than the poppier vein."



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