The New Southern Trendkill – Zain Smith of Anti-Mortem


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It’s a rare thing these days for a brand new band not featuring ex-members of other bands to appear fully formed and ready to take on the mainstream. Anti-Mortem could well be the exception to the rule. With their debut New Southern fresh out on Nuclear Blast Ghost Cult caught up with guitarist Zain Smith.

 

Dude, I’m stoked to finally release it man. It’s been a long time and we’re finally here! The record’s out, the first week sales are in and they’re good, we had a strong first week, and it’s going awesome!”

Zain Smith, guitarist for Anti-Mortem is in a good mood. And who can blame him. There’s not many guys in their (very) early 20’s with a debut on the biggest independent label in the world getting the kind of push and praise that his band is receiving. But this isn’t a tale of “next big thing”. New Southern has been 8 years in the making.

We all went to high school together; we started bringing our guitars to school and we kinda became friends that way. We’d jam on the guitar for years and years, and gradually got better and better, making progress, we’d play better shows, getting better opportunities, start meeting people…

When we were nobodies in the first 3, 4 years of the band, there was a bit of ego, a bit of “We’re so cool!” listening to nobody, buying into our own shit and whatever we’d want to do, but we realized we needed to start listening and focusing on this. We met a guy in the city, Provo, he’s in a band called Everybody Panic, but he’s also playing guitar in Skinlab, he was the first dude we met, and he’d toured, done some label stuff, and he was like the idol of the Oklahoma scene, so we listened to him.”

Anti-Mortem band

For such a young band, Anti-Mortem display exceptional maturity and humility, which serves them well. “ Provo, I’d give him a lot of credit for that, but I think we have to credit ourselves, too, for being great listeners. In this business you don’t know what you’re talking about if you haven’t done it, but the people that have been out here for years, they’re the ones who can teach you. Listening is a big part of it – you can’t just get out there and be all “I’m the shit, I know everything”.

He (Provo)’s one of the main reasons this all happened, teaching us the ways of life and how to be in a band. Him being in Skinlab is how it all came down. Skinlab came to Oklahoma to play and we supported them. Steev (Esquivel – vocals/bass in Skinlab)’s seen us play and was all “You guys are phenomenal. Monte Connor’s my good buddy, we’re going to get you signed”. So we started talking to Monte (former Roadrunner mainman, now partnered with Nuclear Blast) and we’ve been in contact with him since.”

So, onto the next chapter in the story. Or the first chapter as far as albums go. Entitled ‘New Southern’ it’s not like the band are hiding their roots. But there’s more to Anti-Mortem than a Southern twang… “We don’t just do the Southern thing, but we try to keep that in there too. It started with getting a guitar and just wanting to play riffs, you know. AC/DC riffs, Metallica riffs and we really love the deep Southern tone that comes with that type of music. We’re huge, huge fans of Lynyrd Skynyrd, Molly Hatchett, Down, Corrosion of Conformity and Pantera, of course, but we do branch out to other things.

One thing that sets Anti-Mortem apart is, for their metal imagery and death-related name, they haven’t been swept up in the metal trend of screaming or shouted vocals, harking back to a bygone age of great singers, of proper vocalists. “We’re huge fans of great vocalists like Robert Plant, that’s a big inspiration to Nevada (Romo, Guitarist) and our vocalist (Larado Romo, known as Rado). Stuff from the 60’s and 70’s and then from the early 90’s, like Chris Cornell, bands that were just about big badass rock vocals.

Rado, he’s got a voice, he’s got a talent. We knew that from day one. He’s always been developing it and getting it to where it needs to be, but that’s what makes us, in my opinion, versus every other band that’s out there trying to do it. When it gets to metal, hey, I’m a metal dude, I listen to a lot of metal, I love it, but the thing is, everybody jumps on the metal train and it gets to points when you’re a screamer where you either sound like Randy Blythe or you might sound like Meshuggah. That’s it. There’s like 4 different types of screaming only, so once you do that, you sound like everybody else. So the originality has to come from the band only, but with Rado… Monte at Nuclear Blast he told us from day one, ‘Your boy’s got a voice. He’s great. His voice is fucking special’.”

 

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Another thing that impresses is that Anti-Mortem keep the guitars turned up to 11 all the way through, there’s no let up or temptation to chuck in a countrified, round the campfire acoustic song. “If any song is close to that on the record, it’d be ‘Black Heartbeat’ which we wrote at a time when we were thinking we might want to be a radio band and we were writing songs for Roadrunner, because that’s originally where Monte was until he left, but we’re just huge fans of metal, rock and rock n’roll, and we’re also big fans of the Rex Brown (Pantera) bass tone, you know it’s the biggest baddest bass tone you can ever get, and the biggest drum sound, the biggest guitars you could ever get. The legends, the bands that really changed music, Metallica, Zeppelin, they were all firing on all cylinders all the time. James Hetfield’s great, Cliff Burton’s amazing, I mean all the bass players they’ve had have been great, but they’re all firing. Take Zeppelin, I mean Robert Plant was the weakest link of their thing, and yet he’s great. Every member of all these bands has to be firing, and that’s what we strive for – being the best.”

So how did the songs come together? Over 8 years of being together, despite most of the band clocking in at 22/23 years of age, must have helped hone a writing style you feel can keep you at the top of your game long into the future? “We write different ways, man. We write in band practice as a group, we write on acoustics, we are all writers. I have pro-tools so I can write all the time. ‘Ride Of Your Life’ is a song I wrote, Rado came over, wrote the vocals and words and, boom, song. ‘Hate Automatic’ is one where Nevada has pro-tools too, he wrote the whole song, Rado put the vocals on and boom, song. Then there’s songs like ‘Truck Stop Special’ where we all as a band were in a jam spot in rehearsal and I had a couple of cool riffs, Nevada threw in a bridge and middle 8 and boom, song. There are songs we’ve written on acoustics and put them together. We have radio hit songs, the heavy hard-hitters that could make it to the radio, then we have songs like ‘I Get Along With The Devil’ that’d never make it to the radio – it says “motherfucker” too much!

We just write all the time. With bands, their first records tend to be better than the rest because they get busy and they don’t have time to write good material. So when we’re home, or not busy, we’re trying to write songs because you never know when the time comes and a label will say “We need 2 more records now”. You never know, they may say “This record’s doing well, let’s ride this shit for 2 years” or they may say “This one isn’t working, we need you in there now”. The bands that don’t have songs will get screwed, because they don’t have material and then the producer ends up writing it all and then the record turns out not well. Fans can see. Fans can see what’s our music and what’s producers music.”

With an album out, and the band already on the touring cycle in the States at the moment, it is inevitable that live is where the band are looking to make their mark next, with several great opportunities coming their way. “We’ve got shows with Lacuna Coil, which will be great for us in the US, then we’ve got Download festival in the UK, and because it costs so much money to get over to the UK we’re going to try and stay over there and tour there if we can, try and stay over. Then July is probably the biggest thing for us – we landed a Machine Head tour in the US, who were nice enough to say “Let’s go” to us. That’s all for now, but with the record out stuff will keep happening.”

The ball is rolling. The New Southern Trendkill has begun.

 

Anti Mortem on Facebook

STEVE TOVEY

 


Anti-Mortem – New Southern


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It has been 20 years since Corrosion of Conformity’s Deliverance and Pride and Glory’s self-titled established the first real successful integration of the sounds and styles of mainstream Southern American music and metal. New Southern (Nuclear Blast), the first offering from Oklahoman Young Guns Anti-Mortem, takes its roots in the guitar heavy Southern leanings of both, while also calling to mind Alter Bridge, SOiL, Shinedown at their heavier moments, NOLA era Down and Black Stone Cherry (before they started blaming everything on the Boom Boom).

 

If the lyrics are at times juvenile (‘I Get Along With The Devil’ and its multiple motherfuckers) Anti-Mortem (average age of 21) can be forgiven youthful exuberance. If at times they sway into stock Southern Metal territory, they can also be forgiven for allowing themselves to be over-polished by a big album producer, Bob Marlette (Shinedown, Seether) and playing it safe on their first album. To their credit, the metal edge shines through, and Anti-Mortem avoid any temptations for hokey acoustic campfire radio-friendly unit shifters, keeping the guitars to the fore all through the 12 tracks that make up their debut.

‘Words of Wisdom’ is an opening statement of intent, big guitars leading the way before impressive vocalist Lorado Romo takes over. In an era when great rock singers are a conspicuous by their absence, this kid has the pipes and personality to propel the band to great heights, and a couple of songs later with ‘100% Pure American Rage’ and ‘Hate Automatic’ Anti-Mortem really hit their groove, all sizzling riffs and powerful choruses. Other highlights include the rocking ‘Ride Of Your Life’ with a down-tuned stomp kick start that picks up pace, lead-off single ‘Stagnant Water’, a heavier, dirtier Black Stone Cherry, and personal favourite the Down meets Lynyrd Skynyrd ‘Jonesboro’, that tells the story of guitarist Zain Smith’s old man blustering his way out of trouble while hitch-hiking back to Oklahoma from Arkansas.

 

New Southern doesn’t redefine metal, but it could go a long way to setting Anti-Mortem, safely under the wing of kingmaker Monte Connor, on the path to great things. Promising.

 

7 / 10

Anti-Mortem on Facebook

STEVE TOVEY