Youth Movement – Speaking The Kings


speaking the kings 2

Orange County post metallers Speaking the Kings are the newest faces on the Nuclear Blast roster, with the release of their first full length album Carousel. Guitarist Justin Boch spoke about being part of a youth movement on a Nuclear Blast roster and sounding a bit from left field than most of the current acts they have out.

It’s funny. This is probably the least metal or heavy band we’ve done to this point. In the same breath it’s also the thing we’ve most proud of and it’s like what you said earlier that we’re on a huge label with all of these huge metal bands that we all like so much. We’re extreme fortunate that they believe in us enough to give us a chance to be that band. We’re stoked that a band from the UK called Bury Tomorrow that’s closer to what we’re doing. Just possibly being able to carry the flag for this genre and this music on a label like this has been nothing but a blessing for us and we’re super stoked on that.

I think they see the potential in this genre. They’ve been around for 30 years and they have almost every single kind of metal you can think of, from rock to black metal to thrash metal. But they don’t have their hands tapped into this kind of popcore genre that we’ve undertaken. It’s cool because they’re making a move to push for this style,” added guitarist Mike Entin.

They just signed For Today, which is similar type of band and will find on Warped Tour, but they’re also making some moves for the future that are really big and exciting and can’t wait to get shit happening. I think they see our potential and they want to be part of this while it does grow.

Speaking The King's - Carousel - Artwork

They spoke about being signed to a label like Nuclear Blast and when the reality of being labelmates with bands such as Slayer and Machine Head sunk in. Entin shared his thoughts on the matter.

It immediately sunk in! It’s funny because one of the first things I learned on guitar was ‘Raining Blood’ and now we’re on the same label as Slayer. I remember I met Kerry King and I couldn’t even talk to him because I was so starstruck and that’s not usually my thing. It was crazy to me that we’re on the same label as Slayer, Suicide Silence and Meshuggah – all of these amazing bands. It’s just crazy.

I’m not an amazing guitar player or anything but it’s awesome that Nuclear [Blast] sees the potential in me and trusts us and wants us to be their flagship band of the genre.

speaking the kings 3

On the subject of which label mates they would each like to tour with, each member had a different candidate.

Suicide Silence. They’re friends and local band and they’re killer dudes with a killer lineup,” said drummer Will Peacock.

I would say Bury Tomorrow because I would really like to go to Europe and I think that we’re all into their music and they would be super cool to go out with someone from there and show us around and see someone you normally wouldn’t see,” said Boch.

Entin added, “Bury Tomorrow would be cool because they’re Nuclear Blast family and they’ve been carrying the torch over there. Maybe they’ll show a little love to us and take us under their wing. Then they could get the most out of us for Nuclear Blast. And of course there’s Slayer.

By Rei Nishimoto


Reliving Dark Days – Randy Blythe of Lamb of God


d randall blythe dark days book

Imagining the horror Lamb of God frontman Randy Blythe endured during his 2012 arrest in Prague, Czech Republic during one of their European touring cycles is something most cannot imagine. He shared his thoughts on his whole experiences being held in a Czech prison and his life in a book titled Dark Days: A Memoir, which was released this past July.

For those unfamiliar with the story, Blythe was accused of pushing a 19 year old Czech concertgoer Daniel Nozek who was stagediving during their show after repeated being warned not to come onto the stage. He was arrested and accused of intending on causing bodily harm to him by pushing him off of the stage and later hitting his head on the floor and dying from his injuries.

Despite all that he faced over this time period, things with Lamb of God has not changed much and more on his personal side. One could imagine facing possible prison time in a foreign land, and the burden that comes with that.

At the end of the book I wrote the huge change for me was clearly when I got sober. That made me take a look at my life at what was good and bad about it and signs of touring in a positive manner.

As far as my day to day life, it’s none added because the whole thing was tragic. Beyond that nothing has changed. I’m the same dude. I think some people totally take that in the wrong way. I’m dealing with the situation in a totally different manner and it’s furthest from the truth. It’s a seriously tragic situation and it wasn’t a lot of fun to go through. It’s hard sometimes. You do the best you can. I’m not the only guy who’s done hard time and coming out. So there hasn’t been this big change. I just got clean and sober. I just tried to do the right thing and my moral compass.

Photo Credit: Evil Robb Photography

Lamb of God, by Evil Robb Photography

In order for Blythe to organize his thoughts and getting down on paper, he had to get himself away and in a place physically and mentally where he could convey what he was feeling and fully describe each scenario of what was happening at each moment during that time period.

 

The hardest thing for me about writing the book is not thinking of how the story would go or how to put it artfully or anything like that. The hardest part for me of writing is sitting in a chair and writing. That’s the hardest part. It’s making yourself sit down to write it all out.

I think I heard somewhere in a quote say ‘writing a book is easy. Just sit and stare at the blank page until your eyeballs bleed.’ That’s really it for me is getting my butt into a chair.

The chronological order of the book is a structure that was provided. They provided it. It didn’t look like I was writing a novel but I had the plot. Everything is, not based on real life, but it was real life. The structure of the book was already in place.

Lamb of God, photo credit Travis Shin

Lamb of God, photo credit Travis Shin

 

He goes into how moving from one point in time he describes back to another moment in his past references some of his rough times in his life, such as his struggles with alcoholism, amongst other topics, which he talks about quite a bit throughout his book.

There are a few times where I go back and forth in times through my life. Those are [where I] explain my alcoholism. I explain what it’s like to be in the band and a couple other things. Those were for me varied ways to explain who I am, for people who didn’t know me or who weren’t familiar with my band.

Then I was talking about what happened to Dimebag Darrell. One editor was like ‘you really should have different friends write the book. These are writers and editors and they were giving me some feedback. This one guy, who was a music writer, said ‘you don’t need to explain what happened to Dimebag. You should just put a paragraph.’

I’m like no you’re wrong because not everyone who reads this book is a heavy metal fan. So I had to explain for people about my world, like in Chapter Two about what it’s like to be a professional musician.

I always do that for two reasons. One: to actually explain it to people; and two: to dispel some myths. There are people today that think they’re billionaires and fly around in diamond plated helicopters. I feel it’s important for me to explain if it were a back story of a character. Regrettably in my book, I didn’t have time to really go through the plot of the book, I suppose, like showing certain things. All of sudden you’re out with this dude and you’re a professional musician halfway through the book – that’s not how it happens. The place sets the character, me being I suppose, my character to be protagonist I suppose and set them in place with where they were and what they get from it from within the reader’s mind.

So I had to leave Richmond and my life. I need quiet. I tried to write some on tour, which is an abysmal place to try and write. Some people can write in chaos. I can’t. But I sat down and basically wrote my journal I wrote in prison and it was pretty much a day to day journal. With that, it nearly provided me with a chronological timeline for events that happened in prison, because I wrote about them. Everything else was just a matter of court papers.

Lamb of God, by Evil Robb Photography

Lamb of God, by Evil Robb Photography

 

Within his book, he describes some of the other inmates who were held at Pankrac with him. While communication was an issue throughout that time, he went into more detail about the environment he was placed into and the little contact he had with the other inmates.

I was in there with people who were there for everything from tax evasion to murder to being in the country for a lack of a proper visa or domestic disturbance for stealing a lighter while high on drugs to rape. Some of the guys I got along with quite well. It’s kind of hard to bond with people when they’re not speaking your language basically. If these people spoke English at all, it’s very broken except for one or two people.

One of the guys was an Irishman who was in there for a tax fraud thing. He was in there for six months and hadn’t been charged yet. I got to talk to him a bit extensively about Ireland for a bit because I’ve been there a few times and that was nice. He was the only other dude who was a native English speaker in there. I only saw him an hour every day.

There were certain guys I got along with very well. There was a guy in our cell block who was charged with rape and no one got along with him. It’s true what you hear. Rapists and child molesters they aren’t thought of well in prison. They took him off of our cell block shortly because I think he was going to be dealt with. That’s what happens in prison.

I got along with my two cell mates. One of them drove me crazy. He was a bad alcoholic who did nothing but whistle all the time. The other one was a businessman. I got along well with them.

I mean…we weren’t there for summer camp. We were there doing time. Nobody was mean to me or anything. Everybody knew that I wasn’t some sort of broodish killer type of guy who had come to the Czech Republic to kill someone or something. I think it would have been a slightly different situation as a foreigner, had I been in prison and I’d gone there to murder a Czech citizen or something. I don’t think I would have been treated with any sort of friendliness whatsoever.

Overall, communication was a huge problem in there. Besides from my two cell mates, I only saw anyone else for one hour a day. Prisoners are only allowed out of their cell one out of 24 hours every day. It’s not like I had tons of time to sit around and discuss philosophy.

video still from Lamb of God Overlord video

Still image from Lamb of God’s ‘Overlord’ video

He also insists that his relations within Lamb of God has not changed much either. While they had publicly shared some of their darker moments while on tour on past band DVDs with inter member fighting, he compared that to a dysfunctional relationship from being in a band for over two decades together.

Nothing has changed. We’ve been a band since 1994 for 21 years. Supposedly it must be romantic to think all of these guys went through this and it brought them closer and it brought them so much closer. That’s not the case. We’re just a rock band. Things moved on as normal. Nothing like we’re reinventing the wheel.

Did it change the way we write the music? Did it change the way we recorded things? Did it change our relationship? I’ve known these guys for 21 years. They’re the same dudes. It’s that this happened and I went to prison for a little bit and we had to go through this. We’re not a brand new band. We’ve been doing this for 21 years.

It was a terrible thing and personally it has brought sadness and for the members of my band. But that’s it. It hasn’t made us play guitar any different. It wasn’t some sort of creative well to draw from for music. It hasn’t changed. We still get on each other’s nerves horrifically. How’s that?

It’s being in a band this long. It’s like a long marriage. It gets dysfunctional. I think it feeds what we do creatively. I’m still married to these same four dudes. It’s not like I woke up and I look different and started playing guitar different. The incident was just tragic.

By Rei Nishimoto

 

[amazon template=iframe image1&asin=978-0306823145][amazon template=iframe image1&asin=0306823144]


Riding The Metallic Wave – Bjorn Strid of Soilwork


soilwork
Reinventing its own sound especially after shuffling members can stifle a band. But for veteran Swedish metallers Soilwork, they have embraced this challenge head on and have created some of their best works working around the members on each release.

They recently completed their latest North American tour supporting Soulfly, and in support of The Ride Majestic, their tenth and latest album, and while frontman Bjorn “Speed” Strid talked about working with the incoming members on recent records, he also talked about whether the ideas and concepts of each release comes together quickly.

I don’t think we discuss it that much. I think basically what happened is that we definitely found something new with The Living Infinite. We rediscovered ourselves as songwriters through the album. I’m happy about the Panic Broadcast as well, but I think we found something new with The Living Infinite and with David [Andersson] entering the band as well and playing together with Sylvain [Coudret]. I think it brought something interesting to the table. I think it really inspired us to write the new record because it was quite a project. It was almost like an experiment as well because we recorded 26 songs total. 20 ended up on the album. I think that was a great way for us to find ourselves again after everything happening with Peter [Wichers] quitting the band and then coming back again and then quitting again. I think it was a necessary thing to do in the end.

With this new album [The Ride Majestic], it was pretty easy. We just booked the studio and we felt very inspired. We could have toured twice as much as we did for The Living Infinite, but we ran into some troubles with our management at the time. So that killed it a little bit. It happens and there’s quite a number of bands that could relate to it.

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

Basically we said let’s focus on making a new album instead, and channel all of our emotions through that album instead. That’s what we did and I think we have this mutual vision that we thought it would be somewhat darker. I guess the keyboards led in the darkness. That’s exactly what we did and going through everything, with personal tragedies with family members passing away during the actual recording, it actually made it pretty rough. I think the music became a big comfort and it happened so close to us. It was the close encounter with death and dealing with an album where a lot of lyrical content is dealing with a lot of expediential questions about life and death and those things. It definitely affected the approach to the recording and also a little bit, the songwriting as well.

The Ride Majestic was produced by the band with David Castillo and Jens Bogren mixing the album. After working with a few different producers over the band’s history and even self producing a few along the way, Strid said having both options when working on records has helped them learn how to approach each release differently.

I don’t even think about it. It just kind of happened that we started producing it ourselves. We never really decided ‘OK we are producing this record and that’s it.’ It just happened that way.

We tried out doing producer teams before with Devin Townsend and Fredrik [Nordstrom], which was a pretty interesting and chaotic project as well. It turned out really good.

I don’t mind having people having opinions. We’ve been working with really cool people for sure. David Castillo has worked with Fredrik Nordstrom and Daniel Bergstrand.

The death theme became a common topic during the recording of The Ride Majestic. While much of the material was already written, personal tragedies began to affect each member of the band during the making of the album, which altered the dynamics of the album.

Most of the songs were done already. It would have still turned out to be a pretty dark album. The songs became a more real soundtrack to what was really happening at the time. I think it affected us as to how we approached the actual recording.

For example, when I recorded the vocals, it was a pretty tough time. It felt very real and I could really relate to the melancholic sounds that run through the album, especially with the melodies. They are very Scandinavian and melancholic.

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

Since the recording of 2013’s The Living Infinite, Strid lost his longtime writing partner and guitarist Peter Wichers for the second time from the band, and was getting used to writing with two new guitar players who had just joined the band then on a full-time basis. Getting acclimated to new chemistry became a challenge, and also helped Soilwork move forward as a band at the same time.

I worked with Peter [Wichers] for such a long time. We started the band and I was so used to working with him and when David and Sylvain came in and they started throwing me some stuff…like whoa…what is this? So I really had to step outside of my comfort zone. That really made me develop as a singer as well, and also inspired me to pick up the guitar again. I used to write a lot of stuff. I wrote eight songs for The Living Infinite and on the new album I wrote four. It’s been very inspiring for me.

The songwriting has been looking pretty much the same. We write separately and sometimes meet up whenever me and Dave are sitting down and are going through some song ideas that we had. For the most part, we sit separately and put the songs together and bounce files back and forth. We’re used to that.

I think Soilwork needed this kind of member change. It was only natural at the end. It brought something new and I’m so proud of where we are today with the sound that we have and we found something interesting that I didn’t know that we had. It’s like we used an old cliché. It’s a new era.

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

Since the last album, the band also parted ways with longtime bassist Ola Flink and was replaced by longtime tech Markus Wibom.

He’s an old friend of the band so it’s been a very natural transition. He’s been on tour with us before. He used to be a guitar tech on both our European tour and our North American tour in the mid 2000s. Everybody in the band knows him very well and everybody liked him. The only thing was we knew he played bass, guitar and keyboards. We just didn’t know how good he was on bass. We had to try that out. We knew his personality which was spot on perfect. He pulled it off really well. It’s been a really smooth transition.

I definitely miss [Ola] Flink but I also could see that he was pretty miserable at the end being on tour. He’s in a better place now. Markus [Wibom] is really excited. That’s exactly what we need.

There are no hard feelings. He came to the point where he was like ‘I don’t feel motivated to tour anymore and I want to have a normal life and a normal day job.’ Most of us come to that point. It’s also rough surviving financially and there’s no stability for the most part.

Strid also talked about the band reaching its 20th anniversary as a band. While many bands are squeaking by and reaching an anniversary date, he is proud of the band’s accomplishments and where they stand as a band today.

I’m really proud of us for still being…we’re still making sense and we’re a very energetic band. You can feel the energy running through the music and we’re not trying to recreate that album, whatever that might be – Stabbing The Drama or Natural Born Chaos. Those are like somewhat cult classics by now. It’s been very important for us to not try to recreate something and being able to develop our sound and still being able to surprise ourselves and our listeners in a very positive way. I think it’s a pretty cool thing that most fans have been able to develop with the music and the band. People know they can expect some surprises for each and every album.

I don’t really hear a lot of people bashing us for like ‘oh go back to Chainheart Machine or Stabbing.’ Most people are happy with where we’re at right now and they can still feel that it’s true to our roots but it’s also that we’ve evolved as well,” he said.

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

With Soilwork’s influence upon the hard music scene overall, younger artists have shown their appreciation in many ways and YouTube videos have popped up with many variations of covers of their songs. Strid did admit he did occasionally view some of these and enjoys what he sees from these artists.

It’s really cool to see. It’s kind of surreal when you look at it there’s somebody sitting in their bedroom or their dorms ripping through some songs from the old days or even now.

It takes about two days. If you have a new song, it’s like ‘uh ok…here’s the cover.’ It’s insane how many talented kids there are out there that can look at the songs and nail it.

Being on tour and having ten albums worth of material, including a brand new release has made things a bit challenging when selecting a set list. Strid admitted that while it can be tough, they do have options on forming a strong set of songs.

It is very hard, especially now that we’re doing a direct support tour. We have 45 minutes and that’s it and we’re promoting a new album. I think we’re going for a pretty intense set and taking the songs that work good live, has really cool dynamics, to get everything packed in there and that represents our whole career. It’s really hard to do. We have ten albums out.

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

Soilwork, by Evil Robb Photography

Lastly, would Soilwork be open to doing ‘An Evening With…’ style show doing an entire album or two from beginning to end? While he had mixed feelings about it, Strid shared his thoughts on the matter.

We have discussed it but I guess we’re stubborn like that. Whenever people are doing that, we don’t wanna do that. It’s just too predictable. I know it’s kind of silly.

In a way I would like to do it. Maybe do Natural Born Chaos in its entirety, but it’s a little bit of a different lineup today. I want to respect that as well and not just be too nostalgic as well. I’m sure there will be a time where we could do something like that, even if it’s one of our later albums or even the new one or The Living Infinite in its entirety. That would be cool too.

By Rei Nishimoto

 


Kellii Scott of Failure Talks Making of Heart Is A Monster


Failure, by Boston Chuck Photography

Failure, by Boston Chuck Photography

Los Angeles post rockers Failure released their first new album in over 17 years titled Heart Is A Monster earlier this year. While the album has 18 songs and much longer than most releases in the modern era, drummer Kellii Scott explained how adding the segues on the album became an unintentional way to section off portions of songs at a time to listen to.

“The segues aren’t intentionally designed to break up the record. But I know when we did Fantastic Planet, the segues, when you listen to the record, it has that strong impression. When I listen to that record, I feel like I’m listening to three mini records.

I think the true intention was just to add a little bit of a narrative to help balance it because it’s so long. It’s a lot for someone to sit down and listen to a record for an hour and change. I think on the new record the segues actually help the record move along and makes it sound like one complete piece of work.

failure 4

He explained how this album was not the first time they attempted the segues on a record, and did so on this one after discovering how it worked well on a previous release.

The segues did chop up Fantastic Planet and I don’t think that was intentional. That was just an added effect and I think that it does help the listener listening to the record by splitting it up like that because it is such a massive work.

The opposite happened on the new record. The segue really made the whole record blow into one large record. The listening experience, I think there were some unintentional consequences, but a consequence of having the segues was definitely intentional, if that makes any sense.

Sometimes you do things and you really can’t predict what the outcome is going to be. It was intentional but not intentional.

faillure the heart is a monster

 

What they discovered was that Heart Is A Monster became a long-playing release that flowed well and became a listening experience more than simply a record with a lot of songs.

On the new record, I was pleasantly surprised the first time I sat down and listened to it. I was really surprised at how quickly such an obviously long record went by.

When I listened to Fantastic Planet, I feel like I’m listening to a very, very long record. I don’t think that’s necessarily a bad thing. I think sometimes testing your audience towards a listener, like making them commit to sitting down and listening to this. I think it endears it to the listener even more. I think that’s probably a large part of whether they know it or not so many people love listening to our records.

Lastly, Scott explained how the album’s title came together and like many of their other releases the meanings behind them can be left to the listener.

I don’t think there’s any one meaning. I think when Greg [Edwards] came up with the title he just said it and it sounded really big. A really, really big, ambitious title and it also sounded like something that none of us could believe no one had used that title before. We had seen it as obvious.

In true Failure fashion, the beauty of the concepts and lyrics and things like that, it’s a different meaning to a different person. I don’t think there is any one meaning for anything. I think it is and always has been open to interpretation to the person listening and holding the record.

By Rei Nishimoto


At War With World Domination – Martin Larsson of At The Gates


 

At The Gates. Photo credit: Ester Segarra

At The Gates. Photo credit: Ester Segarra

Swedish extreme metallers At The Gates have been keeping themselves busy on the road, and venturing into new areas on each stop. Their venture took them to Knotfest in Devore, CA where they played to a packed second stage area on the Saturday of the two day event.

It has been over a year since they released At War With Reality, their first new album since 1994’s Slaughter of the Soul. Being away from the music scene under this moniker since the band stopped, guitarist Martin Larsson spoke about how different their writing approaches were, versus prior to their abrupt stop years ago.

The actual writing [is] not much difference, but the collaboration is so much easier. Now we’re so spread out. In the 90s we were all in Gothenberg…um I wasn’t so nevermind…basically Gothenburg.

But now the drummer’s [Adrian Erlandsson] in London in the UK and three of us are in Gothenberg, and the bass player [Jonas Bjorler] is about three to four hours away in Sweden. With the internet and email and files to Dropbox and what have you, usually what happened on this album is Anders [Bjorler] made a demo and then once he’s satisfied, in a second we can all listen to it wherever we are and comment on it. Ideas bounce back and forth over the internet.

I think we spent the better part of a year just sending ideas back and forth and doing demos. We had such a full idea of the album already when we went into the studio. I think that’s the big difference – the whole collaboration is so much easier.

Photo Credit: Hillarie Jason

During the time away from the band, the various members were at various times involved in a number of other bands and projects. Frontman Tomas “Tompa’ Lindberg was involved in The Crown, Disfear, Skitsystem, Nightrage and Lock Up; guitarist Anders Bjorler was with The Haunted and now his solo project; bassist Bjorler is with the Haunted; and Erlandsson with Nehain, as well as his stints in Cradle of Filth and Paradise Lost. Larsson himself is currently playing with Agrimonia when At The Gates has down time.

Have doing other projects re-energized the members of At The Gates towards adding a new spark into the band? “Maybe in a way yeah. I guess doing other stuff always gets you excited to do At The Gates, I suppose. A lot of outside influences and ideas or whatever, so I guess so,” he said.

Photo Credit: Hillarie Jason

Photo Credit: Hillarie Jason

When it comes to the touring side, Larsson explained how they balance out who will be touring with what band and aligning schedules to make it work in the long run.

With the other bands it’s first come first serve, so it’s an easy rule to follow. Whatever band gets the booking first has the privilege. All of us do regular stuff on the side or At The Gates is on the side. Mostly Tomas and Jonas have regular proper jobs. They work part-time during the week. We mostly play weekends. We’ve done that for this year since the album came out. We’ve done a couple of tours. We did a US tour for three weeks in March. Right after this we have a week in Australia and a couple of dates in Japan. It’s mostly weekends.

There’s a lot of travelling just doing weekends. I feel like I’ve been jet lagged constantly for about a year, but playing is such a pleasure. You don’t mind it at all. We’re privileged that we get to do this and that people still want to see us.

Photo Credit: Hillarie Jason

Photo Credit: Hillarie Jason

Since the band has reformed, At The Gates has found themselves touring new territories they were unable to visit the first time around. Larsson spoke about some of their target areas they wish to hit.

I’m a bit of an explorer myself. I always like going to places I haven’t been before. We’re going to South Africa in March. I’m stoked to do that. I’d like to play more in Eastern Europe and Asian countries. We’ll take it gradually.

He spoke about their visit to China, one of the newest frontiers for many artists in recent years.

We played China twice. Things haven’t really happened in China metal wise, but they’re starting to. First time we were there we played to 100 people, and the second time 200 people. There’s a progression. Things are happening. It’s exciting. It’s like when we started 25 years ago.

2016_ANNOUNCE_ATTHEGATES_SITE

Aside from their upcoming US tour with The Haunted and Decpaitated, he also unveiled another upcoming tour stop on a cruise. “The cruise in the Carribbean – 70,000 Tons of Metal. We’re playing that. This is the first time under that name. We did the Barge to Hell ones, which is kind of the same. That one had even more focus on the extreme metal. I guess this one is all around metal. It’s going to be great.

Lastly, he talked about the possibilities of a new At The Gates record and whether it was realistic to talk about one yet. “No. I’m not saying we’re not gonna but we don’t know. The only plan we have at the moment is not quitting. So we’re going to take it as it comes. We’re already booked until August. Once this goes down we’ll just sit down and see.

We’re not going to push it. If there’s more music – fine. That’s good. I’d like it there to be more music but we’ll find out.

By Rei Nishimoto


Monsterous Effects – Kellii Scott of Failure


failure ken andrews 20151web

A lot has happened for the members of Los Angeles experimental rockers Failure since resuming their activity two years ago. Aside from performing again to eager fans and releasing their long awaited new album The Heart is A Monster, they have booked their latest tour run with long time member Troy van Leeuwen (now of Queens of the Stone Age) joining them. This is their first time since the band’s inactivity that he has performed with them.

Drummer Kellii Scott shared his thoughts on the matter: “Oh yeah for sure. It’s actually just like it was when the three of us got back together. It was like long lost friends mutual relationship. For me, it literally was like we never parted. It’s pretty cool.

We rehearsed in a place where we hadn’t rehearsed in since the 90s. I think the last time we were there we actually recorded ‘Enjoy The Silence’ (Depeche Mode cover). That was kind of weird because we started rehearsing after we had started playing ‘Enjoy the Silence’ to do on the tour. So that gave us a little extra flashback. It was great.

Obviously there are a lot of songs we’re going to be able to play on this tour because we have an extra person. Troy will be playing guitars and keyboards and some percussion stuff and singing a little bit.

Failure tour poster with Troy Van Leeuwen

Despite adding another member, he insists that simplifying is something that is foreign to the band. Instead they upped the challenge levels for themselves amongst the foursome with a slightly different group of songs to tackle.

I don’t know if it really frees anyone up. I think the difficulty level in performing these songs is about the same. As we’ve chosen to play the songs that we’ve been already been performing out on tour, it probably would have freed everybody up and made things a little bit easier. Being in true Failure fashion, we chose to instead of doing that, choosing more complex songs we couldn’t perform as a three piece.

They were still pretty busy and it definitely requires a lot of focus on everyone’s part. It definitely doesn’t get any easier.

Photo Credit: Sarah L Wilson

Photo Credit: Sarah L Wilson

He also shared what they are working on for the set list with Van Leeuwen.

We’re adding in ‘Enjoy The Silence.’ We’re adding in ‘Moth,’ which we haven’t played since 1993 or 94. We’re adding in three songs from the new record that we definitely needed an extra guitar to perform. There are a couple other little surprises. I don’t want to give away too much.

It looks like an entirely new setlist from what people had seen before. There’s a lot of new stuff off of it that no one had seen us play in the past year. About half the set is new.

failure 4

Failure has kept the excitement levels at a high with working in new songs from their latest album, even prior to its release. Fans got a chance to hear select songs from the new album while also working on various songs from past recordings, making each show a different experience than the prior ones.

We’re not really the kind of band…I know a lot of bands when they put out a record they decide on a setlist and they play that every night. They decide on the way the stage is going to look and do that every night. We’re not really that kind of band.

We know if we keep it interesting for ourselves, that’ll trigger into being interesting for the band. Some people have come out to multiple shows. We’re constantly trying to think when we should make the show new each time we go out on a tour,” said Scott, explaining how their inner workings within the band keeps things fresh and exciting.

Photo Credit: Sarah L Wilson (via Facebook)

Photo Credit: Sarah L Wilson (via Facebook)

Being on the road has reignited their creative juices and allowed them to explore new sounds for songs on their new album, just as well as rediscovering tunes from past releases. While much of The Heart Is A Monster is relatively a new release, Failure has yet to perform much of the album and Scott talks about their process of working towards making that a reality.

You know I think in terms of how we perceive the record after the fact having listened to it – each of us recorded it and there isn’t anything on it we wished we had done differently.

A lot of referring to the last question, this album is still so really new for us. Each time we go out we find ourselves learning new songs that we hadn’t played on previous tours. So that keeps it interesting because before [the release of The Heart is a Monster], we would do one song at a time. We would literally have to go back and learn how to play them. So everything is still really new and fresh. We haven’t gotten through every song on the record yet. We’re getting close.

If we count this tour coming up, it’s ten songs off of the new record. So we’ve played most of the record live, but it’s still pretty fresh. We’re all still feeling very excited about it and still very, very proud of all of the things that created the record.

Even on Fantastic Planet there were a couple of little things. We don’t move on to the next song in the recording process until we’re happy with where we are. So in a sense, looking at things in retrospect, we’re not looking at it like ‘oh god I wish we’d done that differently…’ I think we’re proud of and to this point all of the records have stood the test of time.

failure ken andrews 2015 2

He also spoke about rediscovering certain aspects of the band since resuming activity. Being a band as musically experimental as Failure is, Scott explains their creative process and how they make things work internally.

I think while we’re doing it we’re kind of on a creative autopilot. We’re in the zone and it’s all about your relationship working together and a bit of everyone’s intuition colliding. I don’t think it’s unlike what happens when any group of people when they’re working on something in common. Things just kind of transpire without a whole lot of…we’re in a whole another world.

I do know when we do get together it is always really easy. We’re not one of those really labored type of bands. Things tend to come to us pretty effortlessly. As far as the discovery, a lot of that is probably again due to the way we do things, like writing and recording things one by one, and coming up with all of the parts – melodies and things in that fashion. A lot of the discovery comes afterwards when we all have to sit down and learn what we played.

For example, we’re learning ‘Small Crimes’ with Troy, and we started playing that last year and we played that several times until you have a way of playing it live and you add stuff to it. I went back and listened to the original recordings on Magnified and there were several instances and parts where I was like ‘oh wow…I didn’t hear that the first time around.’ I kind of rediscovered it and integrated some of those really small things that I didn’t notice before that being to the performance of the song.

It’s actually not unlike one of those movies you’ve seen a million times. If it’s a really good movie there’s so many layers to it that no matter how many times you watch it, you always discover something new about it.

For me, that signifies that we were successful at what we were trying to achieve. We never get bored at playing stuff. It always seems fresh at playing it live. I think it also why these songs hold up 20 years. We’re playing songs from 20 years ago, and they still sound really cool and really fresh.

failure studio pic 2015

Lastly, Scott talked about Failure’s effect driven sound that has subtly become an influence on many 90s-esque bands popping up in the scene today. Much of that is heard on each of their recordings and he tries to explain where that comes from.

To a degree, it’s kind of like for example you probably have certain set of friends that you communicate with in a certain way, like a certain musical or a language. Then you have another group of friends that you have a certain language with and you put those two groups together, people are shaking their heads sometimes and saying ‘what are they talking about?’. It usually happens with people you grew up with. When they come in contact with people you’re friends with as an adult. It’s like you have this weird language together and people kind of scratch their heads at.

In our case, there’s certainly a musical language that the three of us have together, and Troy, that we don’t have with any of the other stuff we’ve done. I’ve played in so many bands before, but the only band and the only music that makes me play like I do is Ken [Andrews] and Greg [Edwards]. The way I play and respond to their music is completely exclusive to them and vice versa.

So part of it is we already have a built in musical language. When we’re writing a song, we’re responding to each other in a certain way. Then the other thing that comes once we get past the actual concept of writing the song is Ken is just a great engineer. The actual sonic and the meticulousness of the sound that you’re hearing, that comes directly from Ken turning knobs. I want the snares to sound big and this to sound like this. Every now and then again, there’s an influence…’can you make this snare drum sound…’ But for the most part Ken is the one turning the knobs so he definitely has a certain sonic sensibility that he uses as a gigantic paint brush to color over the ideas and songs that we’ve written.

It’s very unique to us. It’s the way we write. The music is very unique to us and the actual sounds that you hear come out of the speakers are unique to us. That’s part of the beauty of the band. We had no interest in being anything other than what we are, which is thankful different than everyone else.

Again the record is so long. If you had the same sounds on every single song, you’d be bored. Not to mention every single song has a different feeling and tension and vibe to it. You could be doing yourself a disservice if you didn’t try to create a different sonic mood for every single song. One song might be mad, one song might be happy – those two things don’t sound and feel the same. So they should appear to sound different. Again it makes it easier to listen to a record that’s so long. I have so many records and I’ll get into the eighth song and it’s the same snare sound, the same guitar sound, the singer’s singing the same and it gets a little hard to get through. It sounds too similar over and over and over.

By Rei Nishimoto


One Eyed Doll On Being A DIY Artist


Photo Credit: Sergio Mazzotta

Photo Credit: Sergio Mazzotta

For the duo known as One Eyed Doll, they learned how to build up their band from the ground up on their own. Since starting the band in 2006, they have released 11 records total, including five of their first six full length recordings were released on their own (their latest Witches was released on Standby Records) under One Eyed Doll.

Vocalist and guitarist Kimberly Freeman and drummer Jason Sewell do all of the band business themselves. They shared some of the ins and outs of what they are working on, aside from constantly creating music and not necessarily intended for a record.

Kimberly Freeman of One Eyed Doll. Photo Credit: Crystal Dean (via Faccbook)

Kimberly Freeman of One Eyed Doll. Photo Credit: Crystal Dean (via Faccbook)

Touring is one of their lifelines of keeping One Eyed Doll going, and have shared stages with Orgy, OTEP, Wayne Static and Mushroomhead.

Thanks to all of these bands for bringing us out and helping us build what we have now. We will always be grateful for all of that,” says Freeman.

We go and we know there’s always a lot of One Eyed Doll shirts in the audience. People always line up at the merch table for autographs. You never really know if they’re really going to come just for us,” said Sewell.

Do they really like us or are they coming for the other bands?,” wonders Freeman, with a smile.

It’s really nice to know we can go out and headline and pack the house,” added Sewell.

one eyed doll

Of the tours they ventured onto, Freeman talked about a recent tour with Orgy they took part on. “We shared a lot of fans. I really liked the Orgy tour. There were a lot of girls and a lot of…I don’t know. I really liked that scene. I really liked their fans. The whole band was sweet to us.

He has been so encouraging to us and he’s just an amazing person and an amazing performer.

One of Freeman’s favorite pastimes is drawing, which ironically is also tied into the band’s business. Whether it involves designing merch or otherwise, she enjoys what she does and sees it as a part of them.

I wouldn’t call it art work. I doodle. Everything is involved with the band. It’s merch. I make and design our merch so that has to do with music. If you’re asking totally removed from the band what are my hobbies then I couldn’t tell you really. I don’t collect wine or anything. I write songs. I love writing songs. I just play guitar, piano or banjo.

It takes up 120 percent of our time. One Eyed Doll is a business. We pretty much handle all of the nuts and bolts of the business. We have a really cool team of people. We have a booking agent who helps us book shows. We have various members of the team, but for the most part we handle the day to day, ins and outs of making the merch. We collaborate with different artists and then Kimberly will design the merch based on their artwork. Kimberly also handles the web design stuff. I do all of the recording. We both handle a lot of promotions. We’re always working to keep ourselves funded so that we can continue making music and touring full time,” added Sewell.

one eyed doll live

Through the band, they have ended up working with a number of producers and musicians who had been influential in shaping their band and their career. One person is producer Sylvia Massey, who they worked with on some recordings that had yet to be released. But ironically, she is making a book and they shared the news about being part of it.

Sylvia Massey is making a book. We are going to be in that book. We just found out. Sylvia Massey, legendary producer who made the first couple of Tool albums, System of a Down, and worked with Johnny Cash, Prince, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and One Eyed Doll of course. She’s making a book on recording outside of the box – being creative with the recording process. She’s been talking to us about it. It’s really cool!,” said Sewell.

Sylvia Massey

Sylvia Massey

She’s one of the most creative producers of our time, if not the. She’s just gets it done. She knows what she wants to hear and she makes it happen. It can come out of some really weird places. We so enjoyed working with her. If you get a chance to work with Sylvia Massey, do it,” added Freeman.

Another person they befriended is Martin Atkins, the one time drummer for Public Image Limited, Killing Joke, Pigface and Ministry, and the one time founder of Invisible Records. Now he teaches music business via SAE School and included One Eyed Doll as part of his lectures and his book Welcome To The Music Business – You’re Fucked.

Martin Atkins

Martin Atkins

Sewell plays down how well the band is truly doing despite how the lecture makes them look. “I don’t know about making money but we can eat! We don’t have a day job.

We do this full time. He is such an awesome, encouraging supporter. He is one of the coolest people I’ve ever met – so much respect. He’s such a great drummer,” said Freeman.

Sewell shared Atkins’ contribution to one of their songs. “He did a drum solo on one of our songs on Into Outer Space called ‘Live Or Die.’

It’s a great song. He just helped tell the story with his amazing crazy beat that he did. The whole bridge is this drum solo and Jason’s playing this weird bass over it. He is awesome. We love him,” added Freeman.

Photo Credit: Rei Nishimoto

Photo Credit: Rei Nishimoto

Lastly, both of them gave a lengthy set of advice for any musicians who are indie artists and how to work their way up the musical ladder of life. Freeman shared her thoughts on the matter.

Don’t sign a contract you don’t like. Make it your terms and don’t worry about that. Get out there and play shows. Play shows and get one fan at a time on your email list. Get out there and play, tour outside of your home town, [and] build your following. The other stuff and all of that record label bs, it’s probably not going to help you out that much. Just keep playing shows, do your thing and run it like a business, take it seriously and make sure everybody is putting all of their energy into that.

[With] record contracts, when it comes time for that stuff, you just take it one at a time and check them out. Don’t just sign that first thing that comes by you. You say no if it’s not what you want. Half of the time they’re not going to live up to those contracts anyways, just so you know. Don’t rely on that. That’s not the goal. Your goal is to build your following to be strong and to have your back whether you’re independent or you sign, you have something to bring. That will support you. No record contract is going to support you. Your fans will support you. So that’s what you need to build.

The philosophy I think you can live by as a musician is when you need the help, it will be there for you. If you’re still able to handle stuff on your own, then do it. If you get to the point like, at this point we needed some help on some things…so if you need the help since you don’t have enough time in the day to handle all of the business that you’re getting – to handle all of the fans that want merch, handle all of the shows that want you to perform at…,” said Sewell.

There might be a point where you need to work with an agency or a distribution deal or a manager or a record label,” said Freeman.

You don’t want to jump into it,” said Sewell.

One area they mentioned was the use of a publicist and when a good time to employ one will come in handy. Once again, Freeman shared her thoughts.

A publicist is a big one that we grabbed onto that early on before we were on with anybody. We need publicity because we can’t schedule everything that’s coming in and we’ve got the blogosphere but we don’t know how to talk to bigger magazines and they don’t want to speak to us. We were at a point where we needed to hire a publicist.”

Just to give you a ball park thing that worked for us. We had gotten to the point where we’ve toured enough and we’re selling enough merch off of our website. We were getting our iTunes stuff was getting to about $1000 a month. That’s how much we could afford to pay for a publicist at that point. A publicist might cost as much as $3000 a month. That’s all we could afford at the time was around $900 and we asked someone if they would give us a deal and they said yes. That was one of the best things this band has ever done, even though it was hard times for us to be able to have to take all of the money we were generating at the time and shuffle it around.

We had to eat rice and then pay our publicist. That’s what we did, but that brought us to the next level. The publicist can really help you out if you find the right one,” said Sewell.

They got the attention of all of these other business types who wanted to work with us after that because they were able to see what we were doing. Before it was like they would have never been able to see it at all,” said Freeman.

I would recommend before a label or a booking agent or any of that, it might be a good idea to invest in a publicist. Give it a month or two and if it’s not working out, then try someone else. That’s the cool thing about a publicist – you’re not in it for a long contract. You can hire them just for one month and see what they could do. Most of them will let you do that, especially if it’s around an album release – you’re putting an album out, there’s a story….you want to have something to talk about – a tour, an album…or else there’s no reason to hire a publicist. But if you have something cool coming up, save your pennies, put it into a publicist and see if you could make some national news happen,” concluded Sewell.

By Rei Nishimoto


Back On The Loose – Dan Jacobs of Atreyu


Atreyu band shot

Since coming off of their hiatus, Orange County metalcore stalwarts Atreyu have released their latest album Long Live. They had just completed a string of European festival appearances and an array of one off shows, testing the waters of where they stood as a band.

Guitarist Dan Jacobs spoke about the band’s return, and figuring out the band’s relevance in the current scene. What they discovered was a lot more than what they expected.

We knew people wanted it. To an extent we weren’t really sure, but we were seeing it via social networking and what not. People kept hitting us up ‘when are you guys coming back’ the entire time we were gone. So let’s see what this is like. So we went and came back and the first show we sold it out literally within seconds. We’ve never done that before. That alone was the catalyst of ‘we need to keep going.’

Photo Credit: Jason Walton (via Facebook)

Photo Credit: Jason Walton (via Facebook)

He admitted that he was the one who got things in motion, in terms of restarting Atreyu and getting the wheels in motion.

I was knocking on everyone’s door the entire time we were on and ended up waiting until everybody was on the same page at the same time. We eventually got back.

Nearly a year ago was their big return at Knotfest 2014 in Devore, CA and fans greeted them with a huge welcome. Expecting the unexpected, Jacobs said that things had surpassed his expectations.

The whole thing is very surreal. It feels like time travel and it’s like snap my fingers and the band’s on hiatus; and snapping my fingers again and we’re back all of a sudden. Snap my fingers again and a year and a half later we have an album out, and the response has been incredible. It’s just crazy to be sitting here at a sold out show at the Troubadour. The whole thing is very surreal. I don’t think however long I ever do this I will ever be able to wrap my head around how I ever made it to this point.

Photo Credit: Tim Cayem

Photo Credit: Tim Cayem

He also spoke about their rabid fan base helping them selling out a number of their return shows on several stops. Unlike before their hiatus, Atreyu appears to have gained more popularity than before and Jacobs had a different approach at seeing where they stood in the present.

In a way I think there’s a different level of respect for our band that wasn’t there before. People appreciated it but I feel us taking this time off and people getting to ingest what’s out there. I hate to say this but a lot of what’s out there isn’t very good these days, especially in our genre of music in particular. So I think it’s refreshing for people to hear a band like us to come back and go ‘oh wow…this is what this kind of music is supposed to sound like. This is it done right.’

He explained on Long Live, they went back to the basics and took the best parts of their career, making it into the highlights of each era. Working with Fred Archambault (Avenged Sevenfold, Alice Cooper, Device), he helped get the best performances on each song and show what they have learned about themselves and their sound. The album took a huge step up and it shows why their fans were eagerly awaiting their return.

With Atreyu, especially on our first few albums, we sounded a certain way. There’s an evolution there but we sound a certain way. We took a left turn on Lead Sails Paper Anchor, and even on Congregation [of the Damned] we were still on that weird path. Finally we got that out of our system. So let’s go back to what we love doing, or originally were doing and what we do best. That’s what we’re most confident with. It took us doing all of these other things to own that.

So now that we’re going into writing it, it came out very naturally and it sounds way bigger and better. You can hear the confidence in it. The response we’re getting on is incredible. It’s working which is awesome.

The last song on Long Live, “Reckless,” took a left turn and returned to their earlier, more abrasive sounds. Letting their guard down, Atreyu threw down some meatier sounds that have been left off of some of their recent recordings.

It was just let everybody loose. A lot of our songs we put to a typical song structure – verse, chorus, verse, chorus, bridge, chorus… – we wanted to have one song kind of like some of our earlier records where it wasn’t as structured. We didn’t want to go down too much. When you have too much structure, it gets weird. It’ll lose that vibe and flows in there. We wanted to have at least one song that has that. It’s something that is where we came from. So that is what ‘Reckless’ is.

Following their last two albums (2007’s Lead Sails Paper Anchor and 2009’s Congregation of the Damned), they experienced being on a major label (Hollywood Records) and entering the world of rock radio. They quickly learned where their strengths and weaknesses lay and they did not fit into that world the way many had envisioned them at the time.

The radio aspect of it really pushing the singles was a little frustrating for us. For us, writing singles was not something we aim for. It’s just that we have certain songs that shine more than others and those were the singles. We preferred to write that way so we’re not trying so hard to get that single.

I think we also learned a lot over the years with all of the record labels we’ve been on, all of the records we’ve put out, all of the producers we’ve worked with, and all of the tours we’ve done. We know who we are. We know what we like. We know what works for us and what doesn’t work. This album is a collective effort of that.

Photo Credit: Timmy David Farmer

Photo Credit: Timmy David Farmer

One positive from that era was working with producer John Feldmann (Black Veil Brides, The Used) and how the band learned how to be aware of capturing certain sounds and how to arrange songs.

Because of our experience with him, we don’t need to work with producers any more. In a sense, if someone needs to arrange our songs, we learned so much from him we know how to do now. We get it. We already kind of got to before working with him, but he solidified it and he put a spotlight on things we didn’t realize we were already doing and were very important. From there, we’re into it and it’s a whole another beast because of it.

He spoke about what each member had been consumed with during their hiatus. Drummer Brandon Saller had been busy as the frontman in Hell Or Highwater, but the other members kept themselves busy with music as well as other ventures.

Our singer Alex [Varkatzas] had a project called I Am War that he was doing with Brendan Schieppati from Bleeding Through. He also has a gym called Planet Crossfit. He’s also a tattoo artist now. He’s doing pretty well with that.

Our bass player Marc [McKnight] – he’s the one that designed all of our album artwork. He’s a very talented artist. He does stuff with web design, design t-shirts, albums cover art…anything to do with art.

Our other guitarist Travis [Miguel] played in Trapt. He toured with them for a little while. Myself I have a merchandising company called Rockworld Merch. We make merch for Monster Energy Drink, Rockstar Energy , Kat Von D and people like that. I also have a company called PlugInz Chains, which is these little mini amp keychain holders. It looks like a little amp peg but it’s a keychain holder.

We’ve been running our own business with this band since we were out of high school and even when we were in high school. We’ve always had an entrepreneurial mindset. This is doing this with other things associated with this going hand and hand.

atreyu pluginzkeychains

While Atreyu were away for five years, Jacobs said that the band realized what they had accomplished over the year and found more appreciation towards what they had.

I think just our knowledge of how this whole process works, as well as our appreciation for it. We appreciate it a lot more now. Before we were jaded to everything, and now we know what we need to be doing or shouldn’t be doing. We know who we are as people, inside and outside of the band. The collective effort of all of that is what makes the album and makes us do what we’re doing and do what matters. That’s what makes it feel and sound the way it does.

He also said the band’s outlook onto the future of Atreyu has also changed, and the appreciation of what they have factors greatly into their decisions.

I think I appreciate and understand the value a lot more than I did before. I think all of us do. I think that’s what we’ve all been humbled over our time off. A lot of the things we get it. We understand it a lot more. We can see a lot more clearly now. I think that’s what makes it a lot more enjoyable and we know what to do with it, instead of flaying our way through our career.

Lastly he shares his thoughts on the Orange County metalcore scene Atreyu was part of in the early 2000s. “It was incredible. It was a tough time in itself. It was a very definitive time for us to shine and make our mark. The time was special and even now nostalgic to an extent because of how much went back to the scene. It’s cool and it’s a shame the scene’s got so watered down unfortunately but it’s cool to see it’s still going. It’s become its own beast.

Does he think Atreyu will inspire some of their recently defunct peers to give it another go? “Hopefully – if that’s what they love doing – that’s what we’re here because we love doing it and that’s why we’re back. If they love doing it too, hopefully they take note and do it as well. Treat themselves to themselves.

By Rei Nishimoto


The Coming of Winter – Morne


12087269_10153706221017566_1693257579552272511_o

December in New England is a special time. The beautiful autumn colors have fallen to rust and the desperate preparation for the inevitable burial under literal feet of snow in the coming months is at the forefront of our residents minds. Seasonally, it is truly the calm before the storm. The time just before nature cleanses itself with decay so it can be reborn in spring. This December will also mark the third annual show during this time from one of our heaviest bands, Morne. Specifically, December 12, 2015, at Great Scott in Allston, MA. The show is aptly named, The Coming of Winter”.

Morne plays locally only about twice a year and The Coming of Winter has become a sort of call to the crowds to come out and celebrate the upcoming new year. It’s also a chance for the band to book their own show with bands they want to play with. For Morne, it isn’t simply a show with bands that you have seen a thousand times. I got a chance to ask founding band members, singer/guitarist Milosz Gassan, and bassist Max Furst, why they put this on every December and what it is that makes the show important to them.

Morne, by Hillarie Jason

I want it to become a thing that I’d like to go to. Something that isn’t just another show that happens every other weekend with the same 10 bands…” explained Gassan. “Something that brings recognition to music and art done without rushing, trying to ‘make it.’ I see it as a special night for us. It’s an event that brings some sort of fulfilling emotion. We aren’t set to play one hometown show a year but we like to keep it to a minimum which makes every show a special event for us and not make us a ‘house band.’ I don’t feel any reason or need to play every show we can. I think that is what makes me approach it with some special feeling. We do tours where we play 30-40 shows night after night but that is something different. You play every night in a different town, different venue. Playing often in your own hometown brings a routine to it and you start to feel numb. I think some people feel this way about the same local bands playing every other week, getting on every opening slot for touring bands. I just don’t like when local bands play too often. It takes away the special aspect of it.”

Booking our own show gives us the ability to select where we play and who we play with. The Coming of Winter is a chance for us to gather with our friends in our hometown and share the stage with some local bands we respect and enjoy.” commented Furst. “This will be the third year we have organized a gig of these sorts, but since it’s become somewhat of a tradition we have decided to give it a formal name and identity. The past two years have proven to be a success so we’re hoping to keep it rolling. Hopefully it will grow in time.”

With all the things you have to do in December, whether it be shopping, spending time with family and friends or simply reflecting upon the past year, The Coming of Winter is something worth penciling into your schedule. I asked Milosz what was special to him about the show being held in December and why they have chosen that month for these shows. “Well, I think fall/winter in general is better for heavy music. I think people are more focused then too, I am. It’s right when seasons change.”

WORDS AND PHOTO BY HILLARIE JASON


Youth Driven Carousel – Speaking The King’s


speaking the kings

Being a new face on a record label with a storied history like Nuclear Blast Records can be a daunting task for any band. For the members of Speaking The King’s, they became one of the label’s newest faces that spearheaded a breed of youth based punk driven metal.

The band completed their full length album Carousel and is excited to share it with the world. The public got their first taste of the band with their debut EP (2013’s Here To Stay), and since then they began growing into their sound by experimenting with a variety of styles and crafting songs that reached a variety of listeners.

We worked real hard on the EP but we were trying to figure out which direction we wanted to go – if we wanted to go wider, heavier. We wanted to see what we could do. So one of the things we really loved and really wanted to exploit was Bobby’s [Burap, lead vocals] great voice so we figured let’s focus on a lot of using that element that he has and getting that into our songs,” said guitarist Mike Entin.

When we were writing the full length, it was a lot of basing off of the choruses opposed to who can write the biggest breakdowns. Now granted there are plenty of breakdowns and plenty of heavy parts on the new CD, it does have something for everybody. It’s a much longer roller coaster.

speaking the kings casanova video shoot

Taking the name from a familiar film, guitarist Justin Bock talked about how this hit them enough to name the band after this.

There was a scene in the movie Inglorious Bastards and it’s actually exactly what you said – it’s a shorthand of speaking the king’s English. It’s the scene where an English soldier first sees a German soldier in the basement of a bar and is captured by one of the actual German soldiers. He basically realizes that it’s the end of the line and there’s really no way out of this. So he’s going up to this place and we just felt like we’re just going to take over this place and we’re just gonna throw everything we’ve got into it and just hope for the best and see where it takes us. So that really struck a chord with us and we grabbed the name and the rest is history.

On Carousel, they enlisted veteran producer Steve Evetts to man the recording sessions. While soliciting producers to work on their record, they found a connection with him over some of his past producing projects was some of their favorite records and ones that helped shape the band’s sound.

On this one, we were lucky enough to work with Steve Evetts. Nuclear Blast gave us the opportunity and we couldn’t have been more thrilled. There was a point where we got the list of producers on board and we were writing down the list of CDs they did. We wanted to work with Steve Evetts but let’s put him on here and the reason why was, is because he worked on one of our favorite albums – The Here and Now by Architects, and a lot of our favorite CDs in the past ten years.

When we got a call a few days later from Nuclear Blast, they said ‘hey we’re meeting Steve Evetts. OK later.’ We just dropped our jaw and said ‘did that just happen?’ Steve Evetts is an amazing producer. He did a wonderful job and we’re beyond stoked on this,” said Entin.

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Bock explained their songwriting process and how they approach their vast string of songs they have written. He said they took more chances on the new record that they did not on the EP.

Typically Mike or I will come up with riffs or chorus parts. We build from there. It’s become a more closed process than it has in the past. I think with the full length there’s much more variety. We feel we put in a little bit more than we did on the EP where it was more straight ahead heavy. We took a little more risks on this one. I think it paid off huge for us.

It usually starts off with Mike or I will write and then we put drums to it and then we put the basic idea structure wise. Then Bobby puts the vocals and then we wait and make it fit the way it is. It’s usually small changes and sometimes big ones and it turns into songs.

They spoke about the variety of styles on Carousel, ranging from heavier mosh songs to more melodic tunes with sing a long parts, which gives listeners an assortment of songs to choose from.

It’s funny because what we do is when we put the set together, we will try to knock off a little of everything. We try to make sure to play something for the kids with the breakdowns, and we’ll also play something back to back that the girls want to sing along. The other thing that we also do is that all of our biggest fans say that they like it and they have so much fun and they’re involved. We don’t make it seem like we’re not down on anyone and they wanted to listen to it. I think that’s one of our awesome qualities that we like to win people over. We’re trying to get them involved – even if it’s not a genre that you like, you won’t feel like you’re lost in the crowd. We want you to sing along with us. I think that stuff shows how much we like to put into making this more of a band than just a band’s show,” said Entin.

Having Evetts manning the recording sessions helped Speaking The King’s elevate their sound to the next level. They explained how his past experience helped them grow as a band and working hands on with the band made them a better band overall

With Steve we gave him a much more complete product. When we did the EP, the band and I just recorded. We didn’t have a singer at that point. So it was like doing two halves and it was the EP. With this record, everything was finished and ready to go when Steve came up and spent a week with us at our rehearsal space just going through everything and song structure – change the kick pattern to this and change the guitar chord to this – little things that help make all the songs into something maybe bigger than we had imagined it being.

He’s a master at his craft and was one of the single biggest learning experiences of my life, which was spending that one month with him and learning more than I have than all of the records I’ve made combined. It was really cool just picking his brain and letting him show us how he makes records with real sound the whole time. It’s not all that programmed drums. It’s all real live natural feeling and I think to me those records seem to last. We were super fortunate to be able to meet with him and then to work with him and make a record that way with somebody like that that’s done so many records we have so much respect for,” said Bock.

One thing that he did actually that we all experienced as musicians he broke us down. He made us work until we had the perfect take. He only strives for the best and we all loved that. It made us better musicians as growing musicians. It was hard love but it was awesome because he got a lot out of you. I think that’s one thing that all of us got after we got out of the studio,” said Entin.

For me, he made me play so much that there were so many drumheads that we had to switch. I even broke one of his cymbals. He made me play so much and so hard to get the recording correct and perfect. I’ve never sweated so much in my life,” added drummer Will Peacock.

At what point did the members of Speaking the King’s realize that Evetts was the same guy who produced records for such artists as Hatebreed and Dillinger Escape Plan?

I think for me we kind of had an idea of a lot of that stuff when we went in there. For me specifically, I found out during the process that he actually produced a lot of the records I’ve listened to for a long time that I had no idea he did. Bands that whenever certainly I’m thinking about pitching to who was producing one, I found three or four records that were some of my favorites that he had done and had no idea. We went in there awestruck and left there even more awestruck. It’s really cool,” explained Bock.

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While the band are still a new face on the music scene, they are learning the ins and outs of how to maneuver in many situations. They shared some of their experiences from their brief time on the road and playing with other touring artists.

We’ve learned that there’s all kinds of people that know what we do in there. It’s cool the variety of people who come together for music. We also learned that the sound guy is your best friend in the world. We played a festival out here with Emmure and their sound guy mixed for us for the show. There was an incredible difference. We played at The Grove in Anaheim, CA and it’s a pretty good sized venue. It was a night and day difference between what we had with him and what somebody in the band had with the house guy or whatever. Each venue is different and so when you get a good sound guy, make sure you thank him for that,” said Bock.

Peacock concluded, “Another good aspect is keep it simple. Don’t complicate things with your rigs with everything that you’re using. You’re making it in and out on the road 24-7 for 28 shows out of 30 days. You want to keep it simple because it will have a lot of wear on it and take care of yourself.

By Rei Nishimoto