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TABLE OF CONTENTS
LETTER FROM THE EDITOR 10
DIGITAL TOUR BUS: GET MORE FROM TOURING 16
COLUMNS 18
HM LIVE: CHIODOS, WE CAME AS ROMANS, SLEEPWAVE 22
PHOTOS BY BROOKE LONG
HM LIVE: HUNDREDTH, THE GHOST INSIDE, EVERY TIME I DIE, ARCHITECTS 36
PHOTOS BY BROOKE LONG
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12 SCARED VINDLESS
THINGS ARE LOOKING UP FOR
A SKYLIT DRIVE P. 32
6
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
Editor David Stagg talks horror movies and Saturday séances with the new prince of horror punk, Nim Vind
BY DAVID STAGG
30
TWO STEPS FORWARD Despite the sudden departure of two members, A Skylit Drive is finding the band rising above it
BY JORDAN GONZALEZ
O
OPENING STATEMENTS
46 NOT JUST DEAD INSIDE Read the surreal story of Tear Out the Heart vocalist Tyler Konersman and how cancer struck his heart. Not dead, still alive, still beating, not just dead everywhere
BY COLLIN SIMULA
54 THE EXORCISM OF PAPA ROACH It’s no small secret navigating the world of rock and roll unscathed is nearly impossible. Papa Roach frontman Jacoby Shaddix needed a wake-up call from someone close, and now the band’s frontman is stands fearless of his future
BY DAVID STAGG
8
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
Photo by Dave Jackson
HM’S
BANDS TO LOOK OUT FOR 2015 P. 60
9
O
OPENING STATEMENTS
‘I am no bird; and no net ensues me: I am a free human being’ I wanted raw emotion.
(which should be required high school viewing). Movies Darren
It was the only thing I could
Aronofsky and David Fincher and Paul Thomas Anderson and
connect to. Growing up in a
Quentin Tarantino and Dario Argento would make I would
fairly strict Christian house-
watch over and over, dreaming of my own signature sequences
hold, sniffing out fake smiles
and shots.
and glad hands and superior-
I still love making films, but I never fell in love with the film
ity through rule was native to
industry. It was a bloated workspace, a place where money is
our blood, like dropping chud
hoarded and then dumped and an unbelievable bureaucracy so
into a shallow pool with starved sharks. It rubbed us raw,
crushing you could feel the weight settle in on your shoulders
then it rubbed us deep, then it rubbed us empty and careless.
in every meeting you sat in. Instead, though my degree is in
I got what I wanted first in movies, like Requiem for a Dream
filmmaking, I got special permission to allow my internship requirement to count from outside the film industry; I had confessed to them my new job goals: writing. Surprisingly, they agreed. They didn’t just say go ahead, they let me write my own syllabus and requirements. That internship led me to Austin, TX, where I took up free work at HM Magazine. I write this ten years later, living proof a blue-collar
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
work ethic pays off 100 percent of the time. I love what I do,
DAVID STAGG
and I’m more passionate about this than anything ever before.*
MANAGING EDITOR
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY
DIRECTOR OF ADVERTISING
COLLIN SIMULA
BROOKE LONG
NATHAN KEY
But every so often, I hear an album that forces me to recall those early college years, where, with every frame I crafted, the audience would face these minor moments of terror and sadness and intense, raw singularity. And with every moment, it
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felt like those audiences would bond together, silent and anonymous but stronger, and the listeners would leave with this gut
SARAH DOS SANTOS,
feeling they were taken care of by each other. When I hear that
JORDAN GONZALEZ,
same emotion in music, it’s the most honest form music can be
SEAN HUNCHERICK
— a true outpouring of the spirit, when words are not enough.
JOSH WEIDLING MATT FRANCIS, TOMMY GREEN JUSTIN CROTEAU, JAMESON
Tear Out the Heart’s Dead, Everywhere is one of those albums. It was an excellent decision by the band to trust the album
KETCHUM, NATE LAKE
to Beartooth vocalist Caleb Shomo. Raw power and pop sen-
5210 CANAL ST.
sibility are embedded in his blood, and his work with TOtH
HOUSTON, TX 77011
vocalist Tyler Konersman makes the experience uniquely
NATHANKEY@HMMAGAZINE.COM
intimate. Even crazier, with the album’s lyrics fresh paint off
LETTERS
LETTERS@HMMAGAZINE.COM
his lips, his girlfriend receives news she’s got brain cancer.
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SUBMISSIONS
BANDS@HMMAGAZINE.COM
Now, he’s forced into a new reality where he’s inadvertently called his own bluff. His own words become his direct inspiration and direction. They’re also his barometer.
HM MAGAZINE (ISSN 1066-6923)
Since Managing Editor Collin Simula chatted with him,
ALL CONTENTS COPYRIGHT 2015
Konersman has gone on to support this magazine socially,
EXCEPT WHERE OTHERWISE NOTED.
and he hasn’t wavered from his commitment to a healthy
HM CONTENTS MAY NOT BE REPRO-
lifestyle with his new, improved, cancer-free partner. He’s
DUCED IN ANY MANNER, EITHER
now partially my inspiration to be the best man I can today.
WHOLE OR IN PART, WITHOUT PRIOR
DAVID STAGG, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF DSTAGG@HMMAGAZINE.COM
PERMISSION. HM MAGAZINE IS DEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED: PSALM 62
10
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
*
Except my wife. Duh!
J
HORRORLUJAH
SCARED VINDLESS GENRE FILMS AND CORMAC MCCARTHY NOVELS FROM THE NEW PRINCE OF HORRORCORE, NIM VIND BY DAVID STAGG
Tell me a little bit about when you decided to go horror with this thing.
guitar. I don’t know what you guys are talking about.”
How do you incorporate that film genre into your stage show?
I just reread Blood Meridian, which For everybody who doesn’t know,
is my all-time favorite novel. That’s
I kind of just started one day (laughs).
you’re in the band with your broth-
my favorite author. Cormac McCarthy
My father was in the symphony. I was
ers. Did that play into the whole idea
is my favorite author.
raised by a symphony player and an
of the band and its genesis?
orchestra trumpet player. He was
It was me by myself, and I would
the second youngest guy to be in the
just get people to play with me at
Vancouver Symphony Orchestra. Ever
first. Then my brothers joined when
since I was a kid, I was around all these
they started going, “Hey, cool. You’re
macabre sounds. All those Gregorian
getting shows. People are going to see
chants. I’d get dropped off because
this band.” As each guy was secretly
I come out to Chapter 14. When we
there was nowhere for me to go. I had
killed off and buried somewhere, they
come out to play, my new introduction
to watch Mahler’s Third Symphony and
would join.
is literally the audiobook for Chapter
watch them rehearse that. The whole thing is just dark, morose sounds.
It ended up being three brothers
He makes you want to stop writing. (Laughs) Yes. It’s like, “I can’t do this.”
14 of Blood Meridian.
after a while. Then we got into the
Have you ever heard the audiobook
So naturally, I started a band. I
music business. The real horror was
for Blood Meridian? When you’re tour-
was from a small town and had zero
our introduction to the business side of
ing, you need something to do driving
friends. I went out and came up with
music. That was really where the most
in the van or whatever, the audiobook
band figuring it was exactly the same
horror came from (laughs).
was almost even better than reading
as everybody else’s. Right away, people
I wrote a lot of really bizarre lyrics,
started saying to me, “You’re horror
mostly because I think I’m mentally
I wanted to actually change the
punk.” What the hell is horror punk?
ill. I like reading a lot of weird stuff,
band’s name at one point to the Satanic
I didn’t know what horror punk was.
and it ends up in the songs.
Hummingbirds, but my manager was
Other people said it was vamp rock. I was like, “Man, all I am is a guy with a
12
What are you reading right now?
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
I guess we ended up writing horror punk.
it myself.
like, “What are you talking about? Why do you want to totally change to
13
J
HORRORLUJAH
Satanic Hummingbirds?” I was trying to play on that part. Listen, Satanic Hummingbirds would be a sensational band name. Someone has got to have a band for it. For me, I never tried to be a horror punk singer or songwriter. I was writing songs that just sounded like that, trying to make my own artistic statement. The next thing you know you’re considered horror. It was fun because I ended up getting thrown in with all these bands that sounded nothing like my band, but I loved them all.
TEN MOVIE NIGHTS! If you’re the kind to willingly freak out for pleasure, Nim Vind and David Stagg want to test your horror limits. Here are their favorites (plus an extra five each!) for your Netflix queues
1.
DAWN OF THE DEAD
1.
SUSPIRIA
1977
1978
Like when I was on Fiendforce Records — they’re in Germany — they went and found all the horror punk in the world and put them all on one bill. They’d have these traveling tours where you’d have, like, four bands and everybody is from a different country.
2.
NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD
1968
2.
THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE
1974
The shows would be totally awesome. We played with a band from France, a band from Texas, a band from Canada and a German one. A lot of my longterm friends in music have been from those bands. All of those bands are
3.
3.
1963
2006
4.
4.
1984
2005
5.
5.
THE BIRDS
HOSTEL
from different pockets, flying that flag. Everybody has the same story: “I never really set out to be this. I just kind of got stuck here.” Now here we all are. It’s better than being stuck at home, right? It could be that.
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET
HIGH TENSION
Yeah, it is. I don’t mean stuck that way. I mean more like you’re just from all these pockets of the world and somebody says to you, “Hey, you over here doing this weird sound, you’re horror punk. Go play in this tour.”
EVIL DEAD
1981
DRAG ME TO HELL
2009 If you’re not horror punk, you’re still into horror movies, right? PLUS! Five More:
PLUS! Five More:
Yeah, totally. I love horror punk.
6. The Exorcist (1973)
6. Book of Shadows: Blair
Don’t get me wrong. I just didn’t set
7. The Shining (1980)
Witch 2 (2000)
out to be horror punk. Somebody came
8. Gremlins (1984)
7. Who Can Kill a Child? (1976)
up and said, “Hey, by the way, I don’t
9. Poltergeist (1982)
8. The Descent (2005)
know if you know this...”
10. Feast (2006)
9. The Last House on the Left
Because that’s what I’m here for.
(1972) I want to get some of your favorite horror movies. I guess this is one
14
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
10. The Ring (2002)
what would you tell them to watch?
of those labors of love. I’m always
ple to listen to this stuff. We were
curious to talk to people about hor-
raised by a symphony musician. We’re
Oh man, I don’t know. That’s a tough
ror movies.
three brothers. We’ve got tons of fans
one. People keep asking me that lately. I should have a better answer.
It seems like everybody that’s cat-
saying they love it. Can you guys just
egorized something as horror stems
check this out? We couldn’t get arrest-
from keeping it an outsider mentality.
ed with it. People wouldn’t give us the
I loved horror movies right from the
time of the fking day. We just decided,
get go.
“Fk you. We’re going to soldier on our-
You’re going to have to figure out your answer (laughs)! I know, man. I’ve got to come up with a better answer.
Before I talk about what horror
selves.” We started finding likeminded
movies, I love the fact that anybody
people. That’s how I ended up with
with any kind of budget can do it. You
my manager. When we pulled up at
still have a market just by being cre-
his house, I knew right away we were
ative. I don’t think there’s any other
with the right person. You walk into
Oh yeah, Dawn of the Dead. I love
movie genre where an audience will
his house and he’s got a Nightmare
the remakes, too. That was one of the
really give a movie a chance no mat-
Before Christmas room. He has, like,
rare times a remake was good.
ter what the budget is. I have another
a 101 Dalmatians life-size exhibit in
band called The Vincent Black Shadow
his house. He could have every horror
that had a lot of good years of playing.
movie you could think of.
You’re a big fan of the Dawn of the Dead series?
I really loved The Texas Chainsaw Massacre remake with Jessica Biel. I
... We started the same way. You have a
But as far as movies go, I don’t know
am a huge fan of the original Texas
shoestring budget. You’re doing tours
if it’s considered horror movie, but I
Chainsaw Massacre, and I thought
with shoestring budgets. You’re mak-
love stuff that’s almost like brain hor-
they did a good job of keeping it
ing it work because you have a creative
ror, stuff like Irreversible. I don’t know
relatively close to the original but
side that’s appealing to people.
if you would call it horror, but you’re
putting their own spin on it.
I love horror movies for that. I’ll watch any kind of low budget movie.
definitely going to be disturbed. Have you seen Irreversible?
Texas Chainsaw Massacre is great. For my brain, when all that translates to music, it translates like a sound-
My favorite ones are the original zombie movies. I love all the remakes.
Yeah. There’s an extensive rape
scape I can write mentally ill lyrics
I love the spirit. How do you think
scene in that movie, which is why it’s
over. On Saturday Séance Songs, I tried
George Romero must feel right now? I
kind of tough to watch. I wouldn’t
to have 12 entirely separate genres. It
hope he’s getting some residuals on all
call it horror, but it takes a horror
doesn’t follow anything. You hear the
that stuff.
mind to watch it. You’ve got to be
first song, and then the second song
able to sit through something like
sounds nothing like the first song,
The barrier for entry is super low.
that. How did you feel that affected
all the way to the end. That’s kind of
You can make a low budget horror
you? What do you think was so pow-
a criticism of Nim Vind. People are
movie and people can love it.
erful about it?
always saying to me, “When you do that, you alienate your audience.”
I don’t think those guys know how
I think it was a really intense artis-
to protect their intellectual proper-
tic statement and a very risky move.
My opinion is I think the audience
ty. Then somebody comes along and
When you make a movie like that, you
is fking bored of being treated like
goes, “That’s a great idea. Let’s do a
are not saying to yourself, “I’m going
everything is a one-trick pony, a one
soap-opera, super-watered down ver-
to make a fortune with this.” You must
shot deal, that I can only do this one
sion we can play anywhere and any
have a specific reason you need to
tiny thing and that’s it.
person can swallow it.” Boom, The
make that movie. It’s more like you
I don’t do that at all. There’s a sound
Walking Dead. I love The Walking
feel compelled. “I’ve got to make this
concept, which I guess is me and the
Dead, but, at the same time, I won-
movie. I have a statement I need to
sound of my voice and the way I com-
der what George Romero thinks. “I
make.” That’s why Blood Meridian was
pose, but otherwise it’s 12 different
couldn’t get anybody to pay attention
good. He had a statement he needed
thoughts. It’s almost like it’s 12 short
for sh-t when I wanted to do zombie
to make. That’s why anybody who has
soundtracks. Pick what you like. It’s on
movies.”
made those kinds of movies does.
there. It’s as if someone took some bad acid and then watched a zombie movie
What are some of the ones you’ve
and then read some Cormac McCarthy
Yeah. Now, it’s on AMC, exactly. The
watched recently that you really
and then went, “OK, here’s my take
story of me and my brothers was the
like? If somebody was going to ask
on the Beach Boys.” That would be my
exact same thing. We’d be asking peo-
for a recommendation from you,
song.
Now, it’s on AMC.
15
J
DIGITAL TOUR BUS
ONE OF THE BIGGEST DIFFERENCES I’VE SEEN, GOING FROM A LOCAL BAND TO A TOURING BAND, IS THE ABILITY TO LEAVE YOUR COMFORT ZONE. BEFORE I WAS TOURING FULL TIME, I WAS GOING TO SCHOOL, LIVING ON MY OWN, WORKING A SECRETARY JOB AT MY DAD’S OFFICE AND GOOFING OFF WITH FRIENDS EVERY DAY. LIFE WAS ROUTINE. I WAS IN CONTROL OF EVERYTHING GOING ON. BEING IN A TOURING BAND IS AGREEING TO BE FLEXIBLE. YOU HAVE TO BE OKAY NOT KNOWING PLACES YOU’LL HAVE TO GO, PEOPLE YOU ARE GOING TO MEET, WHERE YOU ARE GOING TO SLEEP OR WHAT YOU CAN AFFORD TO EAT. I’VE LEARNED THAT IF YOUR HEART ISN’T IN IT OR IF YOU DON’T MAKE YOUR BAND A PRIORITY, NOT ONLY WILL YOU NOT SUCCEED, BUT LIFE WILL GET HARD REALLY FAST. HOWEVER, IF YOUR DREAM IS TO PLAY MUSIC, THEN TOURING IS THE BEST THING YOU WILL DO WITH YOUR LIFE. YOU’LL MISS IT CONSTANTLY WHILE YOU’RE HOME. IT’S A WEIRD LIFE, BUT IT’S REWARDING, AND WE WOULDN’T TRADE IT FOR THE WORLD.
Guide to starting on the road At some point, any local band that wants to become not a local band knows they’re up against one major hurdle: touring. When is the right time? Is there ever a good time? How do I land a bigger tour? Digital Tour Bus asked four different bands their advice on how to turn your band from local to Psy-level stardom 16
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
THE BEST WAY TO START ON THE ROAD BY DOING WEEKEND REGIONAL SHOWS IN YOUR HOME STATE BEFORE JUMPING STRAIGHT OUT AND TOURING. THE MAIN GOAL IS TO WORK FROM YOUR HOME STATE TO DRAW A FAN BASE BEFORE YOU START THOSE LONG TOURS WITH NO SUPPORT. ANOTHER IMPORTANT THING IS STACKING YOUR MERCH TABLE WITH MODERN DESIGNS BECAUSE THE MORE DESIGNS YOU HAVE FOR PEOPLE TO BUY, THE FASTER YOUR NAME GETS OUT THERE IN EACH STATE YOU VISIT. WORD OF MOUTH ON THE ROAD IS STILL THE MOST EFFECTIVE WAY EVEN THOUGH PUSHING YOURSELF ON ALL SOCIAL MEDIA SITES DOES NOT HURT.
THE MOST EFFICIENT WAY TO ESTABLISH YOURSELF AS A TOURING MUSICIAN IS TO OPERATE LIKE A BUSINESS. CREATE A MISSION STATEMENT AND SET GOALS FOR YOURSELVES ON THE ROAD. IF YOU DON’T HAVE PARAMETERS AND IDEALS TO STRIVE FOR AND MAINTAIN, IT GETS VERY EASY TO LOSE TRACK OF THE MONEY YOU COULD POTENTIALLY BE EARNING. VERY FAST. IN THIS FAST-PACED INDUSTRY, YOU BETTER BRING YOUR PROVERBIAL NIKES.
THE BEST WAY FOR ANY BAND TO BREAK OUT OF THEIR HOMETOWN IS TO JUMP ON A LINEUP AS TOUR SUPPORT FOR A BIGGER BAND. THAT IS ALWAYS EASIER SAID THAN DONE! YOU WILL HAVE TO START OFF SMALL. BE PREPARED TO PLAY TO EMPTY VENUES, AS WE ALL KNOW THAT A LOT OF PEOPLE DON’T BOTHER TO TURN UP FOR SUPPORT ACTS ANYMORE. BUT HAVING TOURING EXPERIENCE IS KEY. ONCE YOUR TOURING RESUME LOOKS GOOD, YOU WILL STAND A MUCH BETTER CHANCE AT GETTING YOUR NAME OUT THERE FOR BETTER TOURS. ALSO, BEFORE YOU DO BECOME A TOURING BAND, GET TO THE GYM AND GET A GOOD DIET REGIME FOR ON-THE— GO. YOU WILL HAVE LATE NIGHTS, EARLY MORNINGS AND A LOT OF GEAR TO MOVE AROUND ON TOUR, YOU’RE GOING TO WANT TO BE FIT AND HEALTHY!
NOT TONIGHT JOSEPHINE
DARKNESS DIVIDED
THE MILLENNIUM
THE INSIDE IS LIVE
17
J
COLUMNS
MY LIFE IN RECORDS
Transcending Diet Pepsi, Chris Staples delivers
Matt Francis is a filmmaker/media designer out of Virginia Beach and the drummer for Feral Conservatives, an indie rock band. You can check out his website at mfrancisfilm.com.
18
ognizes his father next to him
person and online, involved the
in the pit drinking a Diet Pepsi.
idea of an artist selling out and
Punk rock equals Youth equals
losing their credibility. Usually
Diet Soda — and I think we
this meant signing to a major
just cracked Stephen Hawking’s
label, “softening” or dumbing
theory of everything. Given
down music by adding instru-
Diet Pepsi may seem innocu-
the lack of MxPx’s widespread
mentation that wasn’t electric
ous enough, the watered-down
appeal, they could have been
or distorted, the dreaded com-
kin of its syrupy counterpart;
replaced with any generic ener-
mercial license.
the conservative, appropriat-
getic rock band; the story was
This idea has largely, and
ed version of a hugely popu-
rooted in the music and frenet-
appropriately, gone by the way-
lar, mass-consumed beverage.
ic editing, not in their band’s
side. Currently, more ridicule
The only edge to it may just
celebrity.
is placed on the idea of what
be the rumors of its aspartame
To my small group of friends
a “sell out” is than the actual
link to cancer, something I’ve
in high school whose only
merits of the argument. Most
heard for years but don’t have
awareness of MxPx was through
people realize, given the cur-
the motivation to switch to my
me, they now had an easy tar-
rent musical landscape, any
web browser and find a reputa-
get. I was the socially awkward,
ancillary income, like licens-
ble confirmation. It’s just the
identifiable punk kid clinging
ing, is generally considered
less-guilty version of a vice,
to the music’s anti-social val-
necessary to sustain a career in
like lean meat or SatisfriesTM.
ues
anti-establishment
music — while message boards
The airplane edit of an R-rated
method as a means of my own
placing the made up currency
movie.
acceptance. My friends shopped
of punk-credibility are arbi-
Young,
at preppy chain stores and lis-
trary and detrimental. But what
Drink Young” campaign, Diet
tened to Top 40. Their values
happened to all the punks of
Pepsi released a commercial
were already on primetime tele-
yesteryear? Have they all gone
depicting a raucous and muddy
vision and in malls; mine were
soft or country?
concert
somewhere
For
their
“Think
headlined
by
none
and
underground
in
On a yearly basis, I still find
other than Christian pop-punk
dingy basements and given life
new offerings worth listen-
pioneers MxPx, shot during
through Peavey amplifiers. Yet
ing to from favorite artists of
Mike Herrera’s Keanu Reeves
here it was, and the association
the past, the ones responsible
phase. At the time of its airing,
between MxPx and Diet Pepsi
for much of the music of my
they were my favorite band.
still lives on as one of our longest
formative years in the bom-
Playing a song from (iron-
running inside jokes. It was too
bastic, nostalgia rich soil of
ically) their tamest and most
easy: MxPx sold out. And to a
the mid-’90s to early aughts.
mainstream album, the band is
diet brand!
There’s the marathon career
shown delivering a powerhouse
And so selling out used to
musicians (Starflyer 59 comes
show where a moshing fan rec-
be a thing. Many a debate, in
to mind, still active since ’93),
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
the
re-inventors
(now-part-time,
structures or patterns.
ed, often a two verse and two chorus
MxPx’s own Mike Herrera fronts
I’ve often enjoyed the genre as
structure, but the words are memora-
outlaw country band Tumbledown),
a whole as “pleasant enough.” I’ve
ble and the melodies are demanding,
to the more traditional trajectory of
warmed up to stripped-down albums
belying their soft-spun nature. Staples
a rock band whose frontman finds
as summer dusk records or the I’m-
may sound bored or just contempla-
semi-retirement as a singer-song-
e d it i ng-a-v ide o-for-c hu rc h-a nd-
tive to some, but to me it’s more of a
writer solo artist. In the spirit of
need-inoffensive-music records. I’ve
“real at-ease” feeling, Whether he’s
detailing a true sell out, I thought I’d
heard many bare demos and minimal-
creating the perfect Summer Saturday
look at an act that has not only quiet-
ist recordings just fail to grab or dis-
(“Now I’m making drinks on the patio
ed down but also skirts the tradition-
tinguish their sound from their hum-
/ Hall and Oates playing on the ste-
al band model of full-time touring
ble components.
reo”) or reminiscing over a life that
And American Soft definitely carries
seems both aimless and well-spent
the airy, summery vibe you would
(“Fifty-seven years, I drank fifty thou-
This past year, one of my top releas-
assume, its melodies casually sung
sand beers / And now they’re passing
es came from (seemingly) nowhere:
and drifting mid-tempo. The words
through me like the ocean through the
Chris Staples, the former frontman of
and vocals have a chance to shine,
piers”), it rests on the ears with both
Tooth and Nail band Twothirtyeight. I
and they deliver. The production is
confidence and a gentle lethargy.
wasn’t surprised because he’s a great
sparse enough, but the percussion
Some of my favorite artists have
songwriter; I was honestly surprised
— at times just hand-claps and foot-
produced hours of quality material over
to see his name at all. I hadn’t fol-
stomps — has a way of sounding huge
the spans of their respective careers.
lowed his career much at all since
in the minimalist middle ground of
In some cases, multiple careers. Some
Twothirtyeight called it quits in 2003,
low end and cavernous reverb. This
bands I align with sonically to the
so when I saw a Chris Staples — the
is an album you can wrap your head
tune of side-projects and solo work
Chris Staples, the same person who
around on first listen; at a just over 30
from various contributing members
once fronted an emo band with a song
minutes, you’ll quickly distinguish
for a storied body of work, splintered
called “The Bathroom is a Creepy Place
the songs from one another, and the
into the compounding of their indi-
for Pictures of Your Friends” — had a
songs contain only around five-to-
vidual contributions. Some voices are
new album out on Barsuk Records, I
six separate elements. But this only
so affecting to me I can follow them
had to investigate. Intrigued, I checked
serves to elevate the subtle, infect-
through stylistic shifts, wild detours,
out the advance stream. It was exactly
ing melodies and clever lyrics with
experimental dives and pandering for
what you expect from a solo artist born
soothing, doctor’s-orders delivery.
them. Some artists are worth follow-
of the alternative scene: stripped down
In some ways, it’s dressed down to
ing when they go diet.
acoustic with traces of folk.
truly showcase the best of the sing-
cycles and heavily promo-ed album drops. And man, has it paid off.
The unexpected thing was how
er-songwriter craft. And this is it.
Chris Staples has changed as an artist, but he continually makes music
engrossing the songs were. The singer/
The vocals show a restraint that only
worth listening to. That’s a songwriter
songwriter genre is really a showcase
serves to accentuate the melancholy
who transcends genres, and that’s a
of lyrics and vocals, not so much plying
nature of the songs. This is not a bad
voice worth following; no calories, but
anything new from traditional chord
thing. The songs are short and point-
some ukulele, an artificial sweetener.
19
J
COLUMNS
THE HEAVY HEART
Born with worth but arguing over lives
Collin Simula lives in Columbus, Ohio, with his wife Ciara and his three small children. During the day, he does design for a branding agency. In his free time, he makes very heavy music as Maranatha. Simula is the Managing Editor of HM.
born with an innate attrac-
feeling stuck, lost and com-
tion, “hating the sin” comes
pletely hopeless.
across as hating them at their
She posted it, and then she
core being. I understand that
jumped in front of an 18-wheeler.
many in the more conserva-
A few months ago, a then-
We can argue all we want
tive camp might not believe
unheard-of Christian hardcore
about our theology. We can
someone who is gay is born
band put out a song calling
vehemently debate the trans-
that way (I do), but your per-
those with “twisted sexuali-
lations
interpretations
sonal opinion on what is or
ty” an “abomination.” After all
of the six verses in the Bible
isn’t sinful has no bearing on
the popular metal and hardcore
that mention same-sex acts.
the way someone feels deeply
blogs crucified them for it (and
We can write and record songs
in their own heart.
made them popular in the pro-
responding to other songs we
Especially in Leelah’s case.
cess), they released a statement
disagree with. But while we sit
But if you insist that you will
saying they weren’t specifical-
in our club and get angry with
not stand for sin and that as
ly speaking about anyone who
each other, actual people are
long as someone is living that
identifies as LGBTQ.
experience very real hurt.
“lifestyle” they are hopeless,
Regardless
of
the
and
actu-
Scripture calls us to defend
al target of the lyrics, any-
the orphan. Leelah was spiri-
one in America knows those
tually and emotionally aban-
Although I understand those
are Evangelical code words for
doned by her family — she
two bands’ passions and I know
“gay.”
Jesus implores you to go ahead and cast the first stone.
was an orphan. We learn that
they both have good intentions,
This month, another pop-
the poor in spirit are blessed;
it still doesn’t come across to
ular Christian hardcore band
Leelah’s incredibly passionate
anyone outside of a Christian
released a song that, for all
yet hopeless note was one of
club as anything but dysfunc-
intents and purposes, was an
someone who’d come as close
tional.
angry response to them, with
as they could to giving up.
But this is hardcore music.
a namecalling title. Shortly
Poor in spirit. But no one told
Let’s channel that passion and
thereafter, the speculation and
her how much she was worth
energy
statements and snarky com-
before it was too late.
that matter. Let’s be angry —
towards
the
things
ments came out, most making
Real people have real worth.
there are entire classes of peo-
the claim for the band. Once
When scripture tells us we
ple being viewed as less than
again, Christians are made to
were created in God’s image,
human. Let’s be outraged —
look like dysfunctional idi-
it doesn’t say “except for these
there are people who feel like
ots, leading lives that consist
few people.” We are born with
they are outside of God’s love
of nothing more than arguing
worth.
your
because of the way they were
over a stance on something.
conservative or liberal inter-
born. Let’s be as vocal as pos-
This isn’t about a theological
pretation of same-sex verses,
sible — we will not stand to
stance. This is about the real
we’re called to love and care
see another teenager take their
lives of real people.
for all, regardless of disagree-
own life because of our own
ment. People are not concepts
holy book.
A few days ago, an hour and a half from my house, a transgender
20
depth about her struggles with
named
of
to argue over.
Let’s stop spending all of
Leelah
We need to retire “love the
our time publicly calling each
wrote a suicide note on Tumblr.
sinner, hate the sin” as our
other out, and, instead, do
After being essentially dis-
catchphrase for treating the
what we’re actually called to
owned by her Evangelical par-
LGBTQ community. To some-
do: love those who are hurt-
ents, she went incredibly in
one who believes they were
ing.
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
teen
Regardless
VERSES
Casting Out, Part II: Faith and Commitment
Nielsen Greiner is from Lancaster, PA and recently graduated with a bachelor’s degree in anthropology. Currently, he works full-time. He has a heart for high school ministry.
for who He truly is, worshiped
ods to around 700 students.
Him from that point on, from
When I started, I was over-
a true knowing in their hearts
whelmed, sometimes anxious,
and actions in their lives. What
uncomfortable,
did they see that we so often
in many of the situations and
do not?
emotions I often avoid. It didn’t
submerged
“For everyone who has been
I am currently in the very
always feel good — and some-
born of God overcomes the world.
midst of “casting out.” I don’t
times it still doesn’t — but in
And this is the victory that has
know how much or what I may
leaving the comfort of home,
overcome the world — our faith.
catch. If anything at all. But I
I knew I was doing something
Who is it that overcomes the world
know I’ve heard a voice, that
that would challenge me and
except the one who believes that
word worth obeying, follow-
result
Jesus is the Son of God?” I John
ing and allowing risk for. I’ve
and character development in
5:4-5
been hesitant and apprehen-
ways I could never achieve back
sive about it all and have only a
home. I needed to buck my ten-
little faith.
dency to take the path of least
We overcome the world by
in
growth,
maturity
our faith, but our faith need not
But it’s just enough. I know
resistance. I needed to be more
exist unless there is someone
the one who’s called me, and
than a “backpacker” passing
worthy of it. Faith is only as
He is the one who is sufficient.
through and invest myself into
good as what it has been placed
I want to be Peter in these
something, not allowing the
in.
moments of this story. No mat-
room to let myself off the hook
It’s through His word life was
ter how he started, he ended up
any time I pleased.
brought to what I believe in,
in just the right place — fol-
If I would have never put
yet my response in faith brings
lowing in the footsteps of Jesus.
myself in this position, I would
substance to it. A word requires
I want to be one who is capable
be missing all the present
faith, and faith requires a word.
of recognizing the worth of the
opportunities in which I have
His word requires our faith, and
one who calls and be willing to
grown here. I’ve experienced
our faith requires His word.
follow because of it.
joy, struggle, maturity, relapse,
It always comes back to His
For the most part, my ten-
victory, wrestling, new friend-
word; it is the most certain
dency is to shy away from sit-
ships, loneliness, adventure,
promise we have from God;
uations, contexts and circum-
the mundane, faith and trust,
we believe it stands forever. It
stances where I may be uncom-
doubt and uncertainty and all
lived before I breathed and will
fortable or in unfamiliar ter-
the highs and lows that accom-
continue when I cease.
ritory. I am currently teaching
pany a season abroad.
As Peter cast out his net at
English as a second language in
I’m not particularly special;
the word of Jesus, so do I. There
Phayao, Thailand. In coming to
I’m just attempting to make
is no true worship if we do
Thailand, I committed to some-
choices according to growth,
not know Him personally. Our
thing completely foreign (liter-
maturity and commitment —
revelatory knowing of him is
ally) when I decided to com-
all in faith. Everyday here, I’m
what causes us to worship, then
plete a TESOL course and take
tempted to lose sight of why I’m
follow. Glancing back at Peter’s
a job as an English teacher at a
here and why I’m doing this,
story in Luke 5, he first wor-
Thai Secondary School (called
especially on long, exhausting
shiped Christ, then followed
“Mathayom”
the
days. But those subtle, deep
him.
scripture,
American equivalent of Middle
reminders are always present
those who received a revela-
School and High School). Each
in my spirit, awakening my
tion of his worth and charac-
week, I’m teaching communi-
heart to know again and lifting
ter, those allowed to see Him
cative English for 23 class peri-
my eyes to see again.
Throughout
in
Thai,
21
HM LIVE
WITH A LITTLE HELP FROM MY FRIENDS ROUNDING OUT A SOLID WINTER 2014 TOURING SEASON, CHIODOS, WE CAME AS ROMANS AND SLEEPWAVE FILLED VENUES ACROSS THE NATION. OUR OWN BROOKE LONG WAS THERE WHEN THEY HIT BALTIMORE
J
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H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
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J
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H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
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30
A SKYLIT DRIVE
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
ADDITION BY SUBTRACTION THE FACE OF A SKYLIT DRIVE IS EVOLVING, WHETHER THE BAND PLANNED FOR IT OR NOT. AFTER A COUPLE OF SUDDEN DEPARTURES, VOCALIST MICHAEL JAGMIN TELLS US HOW THEY MOVE FORWARD BY JORDAN GONZALEZ PHOTOS BY BROOKE LONG
Do you go by Jag or do you go by Michael usually? What do you prefer to go by? It doesn’t matter. People use both of them.
bassist and our drummer left the band. We weren’t able to tour again. It had already been decided we weren’t going to tour after Warped, at least until (2015). Then, they randomly up and left a few months ago.
Just wanted to make sure I wasn’t calling you something you didn’t like, and I always knew your name was Michael. Either one is good!
You said right now it was randomly. When the members left the band, was it suddenly, too? We didn’t know they were going to post a statement on the band page. The way I look at it, when band members are
Catch me up on what you all have been doing the
quitting, it’s like they’re relinquishing their right to even do
last few months as far as tours go. I know you were on
anything on the band page. The right thing to do is to give
Warped, right?
your statement to the remaining band members who are
Yeah, that was the last tour we did this past year. After
staying in the band so they can post their own statement.
that tour, we finished up everything with our acoustic
You can post yours along with it, so the fans get the entire
album, Rise: Ascension. It was only a few months ago our
picture.
31
A SKYLIT DRIVE
Versus what they did. They went
been talking about it earlier in the
In its entirety, it’s acoustic?
and posted it without telling anybody.
year. All of a sudden, come the end of
Yep. Yeah, the whole thing.
It left everyone with this one-sid-
the year, I was like, “Hey, Reg. I need
ed picture. The fact they did it with-
you now.”
What made you guys want to do
out saying anything was a surprise.
He’s a great fit. I think he’s every-
that? Did you want to just give the
We were trying to contact one of the
thing we needed to fix as far as pre-
fans something new? What was the
members to try to kick him out, but he
vious issues. As for another screamer,
thought behind that?
wouldn’t respond to anyone. I’m not
there were a couple standout audi-
It’s something our fans have asked
sure if he saw that coming or if he was
tions, but one in particular definitely
for a really long time, even prior to any
already planning on quitting, but he
rose above the rest.
other bands doing a reimagining or
wanted nothing to do with anyone and wouldn’t respond. The other one — we would have wanted him to stay. But, in the end, they both left with
anything like that. It’s something we To clarify, you do have a drummer. Mmhmm.
this dark cloud over them. Things
knew they always wanted to hear from us. We’re not really one of the bands who wanted to half-ass anything. We wanted the band to stand on its own,
weren’t positive for either of them,
As far as a new screamer, did you
but also that if we were going to do it,
whereas we were, like, one of them
get a new person for that, or are you
we wanted to make something even
was more of a benefit to the music, but
still narrowing it down?
more special out of it. It felt like the
your attitude was only working against
I’d say it’s 95 percent.
right thing to do.
it. We can find someone who is just as capable and also has that new passion
How was the process of asking
Do you also enjoy performing
to do this. That’s one thing we’re super
strangers? Was that overwhelming?
acoustic? Do you plan on doing these
excited about now, the kind of people
Did that go well, asking people to
live?
we can find. The three left now, it’s
send in auditions?
We thought about doing something,
almost we’re like jaded old men. We’ve
It went pretty well. We were fair. We
like, really exclusive and small, but
been doing this for a while. It’s going
watched everything to see if there was
then we all decided against it. We
to be nice to bring in some new people
any actual spark in anyone’s ideas.
decided to keep the album as a simple,
to make it fresh and exciting. I think it
I don’t know where any confusion
novelty-type thing. We just wanted to
will change our outlook and help us go
came from, but we’d end up getting
do it, and not treat it like a monument
back to that stage where we are excited
a bunch of questions. We’d have to
album.
again. I’ve been around so much neg-
overlook them because there were just
ativity, every single tour. It can start
so many. We only really had time to
to drain you. It can start to take away
look at people who were going to be
what you love about it.
go-getters.
You guys started around 2005, correct? I’m actually not sure when A Skylit
For me, I would never audition for a
Drive happened, probably like with most bands that started in high school.
Let’s talk about the new people
band with a bunch of questions. If I’m
you’re looking for. I saw on Facebook
confident in what I do, I’m just going
We don’t know when our merger was ,
a few weeks ago you all were holding
to do it. I’m going to do it somehow
but we combined with another band.
auditions. How did that go? Did you
the fastest way that I can. Somebody
I started in 2006, 2007. Something in
find anyone from that? Do you have
coming in with an almost a defeatist
there.
any prospects?
attitude is, of course, the last thing
Yeah. That’s where we found one of our guys. Drummer-wise, we didn’t
we’d be looking for. In that way, that was probably the only issue.
hold open auditions for a drummer. It’s funny because I already knew someone who really wanted to help us out with any kind of need. We had randomly
By that time, the post-hardcore genre had been blossoming. What is it like, having been able to look back
Let’s talk about Rise: Ascension. That’s Rise, but acoustic, correct? Yes.
and also look forward? You guys are in between the older bands and the newer bands of this genre.
33
J
34
A SKYLIT DRIVE
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
Back when we started, singing wasn’t as prevalent quite yet. It wasn’t
It will be sometime this year. That’s all
me is that kids can still tell it’s me. I
I do know.
sound like I’m doing something differ-
nearly as hard to pick out a band to work something back then.
ent. So, to me that’s cool. Let’s talk about your vocals, too.
They don’t think it’s a new singer
That’s the hugest difference now,
Some fans and critics have noted
because it still sounds like him. It just
is that it’s so over saturated with so
your voice has changed from earli-
sounds like he’s trying something new.
many of the same band, even I can’t
er albums throughout your career.
keep up with them. Whereas as back
What are your thoughts on that?
Do you have a favorite venue
then, the bands who were at the top,
Have you heard that and if so, what
or city that you like to visit when
they sounded like that, and anybody
do you think about that?
you’ve toured?
who tried to sound like them didn’t
When I first joined the band, was
Dallas is always fun. The Northeast
get anywhere because they would just
when I sang in a way where I’d throw
always treats us well. New York. New
be considered a carbon copy of that
my voice out way more often pretty
Jersey.
band.
much. I wasn’t very proper about the
pocket up there in Connecticut. We
way I was singing.
always have good shows up in there.
It seems like it’s a lot easier now to
Pennsylvania.
That
whole
get your face out there, whereas back
From every album I can see differ-
Then, of course, Northern California.
then it was a little more elbow grease.
ent changes. For most people, it takes
Sacramento. Those are always fun. Salt
You had to get into the right course, get
two or three albums for them to really
Lake City is always a really good one.
in front of those bigger crowds. Now
notice a difference. From touring I
it’s easier and harder. Does that make
slowly start adapting and inheriting
Is there any band you’d love to
any sense?
new tricks to be able to get through
tour with, even if it were Taylor
the set.
Swift?
We have to recreate ourselves without completely changing ourselves. We
If you think about it, I’m playing live
try to do that on every single album.
shows the whole time I’m in the stu-
I’d love to tour with KISS.
It’s extremely daunting, but there’s no
dio. [Indecipherable 21:31] The muscles
other move. If we did a new album that
in your throat are going to adapt to
That’s what got me started in music
sounded like a complete carbon copy
what you’re doing live. While I’m in
back when I was nine years old. That’s
of our most popular album, it wouldn’t
the studio I’m singing as I would do
the whole reason I even got into rock
really be what people want.
live.
music. I would definitely enjoy per-
You’re a big fan?
A comforting thing for me is that
From album to album I can remem-
I’ve seen a lot of bands come and go.
ber certain albums where I had more
The fact is that we are still hanging in,
of a struggle on whereas Rise was the
What have you been listening to
even after leaving two members, we
easiest album for me. I found a com-
lately? What’s on your radio? What’s
are still going and we are still moving,
fortable spot after touring for so many
on your phone?
and we are not stopping.
years and trying to find that sweet
I’m a super-big weirdo when it
spot, where I can still sing high and I
comes to music. I’m always writing it
can still sing the old songs.
to where by the time I’m not writing
Is there anything you want to say
forming with them.
about an upcoming album (after
It’s just at a slightly different tone
Ascension), or is it too early to talk
because I can just belt it out. It’s like
about it? Do you have any goals?
singing from a different spot in your
We’re in full-on writing mode, so
throat. It’s just the way that I do it now.
every day, for a good three to four
I have more longevity.
hours out of every day, I’m sitting in
I think it’s probably way too early for me to even know what that looks like
it anymore, I don’t want to listen to music anymore.
because there’s no actual set timeline.
I think that’s where that comes
front of my laptop listening to a demo,
There’s no set plans for us to go into
from. I like the fact that it’s different
getting my vocal ideas together. When
the studio. The first plan was to have it
every album. I get bored hearing the
I’m done with that, my ears are ringing
in by the summer. It could still be the
exact same thing out of a band five
and I’m, like, all right, I’m done with
summer or the late summer or the fall.
albums down the road. What’s good to
music for the day.
35
HM LIVE
GHOSTS OF THE NIGHT
ONE OF THE HOTTEST BILLS LATE LAST YEAR, THE GHOST INSIDE, EVERY TIME I DIE AND HUNDREDTH JOINED ARCHITECTS AS THEY TRAVELED THE U.S. WITH THEIR UNIQUE BLENDS OF METAL AND METALCORE. DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY BROOKE LONG WAS THERE ON THE SCENE.
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H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
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H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
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HM LIVE
THE H TEAR OUT R AND THEIR
HEART TEAR OUT THE HEART’S TRIUMPH OVER DEATH BY COLLIN SIMULA
RETURN R MIGHTY
Pretending we’re not cowards, that we’re not liars,
healthy lifestyle and where God fits
to something I don’t really see
I mean it’s not to say everyone
in to all of this.
being anything other than poet-
is dead inside. But the name of
ry or spoken-word. So you guys
the record is about expressing
are going to have to be really
yourself vocally, about reveal-
open with me. We’re going to
ing who you really are inside.
have to try something new.”
Everyone has an opportunity in
that we’re not thieves. — Dead, Everywhere You’re about to release Dead, From the mid-’90s through the early 2000s, openness and vul-
Everywhere. How is it different than your earlier material?
Some of the guys weren’t real-
them to be the villain, or an
nerability were the highest vir-
It feels like we did a good job
ly feeling it. Some were confused
opportunity in them to be the
tues in hardcore music. Young
branching out with it, doing
or didn’t really know what to
good guy. The main idea behind
kids from broken homes and kids
things we always wanted to do
expect. Before we recorded any
this record is that today you
from the suburbs who didn’t fit
but never really did or didn’t
of the vocals, the spoken-word
have the opportunity to choose
in found a safe place where they
have the time or even know how
track was the first thing we did
for yourself. On a day-to-day or
could be themselves, a place where
to arrange or orchestrate. This
in the studio. As soon as I did
even minute-to-minute basis,
like-mindedness didn’t mean you
time, we really didn’t hold any-
it, everyone was like “OK, I see
you have the chance to be the
were all the same.
thing back.
it. I see the big picture now.” It
better person, to take the higher
turned out awesome.
road.
You understood each other even
We tried everyone’s ideas. It’s
if you disagreed with each other on
a roller coaster of an album — it’s
religion, situation or lifestyle.
got its ups and downs, it’s pretty
In this new generation, a quick
long — but, overall, it covers all
search of metalcore on YouTube
of the bases. There is something
brings up video after music video
for everyone on it.
Or the opposite. It’s about disTalk to me about the title, Dead, Everywhere. Our first record, Violence, was
tinguishing the difference and knowing when to make the right decision.
more about inner demons and
of bands infatuated with excess. It’s
struggling with how to deal with
You mentioned your first
all machismo and non-stop par-
You begin the record with a
them. Topics about insomnia,
album was about dealing with
tying. Openness replaced by hard-
fairly poignant spoken-word
depression, stuff I’d been dealing
inner demons, so would you
ness. Vulnerability replaced with
poem,
somewhat
with. Dead, Everywhere is more
say that Dead, Everywhere is
the substance of the moment. Virtue
unexpected in this day and
about accepting your problems,
more empowering?
replaced with vice.
age.
accepting who you are and being
Absolutely. At it’s most basic
which
is
It’s here — in this time in heavy
The intro to the record (also
vocal about it. Being up front
level, it’s a record about growing
music history — that St. Louis
the title track) is something I’ve
about your flaws as well as your
up. Throughout our lives, people
metalcore band Tear Out The
had written for a while now. I
finer points. We’re dead every-
will tell us to “grow up” nega-
Heart’s message is more important
often just write without a song in
where, not just dead inside. We’re
tively as well as positively, but
than ever. After a tumultuous year
mind, just for the sake of writing.
no longer hiding who we are,
this record is about self-reali-
including, but not limited to, vocal-
Especially during downtime. I’m
we’re no longer hiding what’s
zation. It’s about empowerment,
ist and lyricist Tyler Konersman’s
constantly jotting down ideas,
bothering us. It’s kind of forcing
taking a stand. It’s saying “This
girlfriend being diagnosed with
and the spoken-word intro piece
us to deal with what’s going on
is me. If you have a problem with
brain cancer, not only were Tear Out
is something I’ve been sitting on
in everyone’s heads, what every-
it, then fk you.” That’s the over-
The Heart forced to push back the
since shortly after the release of
one’s afraid to say.
all message.
release of their proud, new, Caleb
our first record, Violence.
Shomo-produced
A lot of people struggle with
Dead,
When I pitched the idea of the
Interesting how you kind
really finding themselves. And
Everywhere, but Konersman was
record name to the guys in the
of imply that we are all dead
once they do, many struggle with
forced to make some major life-
band — I basically told them —
inside in some way. Is that
being OK with who they are and
style changes in order to accom-
“This is what I have in mind,
something that you see in
being open about it. This record
modate his new style of life. I spoke
I want to call the record Dead,
yourself as well as everyone
is a good push. We want to tell
with Tyler about the album, his new
Everywhere, but it’s attached
else?
people it’s OK to be yourself,
46
album,
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
47
and put yourself out there on an
esting in light of the fact that
Oh yeah. Absolutely. Caleb is a
this to be a really straight-for-
emotional limb. In all hones-
(Beartooth
Caleb
great dude, and it was an honor
ward record.” Caleb (got it) and
ty, everyone is dealing with the
Shomo produced it. We had a
to work with him. He’s a good
definitely pushed us to open up
same problems you are.
conversation with him a few
friend and even better producer.
more in our music and as people.
months ago about Beartooth’s
He definitely helped us harness
My personal tastes and back-
latest album and he had a sim-
our finer points and bring out the
ground are a bit different than
ilar outlook. Much of their first
stronger elements in our music.
what a more traditional metal-
That element of real solidarity—you’re not in this alone. Exactly.
vocalist)
EP dealt with inner demons,
He told us that it was OK to be
core vocalist would bring to the
more
vulnerable. He was the mascot
table. I come from a background
The way you talk about
empowering and positive. It
for imperfections and vulnera-
of grunge and punk rock, pop-
Dead, Everywhere, specifical-
seems like that would make
bility. We went into it thinking,
punk and hardcore. So for me, it’s
ly in comparison to your first
him the perfect fit to produce a
“Alright, we want to do so some-
always been about emotions, it’s
album, Violence, is very inter-
Tear Out The Heart album.
thing meaningful, but we want
always been about putting your-
their
48
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
second
album
self out there. And if someone
relate to that and have a com-
right to me.” It’s genuine, and
you. If others wanted to latch
doesn’t understand, then that’s
mon ground with them, that’s
if it does take off, it’s because
onto it, great. If not, that was
fine. I’m not really expecting
amazing.
people will love and respect the
fine too.
everyone to understand where
I did put myself out there a
record for it’s genuine nature.
bit on Violence, but I was much
I’m coming from.
If people laugh at us or turn their heads or whatever, I don’t
But if someone does, then
more concerned with the typical
I came up in the Christian
care. I’m being myself and that’s
we have that common ground.
things. Does this sound good?
hardcore scene in a time where
all that matters. Like I said,
That’s
That’s
Are kids going to like this? Is
bands got onstage and were
Caleb really pushed us into being
what’s beautiful about music.
this going to blow up? With Dead,
very vulnerable about their
uncomfortable because he’s a
You’re expressing yourself in the
Everywhere,
questions
beliefs. At the time, and this
big fan of vulnerability in music.
most vulnerable state you could
couldn’t have been farther from
has changed quite a bit, it was
And I think that place was per-
possibly be in. And if you can
my mind. Instead, it was, “This
less about preaching and more
fect for this record.
find a group of people who can
sounds right to me. This feels
about sharing what worked for
what’s
strong.
those
49
WORKING ON THIS SECOND RECORD WAS A REALLY BIG RELIEF. I HOPE OTHER PEOPLE HEAR IT AND DROP WHATEVER IT IS THEY ARE DOING THAT IS MAKING THEM UNHAPPY IN LIFE AND FIND WHAT MAKES THEM
LIVE IT TO THE FULLEST INSTEAD.
50
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
Would you consider vulnera-
for a lot of people I know as well
and we’re doing a great job. We’ve
bility to be Tear Out the Heart’s
— and I can pinpoint 2014 as
been much more open spiritually,
message?
being the worst year of my life.
turning to God. It’s not necessarily
bands
Yes, absolutely. It is the same
I’ve learned some lessons from
something either of us were shut-
they talked about God, it com-
thing as being yourself. Growing
it, but I’m definitely looking for-
ting out, but when you’re a young,
pelled me. It felt comfortable. It
up, I was a weird kid. I didn’t
ward to what’s next.
dumb kid, it’s the last thing on
didn’t make me feel awkward. I
genuine anymore. I remember growing up with like
Underoath.
When
really fit in with anybody in
I had just come back from
your mind. You want to focus on
don’t know when it happened, but
particular. I had some friends
finishing the record. Honestly,
the band, or, “Is this song going
sooner or later, it just didn’t feel
who were skateboarders, some
I was in shambles already. We
to be the song?” or, “Is this tour
right anymore. I never found the
friends who were the goth kids
were having some inner turmoil
going to work for us.” You just
right group of people, the right
and punk wasn’t really a big
as a band and recording Dead,
want to go out and get drunk with
beliefs. I came to terms with my
thing with the skateboarders in
Everywhere was a pretty lengthy,
your friends and have a good time.
personal belief system, that I
St. Louis. So I had to abide by
stressful process. We needed to
But there’s so much more
could talk God when and how I
some arbitrary rules, to change
take some time to ourselves and
to the world. You think you’re
wanted to, however it worked for
who I was to really make friends.
get our heads back after record-
invincible.
me. I don’t have to do it on other
As soon as I got to high school,
ing this monster of a record.
In the end, 2014 was a wake up
people’s terms. I have nothing to
I kind of found the hardcore and
Shortly after that, my girl-
metalcore scene — it was about
friend was diagnosed with brain
being yourself. You could find
cancer. That was as much of a
That’s amazing and inspiring.
I wouldn’t want anyone to feel
other people who were proba-
wakeup call as anyone could ever
She’s healthier than she’s ever
like something is forced on them,
bly searching for something
get. I thought I had a grasp on
been. She’s healthier than me!
because that’s the worst feeling
very similar. And I thought I was
growing up was, but the diag-
There’s no doubt in my mind
ever. The personal realization of
growing up.
nosis was a violent shove, full
that with a continued positive
God — coming to those terms on
throttle, into getting my life
mental attitude and our new way
your own — is a really awesome
together.
of living that she’s going to be
feeling.
But you get wrapped up in the wrong stuff, and the music indus-
call, but she’s doing great.
prove to anybody. Because of that, I would never preach to anybody.
try doesn’t really help. It’s a really
She’s been through two sur-
tricky business to get involved in;
geries, she’s got one more, and
it can really mess with your head.
she’s had all of the radiation and
What does “turning to God”
the end-of-year phrase, “New
So working on this second record
chemotherapy treatments. This
look like for you? How does the
year, new you.” It looks like
was a really big relief. I hope other
has really pushed both of us to
spiritual aspect of your new,
2015 is going to be a big shift
people hear it and drop whatever
having a positive mental atti-
cleaner lifestyle look?
for you. Can you sum up what
it is they are doing that is mak-
tude in all aspects of life. We’ve
It just feels right, I guess, in
you want the next year to look
ing them unhappy in life and find
been learning a lot about health
the sense that I felt like I needed
like for you and your fans as
what makes them live it to the
and nutrition, trying to live a
to abide by rules before but this
Dead, Everywhere gets released?
fullest instead.
healthier lifestyle. We realized
record, being about opening up,
Obviously, I want the record
how disgusting the things we
allows me to live life to the full-
to reach as many people as pos-
est extent.
sible, and, because it’s genuine,
totally fine. In a literal sense, you embody
Speaking of vulnerability,
had been eating really were —
tell me the story about you and
you want to ignore it, you don’t
In the past, I always felt
when it takes off and people get
your girlfriend and about the
want to have to grow up and deal
uncomfortable with religion. Like
into it, it’s going to be the real
last six months you’ve had.
with it, you push it off for as long
you said earlier, a lot of Christian
deal. People are going to realize
as you can.
bands and even major Christian
it’s not a gimmick, and it’s not
The record was done and ready to go prior to anything I’ve had
Her being ill was the breaking
organizations are being much
just to be a “cool band.” It’s for
to deal with over the last few
point. We’ve been doing the best
more forceful and pushy with
the music and for the message
months. It was a rough year —
we can to get our lives together,
their beliefs. It doesn’t really seem
we want to bestow on the world.
51
THE
A D FJG
EXORCISM CV BN
OF
P IUM E R
PAPA ROACH BY DAVID STAGG
PHOTO BY TRAVIS SHINN
A D F P V B NQ M A C V B N CV BN P IUM E R
IN OCTOBER LAST YEAR, I WAS ON ASSIGNMENT, STAYING WITH MY CLOSE FRIEND IN LOS ANGELES. I was there to talk with the members of Korn the month before their and stick around for the taping of their episode of Guitar Center Sessions. The band was trickling in throughout the day, but the man they call Fieldy was there a little early, and out of the blue he pulled me aside when we were snacking on crackers and cheese. “You need to talk to Jacoby,” he told me. He knew I was here to interview his band about the man they call Head’s rebirth and he was there, thinking about Papa Roach’s vocalist. “He’s worth covering.” He had a look to his aged eyes, like a magician who knows how the trick is done and he knows I’m going to find out soon, too. It would be over a year before that time came, and now, on the eve of the band’s eighth studio release, the man Fieldy referenced, Jacoby Shaddix, is about to release his first album sober. I spoke to him before Christmas, and he was as carefree and happy a person you could talk to. He spoke almost like he used sing, his voice equal parts the cadence and flippancy of a hip-hop poet. I appreciated most that self-awareness isn’t an issue for him. He knows you could make fun of “Last Re-
How are you? I’m good, man. Just living a tech free life dude. Seriously? How do you get away with that? I broke my phone and haven’t got a new one yet. Oh, so it’s not a self-imposed thing?
on stage?
sort,” but he also knows — rightly — that pretty much every single person on the planet knows the song. And that counts for more, because to him, that’s the essence of heart. A congregation to share in the battles he’s fought publicly in his songs, his heart on display, and — in his own thoughts — would this be the last album they make? Before he could get there in his head, he hardened his heart. He drank it dry and cracked until his brother, the only one who had the guts to face him that day his studio, on his home turf, told him he was done. His kin told him he was a has-been, a drunk, destined for a failed career. It would turn things around for him. Now, talking to him, the tenor in his voice vibrates with new freedom. He is now sober and, instead of regrets to repair or forget, has actual goals and fulfillment for 2015. He talks with me here about them, the gravity of his band’s upcoming release, his private fight with a very relevant addiction and making sure he’s got a cell phone to make the rest of his interviews.
That’s the cool thing about
You go sow your wild oats, and
Oh, yeah. Most definitely. At
some of our music. It’s been ref-
you get to say, “I was in a band.”
this point, being out there on
erenced as timeless. We have
No. That’s not how I look at it.
tour, there are two generations
elements of our band we would
I look at it as we want to have an
feeling Papa Roach. It’s cool to
hope remain timeless. That track
effect on people from generation
see the younger kids at the rock
“Last Resort” comes on the radio
to generation with our music. We
show. The people that started
and still lights up the speaker,
want to move people with our
with us, back in the late ’90s,
you know what I’m saying? Every
music. We want to inspire people
they’re drinking beer in the back
time we play it live, it ignites the
with our music. We want to lift
of the venue; the young kids are
audience.
people up with our music. This
up front in the mosh pit.
That live performance is the
isn’t about, “Check me out. I’m
No. I definitely could have
That’s very important to us, to
proving ground for bands that
the next hip thing.” It’s about
bought a phone last week. I just
have that young fanbase grav-
strive to have a career, that strive
this career, this purpose for the
haven’t bought one.
itating towards the music we
to have a legacy in rock and roll.
music that we write.
make.
It’s shaping up to be like that for
It feels a little nice not to be at everybody’s beckon call every second.
us, but it’s come with a lot of hard How does the band’s history
work, blood, sweat and tears.
split up in your head? And with
What do you define that purpose as, not only for you, but also for the band as a whole?
It was nice for a week, but now
the younger kids, where does
But not a lot of people want
I think it’s digging myself out
I’m like, I keep missing all my
it split up for you? How do you
to do the blood, sweat and
of a deep, dark hole is what it’s
interviews (laughs).
get them on board, especially
tears stuff. How do you iden-
doing.
if they went back and checked
tify with the different gener-
out any of your older stuff?
ations and the bands that have
A lot of bands seem to be
I’m familiar with deep, dark
doing the Ten-Year thing, but
It makes for a good show. You
it’s almost 20 years for you and
know what I’m saying? When
Papa Roach. Do you feel like
we’re playing the old school
Sometimes people look at
where you were. Maybe a little bit
there’s more than one gen-
classics and the young kids are
being in a rock band as some-
deeper. Oh, man. I got lost in my
eration of Papa Roach fan out
hearing these things live for the
thing you do after high school or
addictions. Lost in the whole way
there every time that you go
first time, they get jacked on it.
after college for a couple years.
of the sex, drugs, rock and roll
54
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
come in and have dropped off along the way?
holes. Where were you? Probably a little bit left of
A SQD LV B M M ZY lifestyle, the whole everything. I
songs we write. You don’t know
of addiction, how would you
just a fking drunk. What the fk’s
thought it was going to be a great
if you’re going to be accepted or
reach out to them? Let’s say
wrong with you?”
time. It was for a bit, but then it
embraced. That’s a natural fear,
they came up to you after a
bit me in the fking ass and broke
for an artist or a writer.
show and they asked you,
me down. Some of the things I went through as a young kid, I car-
“What got you through today?” You put yourself out there. For sure.
What would you tell them?
That’s heartbreaking. Yeah, but that’s the moment I needed, man. I thank my brother
For me, I would say being open
every day. To this day. I throw
ried them with me into my adult
Yeah. I’m going to go back
and honest to the people you
a little prayer out: “Thank you
years. I’m a selfish, self-seeking,
out on the road this next record
love about how you’re hurting
Bryson for shooting straight
fking asshole trying to do the
cycle. Last time I had a dude
or about the pain you’re going
with me, because I needed some-
right thing when there are so
who was working on my road
through. It’s about being willing
body to tell me to get the fk up
many temptations in the world.
crew that was clean and sober.
to be teachable. It’s about com-
and get my sh-t together.”
We supported each other out on
ing to the conclusion that maybe
Me, too.
the road. Now, I’m going out on
your way isn’t always the right
It seems like that’s what it
So many things that you think
the road without a sober homie.
way and being open for change.
takes, doesn’t it? It took my
are going to be fulfilling really
I’m like, “Fk, am I going to get
For me, that really opened a
wife saying, “I’m going to
just suck you dry.
caught up in that sh-t again out
whole new way of thinking for
leave you.” Then I got it. Tell
there? I hope not.”
me, which ultimately got me
me a little bit about how you
spiritual.
recovered. Once you came out
Let’s talk about that, if you don’t mind, because the name
It’s hard. It’s really hard.
of your album is F.E.A.R. Do you
That’s a healthy fear for me to
When you were there in
was rebuilding your life like?
still get scared? Do you still
have, because I don’t want to go
your darkest hours and were
How did that reflect in your
find yourself facing fears?
touch that flame and get burnt
thinking about changing your
music? I have to imagine that
right now. I really don’t.
lifestyle, was there a moment
a lot of that is part of your new
that pushed you over the edge?
record.
Oh yeah, most definitely. It’s like, here we are at the bottom of
of that on the other side, what
another mountain in our career
Do you mean to imply that
“OK. This is it. I need to go get
After I cleaned up, about three
as a rock band. We’re going to
you’re sober now? Did you give
help now, because if I don’t,
weeks after that — three weeks
go out and release a record in a
up drinking?
tomorrow I’m going to die.”
clean — my wife kicked me out
climate where rock music isn’t
Yeah. Almost three years.
the biggest thing anymore. How
Everybody around me was tell-
of the house. I had to go get my
ing me, “Yo dude, you all right?”
sh-t right by myself. It was a
do we cut through and make an
Oh, yeah? Congratulations.
Checking in. “You good, man?”
series of bottoms, but that was
impact on people with our music?
I’m almost to two years. It’s
It wasn’t until I was at my rock
the wake up call. I know my pur-
Could this be our last record?
a bizarre world for us, isn’t it?
bottom and my younger brother
pose isn’t to be creating the same
You wake up every day, and you
came to my recording studio and
environment that I grew up in for
don’t have a hangover.
was like, “I don’t even fking look
my own children.
You never know what the future holds. I’ve just got to walk in faith and maintain the
It’s so great.
passion and the vision for the
up to you anymore. Who the fk
Fk, dude, everything I didn’t
are you?” He was like, “I used
want to become, I was starting to
music. I feel like we’re doing
For people reading this that
to look up to you. I used to fking
become. “I don’t want to be like
the right thing in writing the
struggle with the same types
think you were cool. Now you’re
my father.” Then I end up being
55
56
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
Photo by Dave Jackson
EVERYBODY AROUND ME WAS TELLING ME, “YO, DUDE, YOU ALL RIGHT?” CHECKING IN. “YOU GOOD, MAN?” — JACOBY SHADDIX —
57
this fked up dude. Not available,
confident again, but now? When
believe that struggle is nature’s
I could be proud of to present
just fked up — but I switched up
we went and wrote this last
way of strengthening.
the guys. Then I would stick that
my bottoms. Got light, got right
record, I was on fire, dude. I felt
I took people through that
idea in. Play it for them and it
with God. God has done mirac-
solid, strong, clean, clear-head-
struggle, through this record.
would either sink or swim. In
ulous things in my heart and in
ed, spiritual, physically fit. I was
I talked about my life. I talk-
the beginning, there was a lot of
my family. I received help. Not
in a real great place when I was
ed about my strengths and my
strife, but towards the end of the
without hard work and me clean-
writing the record. Now I got to
weaknesses. I put it all out there.
process, I tapped into something
ing house on some of the real
work on the physically fit part
That’s how I do it. That’s how I
that was deep and powerful.
emotional sh-t, but coupled with
again (laughs).
approached it.
Everything I was singing to the
some spirituality, dude, and I’m in a much better place.
band... We love it. Oh, we love it. Alcohol is a calorie killer,
It’s got a lot of great hooks
but so is ice cream. One of
on it. I like to think of it like
You feel it took you a while to
For those who aren’t in AA
the things I learned is I didn’t
old school Good Charlotte.
get back up and running again?
or anything like that, they
realize how much sugar was in
They had great hooks.
teach finding the god as you
beer. After I quit, I was eating
(Laughs) I met those guys! I
have come to know him, that
Skittles and Lucky Charms and
think those guys are back out
muscle. Not a physical muscle,
type of thing, even if it’s not
anything I could get my hands
making music again.
but you get the metaphor. The
the conventional God that
on. I just craved sugar.
people think of, but a bloodline that keeps you putting
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Straight junkie.
your left foot in front of your
Yeah, but I think that’s with anything.
The
creative
is
a
sharper you are... I need to exerIf there ever was a time, now
cise that a little more before I go
would be it. A number of older
in the studio. I think that should
bands are out there having a
be my goal for the next record.
right. How was that reflect-
(Laughs) For sure. Tell me
ed in your records? How long
a little bit more about Face
before you came back and you
Everything and Rise. You said
felt you were capable of writ-
you came in feeling good,
ing again?
clean, and physically fit. Did
When you got in the studio,
a
you think to yourself, “Look, I
did you write it with the band?
(Door opens) Let me deal with
healthy outlet for me. Through
need to write this record about
Did you write by yourself? Did
my cell phone really quick. I have
all of the thick-and-thin, of all
what I went through”? Or did
you come in later and put stuff
been waiting for this thing. (To
that bullsh-t, music has always
you think to yourself, “That
on top of it?
been a great way for me to
was a personal thing, I need to
I wrote it by myself. The guys
man? Who’s that for? Thank you.
express how I feel. I see the true
move forward and try to write
wrote the music. I took the music
Hold up. Hold up. Dude, my cell
power in music.
about a new life”?
in the room next door, by myself.
phone just came. “Yes!” (Laughs) I got the new cell phone.
Music
has
always
been
resurgence. There’s a couple bands I’d like to hear come back out.
My dad used to say stuff like: “Don’t write lists down. Try to remember it, because your brain is a muscle.
the delivery person) Hey, what’s up
What a gift it is, that it gives
No. I wrote with a purpose. I
They gave me a bunch of stuff to
me the opportunity to express
had to write about coming from
choose from, but it was (more
my deepest feelings, my deepest
that darkness to the light. Being
about) whatever was inspiring
fears, my deepest brokenness.
stuck, boxed in a corner, feel-
me at the moment.
It’s always been a healthy outlet
ing there’s no way out to feeling
I just wrote, wrote, wrote,
get going, then! A couple last
for me. It took me a while to get
wildly free. I struggled, and I
wrote until I felt I had something
questions: Where do you find
58
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
(Laughs) That’s awesome. I suppose it’s a good time to
your inspiration now, especially out on tour when you’re around the beer? When you’re
I WROTE WITH A PURPOSE. I HAD TO WRITE ABOUT COMING FROM THAT DARKNESS TO THE LIGHT. BEING STUCK, BOXED IN A CORNER, FEELING THERE’S NO WAY OUT TO FEELING WILDLY FREE. I STRUGGLED, AND I BELIEVE THAT STRUGGLE IS NATURE’S WAY OF STRENGTHENING.
around the hard part? Also,
— JACOBY SHADDIX —
how do you overcome those moments when you feel like you’re sliding back? When I’m out there, I take myself out of situations, if I feel
doing of other things. I’m part
else used to work from the fking
My power for my gate in front of
uncomfortable. If you hang out
of a film company. I co-directed
time they woke up to the time
my house almost died. I have to
in a barber shop long enough,
“Face Everything and Rise.” We
they went to bed. People worked
dig a new trench and lay a new
you’re going to get a haircut. You
are working on a documentary.
hard, with their hands. Tilling
pipe.
hang out at the titty bar and
We pitched our feature film to
the soil. Farmers.
the bar long enough, eventually
some people at CAA, which is
Now, it’s a different gener-
you’re going to take somebody
one of the biggest agencies. I also
ation. We’re behind comput-
home. Those establishments, I
just released a clothing line, as
ers and that’s how we work.
put those few and far between in
well. I just get creative in other
We have way too much time
my lifestyle, because I’m more
places to keep myself driven, to
to think. We’re not physically
I never thought about the
focused on different sh-t in my
keep myself inspired and doing
tired anymore, you know what
physical exhaustion thing. If
life. As I get older fk! I fell in love
different things.
I mean?
you go home and you’re tired
with skiing. I love fishing. You got to wake up early to go get on a mountain. It’s fun on the other side, too. I never thought I’d see 5:30 a.m. again, but now I get so much work done in the morning. Bang, dude. It’s being more productive and creative. I’m
Land work. Staying busy. Manual labor. That’s how I’m going to keep my head straight.
and you go to sleep, there’s Were you doing those things trying to help your mind, too?
Totally. I never thought of it that way.
no room to even piss off your wife.
I found that I do a lot more
How do we navigate it? I’m
Let me tell you. When I’m out
things, too, but some of it is
going to fking dig a trench. No,
on the road, by the end of the
also to keep busy.
I really am. I’m not kidding. It’s
night, I’m zonked. It’s 100 per-
like a one foot trench from A-Z.
cent on the stage. I give more of
Totally, dude. You get lost in your mind. It’s like a playground. Back in the day, everybody
myself to that stage than almost You dug your own trench?
anything else. It comes from a
No, I am going to dig a trench.
power greater than myself.
59
BANDS TO WATCH OUT FOR IN 2015
BY SEAN HUNCHERICK UNLOCKING THE TRUTH After a steam-rolling 2014, the new year has already given us a number of tours to feast on. If you’re looking to get in before the curve, these are Staff Writer Sean Huncherick’s artists who are poised for a strong showing. 60
H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
Genre: Heavy Metal They’ve gone from busking in streets of New York to opening for legends Motörhead, Guns n’ Roses and Living Colour – not to mention performances on the Colbert Report and Vans Warped Tour. Not bad for a couple of 8th graders in one of the best new metal bands. All of this and they haven’t put out any recordings. This is about to change in 2015 with the band’s debut album.
JUSTIFIDE Genre: Rapcore It has been a long, long time since anything was heard from Arizona’s rap-metal artist, Justifide. The band came into the Christian music scene around the same time as Pax 217, Pillar and 38th Parallel but after losing their vocalist in 2003, they changed their name and broke up quietly in 2006. What most people didn’t know is that the band had written eight songs for what would have been their third album. Nearly 12 years later, the band is about to reunite to record those eight lost tracks and maybe a bit more as well. No one knows what to expect from the band’s upcoming album of previously unreleased songs, but we’re sure it’ll take us back to the heydays of rapcore.
TIMBRE Genre: Neoclassical Indie She has played on albums by Mewithoutyou, The Chariot, Jack White (ex-The White Stripes) and Ricky Skaggs; played cathedrals in Sweden and the dusty stages of Cornerstone Festival. Needless to say, classical harpist Timbre Cierpke is in a unique position musically. In many ways, she sits on the line between classical and popular (indie/folk) music.
NEW HEART Genre: Hardcore
On her upcoming double-disk album Sun and Moon, she seeks to show that the two
Anyone who is sick of the “metal”
(classical and popular music) are deeply
in “metalcore” will find something
connected. It has been a long two year jour-
more traditionally hardcore in New
ney to the release of Sun and Moon, but in
Heart. Here is a band that draws more
spring 2015, the harpist will finally be able
from 80s youth crew hardcore bands
to release the long-awaited album. By the
such as Gorilla Biscuits and Youth of
end of the year, she ought to be a household
Today than they draw from the mod-
name in the modern indie scene.
ern metallic hardcore bands that have dominated the scene for the last two
For what it’s worth, this is the one I’m
decades. Expect minute long songs,
looking forward to the most. Give it a shot.
non-stop gang vocals and a passion
Expand your musical palette in 2015.
for unity.
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BORN CAGES Genre: Alternative Rock Born Cages already write songs that are on par with Imagine Dragons and Walk the Moon in regardless to song structure, but pass them in musicianship.
Guitarist
Vlad Holiday is arguably one of the strongest the genre has seen in the last 15 years. The
track
“Rolling
Down the Hill” from their 2014 EP got the band
inches
from
the
away
alterna-
tive rock spotlight. If they are given an opening-slot
on
a
good tour, than their debut album in spring 2015 will kick off the band’s
promising
career. Listen to them now before everyone else catches on.
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H M • J A N UA R Y 2 0 1 5
NYVES Genre: Electronic Ryan Hunter)
Clark
(Demon
and
Randy
Torres (ex-Project 86) in a moody electronic band? It seems like an unlikely venture for the two musicians, but the results have been terrific so far. Think ballads
Demon put
to
Hunter catchy
synth. The songs are certainly danceable, but far from the typical trends of
modern
electronic
music. The band recently completed a Kickstarter campaign for their debut album, Anxiety.
MisterWives photo by Shervin Lanez
MISTERWIVES Genre: Soul Indie MisterWives are one of the most addicting bands right now. Their blend of soul, indie and pop is so captivating and danceable that they make it difficult to stop listening. Last year’s Reflections EP was hopefully just the start of what the band has to offer in 2015’s full-length. If the hype is carried, it should make it to several top lists of 2015.
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REVIEWS Photo by Brooke Long
CAN AARON GILLESPIE’S NEW WORSHIP ALBUM DELIVER A GENUINE EXPERIENCE? P. 70
Papa Roach impresses vulnerability, maturity on eighth studio release Confession time: I never kept up with Lost. I remember seeing the first episode, feeling somewhat underwhelmed by the premise and never really thinking about it again — until my friend insisted I watch the final episode with him. For those of you who’ve seen the series, you can imagine how confused and disoriented I was. The disparate gap between the first and last episode of that series is so big, regardless of my feelings on either, I just had to see what happened in the middle. (And in case you’re wondering, it ended with a month-long binge watching of the entire series.) Fifteen years ago, I listened to Infest, the
major-label debut from Papa Roach. As a nu-metal kid, I gave it a chance. I really tried. I listened to it more than a few times, but it was rather unimpressive. Compared to the early Korn, Deftones and P.O.D. records, Papa Roach’s brand of third-generation rapcore and nu-metal felt uninspired. It felt crafted to sell, not to invoke emotion. Much like after watching the first episode of Lost, I just kind of filed them away in my mind and didn’t pay attention to the rest of their career. Well, other than vocalist Jacoby Shaddix hosting MTV’s Scarred, which was essentially a gory, extreme
Papa Roach F.E.A.R. E l e v e n Se v e n
sports version of Americas Funniest Home Videos. Huge fan. With F.E.A.R. (Face Everything And Rise), Papa Roach’s eighth (!) full-length album, I’m left scratching my head. If I didn’t know this was the other bookend of a fifteen-year career, I’d assume it was a completely different band. Nearly everything familiar to me about Papa Roach is gone. Save for three verses (in “Gravity” and “Warriors”), the rapping is gone. The slightly-off-key, amateur melodic choruses are now shimmering anthems. The simple, guitar-bass-and-drums instrumentation I knew is now replaced with layers of atmospheric gui65
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REVIEWS
tars, electronics and (absolutely) giant-sounding drums. And, much to my surprise, it’s actually pretty good. The band, living together for the duration of writing and recording F.E.A.R., and their musical pedigree is clear. These guys show how to write a focused album. At only ten tracks, every song feels more intentional. F.E.A.R. isn’t interested in any filler; there aren’t any instrumentals or spoken word poems or 30-second interludes. Many rookie hard rock artists fall into this trap, trying to have “something for everyone” on their records. It leads to lazy ballads here, a mediocre heavy song there, the heavy-enough-butnot-too-much-for-the-masses single. Not Papa Roach, and not here on F.E.A.R. It is definitely diverse, but it’s narrow-minded enough to feel carefully crafted. It feels like an actual album, not just a collection of songs. Eight albums in, this isn’t really anything new to them or groundbreaking in nature. They are very effective at adapting to modern methods of songwriting, taking major cues from popular metalcore acts. From the heavy, djent riffing to the House-like synth arpeggios, much of F.E.A.R. wouldn’t sound out of place on an Of Mice and Men or Issues album. The major difference, however, is how long Papa Roach has had to perfect their craft. Papa Roach excels by showing the younger bands how it’s done. Another interesting element of F.E.A.R. is the positive, uplifting nature of the lyrics. Songs like “Broken as Me,” “Gravity” (featuring Maria Brink from In this Moment) and “Warriors” reflect the vocalist’s well-publicized conversion experience last Easter. They’re a far cry from the desolate nature of Papa Roach 15 years ago. Staying open and 66
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vague enough lyrically, F.E.A.R. isn’t marking the moment that Papa Roach became a “Christian band,” but it does put a stake in the ground as the year of their monumental shift in message. With F.E.A.R., Papa Roach has shown that you don’t have to be completely original to be inspired. Sure, by it’s very nature, this album is written for radio play. But unlike my initial feeling of their debut Infest, this album doesn’t feel like a band trying to capitalize on a trend. It feels genuine. It feels like they finally mean it. And based on my listening to the first-and-last albums in their discography, maybe it’s time for a binge-listen.
— COLLIN SIMULA
6’10” The Humble Beginnings of a Rovin’ Soul O l l i e M ob
If Flatfoot 56 is a rambunctious mosh pit, then 6’10” — the folky side project for frontman Tobin Bawinkel — is like going for a stroll on a summer evening. Bawinkel and company have unplugged their guitars and traded in the bagpipes for a violin for their first album as Americana folk act 6’10” (which, not conspicuously, is Bawinkel’s height). The Humble Beginnings of a Rovin’ Soul may be a folk album, but you can sense the punk roots bubbling beneath the surface. Bawinkel brings his usual flare for great songwriting, but here with his
WITH F.E.A.R., PAPA ROACH HAS SHOWN THAT YOU DON’T HAVE TO BE COMPLETELY ORIGINAL TO BE INSPIRED.
IT FEELS GENUINE. IT FEELS LIKE THEY FINALLY MEAN IT. new crew, he takes a more heartfelt and personal route, mulling the loneliness of being on the road, feeling trapped by the mundane goings on of life and finding hope after loss. Sonically, 6’10” has a mix of fun, upbeat tunes mixed with the conventional slower, somber ballads. There isn’t a bad song on the album; “Timothy,” “Hurricane,” and “Backpack” all showcase the band at their best. Bawinkel’s husky vocals are joined by a couple guest vocalists on a few songs; “Backpack” is a great song with the vocalists telling the story of two men trading tales from their travels around the world — only to be yanked out of their fantasies to go back to their humdrum lives working in the factory. Flatfoot fans will feel right at home listening to 6’10” because, at its heart, it’s still Bawinkel. Plus, like Bawinkel, there’s a lot to love.
— BEN RICKABY
Aaron Gillespie Grace Through the Wandering BEC
I have a love-hate relationship with worship music. On one hand, the idea of a group of people in the same room, a multitude of different voices, cultures, backgrounds and lifestyles united in song is an absolutely beautiful thing. This act should be one in which Christians from all sides of the spectrum lay down their differences and come together. The relationship between music and a congregation is a tactile one;
SPLIT GETS THE PUNK YEAR OFF TO A STRONG START
A Common Goal / False Idle Split Decision Th u m p e r P u n k
I’ve been a fan a Sef Idle — the frontman of puck rock group False Idle who also dabbles in the acoustic punk world — for awhile now, and this split with fellow punks A Common Goal is an awesome way to bring in the new year. A Common Goal’s side, “Nowhere Fast,”
it’s one where a united spirit can be felt among the participants. On the other hand, it’s no secret many worship songwriters are just playing the game, trying to get that coveted licensing deal. But in as tactile a way true worship can be felt, so can the feeling of being sold — and that’s exactly what Aaron Gillespie’s latest release, Grace Through the Wandering, feels like. No one is arguing with Gillespie’s songwriting or musical ability. From his flashy drumming-while-singing in Underoath to the pop sensibility of the Gillespie-fronted The Almost, he has a firm grasp on music that feels genuine and passionate and technically sound. Grace Through the Wandering is musically competent and perfectly produced with its layers of instrumentation and sheen. But its problem was never in those areas. The album feels anything but genuine; rather, it feels like a group of songs crafted for the sole purpose of being licensed to churches. It’s the sound of someone selling out while singing love songs to Jesus (and we’ll keep trying to ignore the cringe-worthy, hipster-Americana
take on “Come Thou Fount”). Which leads us to the burning question: Does the world really need another worship album for the American Evangelical? Even starting with the artwork — like so many mainstream worship albums before it — we’re first greeted with a safe photo of Aaron, which subtly implies what this album is really about. The songs are arranged simply enough to break down into basic chord structures. For the most part, the melodies are geared toward the lowest common denominator, easily sung by anyone. Lyrically, it’s nearly absent of vulnerability or struggle. In general, it’s odd we don’t see more of this, which correlates to our best template of worship songwriting: David’s Psalms. It’s called Grace Through the Wandering, and there is a little bit of alluding to needing grace and being lost, but the vast majority of these songs are about feeling good in one’s standing with God. I might be being unfair to Gillespie. He might be totally genuine, but it doesn’t feel like it. I know he can write very inti-
“Two Steps Behind” and “Where Do We Go,” are solid melodic punk songs that jam like Tooth and Nail greats Hangnail did, but with the extra punch of that Gainesville sound. False Idle kicks it into gear with their side, “First World Last Place,” a fast punch in the face calling out American privilege,
mate, interesting worship songs — listen to “Some Will Seek Forgiveness, Others Escape” from Underoath’s They’re Only Chasing Safety. But to see him write just another pop-worship album released on a big label with big distribution feels a lot like selling out. If you want incredibly musical, inspired and passionate worship albums, like to bands like Ascend the Hill (O, Ransomed Son is an absolute game changer), The Ember Days or even the Glorious Unseen. Save your time and money and listen to them instead.
— COLLIN SIMULA
A Skylit Drive Rise: Ascension T r agic H e ro
followed by “Say Goodbye” and “The Cavalry.” Between the in-your-face lyrics and fast punchy melodic punk, False Idle’s becoming a more modern AntiFlag. I would highly recommend this split to anyone who questions if there is such a thing as good Christian punk. — GARRETT HOLLOWELL
A Skylit Drive’s new acoustic album is proof of something a number of musicians would swear to you they already knew: Symphonies are freaking metal. It never seemed like that far of a stretch for you to be listening to obscure tonal patterns and dynamics, writing guitar solos with the woodwinds’ licks. The band uses this to their advantage a number of times through in the band’s latest offering, a full acoustic remaking of Rise. In a way, the album is a self-proclaimed stop gap; the band unexpectedly lost two members, which kind of put a hamper on their writing process. In order to keep things afloat, they opted for this acoustic record. The album is everything it needs to be to fill in that space. Their acoustic renditions have musical guts, while vocalist Michael Jagmin’s high-pitched and instantly recognizable tenor compliment the down-tuned, openly strung riffs. The only major crime here is the forgettable album title. But if that’s the price of admission, I’ll jam these symphonic riffs (with Jagmin’s pop backbone) for a change of pace anytime.
— DAVID STAGG 67
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FROM THE HM VAULT
JAN/ FEB 2005, P. 35 As for Anberlin’s aspirations, Nathan Young sees that the sky is the limit. They’ve had a pretty successful debut, selling over 40,000 copies of Blueprints for the Black Market ... Young is confident about the new disc, titled Never Take Friendship Personal. He’s convinced it will reveal a band that has a strong sense of its unique sound.” — Brian Quincy Newcomb on Anberlin
Never Take Friendship Personal would be released Feb. 1, 2005 and go on to be Anberlin’s highest selling release.