jueves, 25 de febrero de 2016

Deftones Guitarist and Co-Founder Stephen Carpenter Talks to UG: 'I Didn't Want to Play on the New Record

April 8, 2016 will mark the release of the highly anticipated release of the eighth studio album, titled "Gore." Although the band has been going strong since 1988, recent years might be described a turbulent following the tragic passing of bassist Chi Cheng in 2013. Tension within the band has been no secret since 2009 when the release of the album "Eros" was delayed indefinitely citing creative differences as the reason.

UG recently had an opportunity to speak briefly with guitarist and founding member,Stephen Carpenter about the new album. In the interview, it appears that creative differences are still a very real issue within the band. Nevertheless there has been no talk of a breakup or canceling tour dates which already stretch into late summer.

UG: The folks at UG are admittedly gear nerds, so let's dive right into the gear you're using on the new record. I know that historically you've kept your live rig and your studio setup the same.

SC: The gear is still the same live as it is in the studio. In fact I had to change my live rig because of what we did in the studio.

What specifically did you change?

Well previously on the "Koi No Yokan" record used my Axe FX but I only had one and I ran everything through one unit. The Axe FX offers you two amp sounds in each preset. I'm not a big fan of the X/Y Switching on them so I just use the Scenes. So I still needed that extra amp model for another sound. Now on this record I used one Axe FX unit on my left and one Axe FX unit on my right. So I'm actually using four amp models on each preset.

I bet that takes a while to dial in because you've got four different tones all blending together.

Yeah it takes forever to dial in. I went through a period of time when I wasn't too excited with my sound and I've had a lot of struggles with it but ultimately it boiled down to the fact that I was trying to do the wrong thing with it. Now I've got it working the way I need it and I've got my sound in a nice ballpark. I don't have my heaven sound yet but it'll get there soon.

What initially drew you to the Axe FX? Portability?

Yeah, I just love having everything all in one package.

That's got to be nice for traveling.

Yeah that's what it boils down to. Prior to having the Axe FX in my world I had two big giant racks with my power amps and pedals and all that shit. So it had an immediate impact on us shifting our gear around, especially doing any shows that would require us to fly from one date to another. That was the only way to make it work. Being able to carry our gear around made it possible to play a lot of those places that we hadn't played in a long time. Especially the Pacific Rim - you could spend your whole career working to pay off the shipping.

I've heard of bands that will have a rig built on each continent because it's cheaper than shipping their rig over and back for a tour.

Yeah that's us. I have three entire systems.

Do you have them stored around the world?

No I keep them all here now. I used to have my stuff stored in Europe but it got all rotted from salty air and god knows what else happened to it over there. Never again will I leave a rig just sitting over in Europe.

Was it in a proper storage building?

I don't even know where it was stored but it was definitely not a savory place because it got fucked up. So whenever we play over there we just ship our stuff now because I want my stuff at home with me rather than sitting somewhere and falling apart because it hasn't gotten any attention.

Like most guitarists, I would imagine that you are somebody who is continuously striving to push your playing. Is there anything in particular that you've been working on regarding your playing?

Absolutely not. I do not relate to other guitar players in that way at all. I don't do any practicing at all. I've been so consumed in recent years with working on my rig that I haven't spent any time focusing on my playing at all. I don't have anything dazzling to show anybody. If I got into a guitar battle right now I'd get blown away.

I think for some folks, its more about tone than it is playing.

I'm at a point right now in my life where I've spent enough time worried about the tone and I'm over that. I'm getting back to playing now with the tones I've got. That's what I've always done and it's always worked so I'm going back to that because this quest for tone stuff is ridiculous.


Photo courtesy of Frank Maddocks

Tone is just such an endless scape; it can be easy to get lost looking for the perfect sound.

Yeah but this is what it boils down to, right. As a metal guitar player, because that is the style that I play and that is the style that I like, it goes into one place and its right there in the middle. It needs to cut, it needs to be fucking hard, and you can define it any number of ways but ultimately it becomes one same sound because that is what that sound is supposed to be. So ultimately if you play metal guitar, you're going to come up with something that sounds roughly the same because that is what sounds the best. Really all you need is mid-range and you could really just dump the rest of the board if you're going for that aggressive sound.

You switched to the seven string a long time ago; what sparked that move?

Well what got me interested in it was getting into Meshuggah's music. I had never really had too much interest in the seven string prior to listening to their stuff. So I really liked the sound and the style they were playing and then when I realized they were playing it on seven strings, then I got it. I understood why people like that sound and it is beautiful.

It's amazing what one extra string can do to the possibilities on the fretboard.

It's a double edged sword, always, because the same thing can be said about the eight string, or the nine. Will we all be talking about the ten string in another year or two? Where does it end? I think the seven string is perfect. The eight string is perfect too. I can't wait to get a couple nine strings and have fun with it but if you're looking for clarity and melody, once we go down real deep, were giving all that up.

Is there any seven string on the new album?

No I played all eight string on the new album and my tunings were the same from the last two records. On "Diamond Eyes," I used standard so that's F#, B, E, A, D, G, B, E. Then I used the same tuning on the "Koi" record except I dropped it down to E, B, A, D, G, B, E. So I just used those two tuning on this new record and I only used the drop tuning on two songs so it's mostly just the standard tuning.

Jerry Cantrell makes a guest appearance on the new album. How did that come about?

Well we've been friends with the Alice in Chains guys for a lot of years and toured together. It just really worked out. I don't know who actually asked him to do it but I'm glad he did. It sounds fucking good.

He plays on the track "Phantom Bride," is that right?

Yeah, there goes that song from our setlist live. We can't bring Jerry on tour with us and ain't none of us playing his part, so there goes that song! He killed it on the record.

Are there any songs or guitar parts on the new record that you're really proud of or really excited for the fans to hear?

Oh god. I think my proudest thing about my guitar playing on this record is just playing on the record because I didn't want to play on the record to begin with. It wasn't until way later once I actually got into it. I look at all the songs on the record and they were all a challenge for me to get in to.

What do you think that barrier was for you?

I don't know. I just really like metal and I love all the metal that's being played now. I wish everybody would stop saying "djent" though. That's just dumb. It's just metal.

I still don't know what the fuck that is.

I thoroughly can get djent, I even have great appreciation for the bands, and I mean Meshuggah is one of my favorite bands. But it's just not a genre. It's just metal.

Do you have any advice to guitar players who are just starting out and wanting to get into metal? What defines being a metal guitarist?

Well if you want to be one like me just play your guitar, have fun, and enjoy yourself and you won't have to worry about too much. But if you want to be like all these great players out there, if you want to be a full on shredder and light that fretboard up, you're going to have to put sometime into it.



So, you were saying earlier that you were having a hard time getting into playing on this new album. Why do you think that was?

When we were coming up with ideas and writing the songs, the stuff that was being written, you know, the other guys' ideas, I wasn't too interested in it. It wasn't the style or the sound I was hoping we would take. It wasn't what I was expecting or wanting.

That says a lot about you seeing yourself as part of a band and going in the direction of the band. Its unselfish.

Yeah I hear ya. My band is going one direction and I am going another one currently.

Do you think that will result in some more side projects or solo albums?

Well I have another side project going with my friend in England, Sol Invicto. We've got some songs done over the past decade, hardly enough to count it as a full on band. But that's mostly on me because I haven't been able to contribute very much. My friends in my band would probably say the same thing. It's just that life thing that's always going on. Time and life, that's the way it goes. I've also got ideas for my own personal solo stuff. I've got another thing I'm going to start with a friend of mine. So there's definitely going to be other stuff, no doubt about that.

That's not saying that you're going to leave the Deftones, is it?

I would never leave the band that I started but the band started leaving me, I can't control that.

That's a democratic way to look at it, really.

I mean, I have a great time for the most part. This record has been a struggle and we have got issues that I do not want to leave home but how things will be in the future, I do not know. But I know what I will do and what I will not do and there are some things that I will not do in the future because I just don't agree with it.

Well I can certainly appreciate a person standing their ground, artistically. In the meantime, you've got some tour dates coming up this spring.

Yeah we'll start that monster up in March and we'll go through until the end of the summer and probably into the fall. I don't know exactly where we'll be touring yet but the record will be out in April and we will be out there doing it again.

Writer's Note: I was also able to listen to the new album. Although I have been sworn to secrecy on the specifics (blood oath) I can say that whether you are a fan of the softer melodic sound or the heavy aggressive sound, you will be pleased with both on this album. The sonic diversity is perhaps a result of the creative rifts within the band. Blending the soft and melodic with the heavy and aggressive has always been the trademark of the Deftones' sound and this album does not disappoint. Tension often breeds creativity and brings out the best in a group. That seems to be the case on "Gore."

Interview by Justin Beckner
Ultimate-Guitar.com (C) 2016



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No puedo creerlo, quizas lo entiendo por tantos años juntos, pero no deja de doler ahora que estoy grande y los años me han demostrado que deftones es la banda que estuvo en mi vida siempre presente.

lunes, 15 de febrero de 2016

Lanzamiento del disco debut de Ataque en Contra

Hace mucho tiempo no estábamos en un evento hardcore capitalino, la razón principal es que le hemos perdido la pista a esa escena, ya no sabemos en que andan ni su discurso en esta década de migración.

Pero es tiempo de volver, es tiempo de reencontrarnos con amigos y una escena que dominó la primera década de este siglo en Bogotá. Era momento de estar presente en el lanzamiento del disco más esperado en la historia del hc capitalino; el disco de Ataque en Contra.

Al comprar el disco en enero, me dieron la boleta #8, un fallido mal indicio de lo que sería el toque. Sin embargo, cerca de 200 personas estuvimos viendo el show en ese pequeño bar de la Av Boyacá.


Llegué muy tarde y ya estaba tocando Pitbull, entré justo para la celebración del cumpleaños del Negro (¡41!). La banda toca, están todos, los 5, la misma alineación que vimos después de la muerte de Julián PSS, eso sin duda es bastante rescatable en una escena en el que la edad juega en contra de una alineación estable. Antes de meterme al foso, compré la boleta de mi primo y reclame un nuevo cd, pero el encargado nunca me dió las vueltas (el muchachito de la entrada me ha robado COP 30.000). Esta tocando Pitbull, otra vez sin Julian, van varias canciones de su disco y las clásicas de los 90s, mi primo feliz, mis amigos también, todos nosotros felices.

Es el momento de Tiempos de Sangre, una banda nueva para mí, de la cual nunca había escuchado. Para el público no era nada nueva, todos sintonizados cantaban sus canciones bastante emocionados, tanto como las de Pitbull. Sin embargo, tuve muchos problemas con su sonido, la banda que tuvo un fantástico 2015 (incluyendo una gira por Chile y Argentina, y participación en la última versión del festival Manizales Grita Rock) se esforzó por sonar lo más duro posible, y el ingeniero no logró cuadrar correctamente el sonido por lo cual las voces quedaron disparejas y el sonido de las guitarras se llevó todo por encima. Igual la gente bailo.



Alguien avisó que ya venía Ataque, es decir que me había perdido a Distracción. Mi decepción fue corta, ya que las preguntas sobre quién sería el vocalista que reemplazaría a John Jairo, nos permitían jugar con hipótesis utópicas y descabelladas. La espera por develar el misterio no es mucha, llega el momento de conocer la nueva alineación de Ataque en Contra: Los hermanos Chavez y Klaudio permanecen, ahora acompañados de dos nuevos que no sé quiénes son. Se ven jóvenes, se ve raro, es extraño para mí, pero lo entiendo perfectamente.
 


Ataque arranca con todo, el nuevo vocalista no parece nervioso y nos intenta llevar por delante. Es un nuevo discurso, mucho más personal, es difícil aceptar el cambio, pero es más difícil no dejarse comer vivo por el público de Ataque y él lo logra. (Creo) Tocan en orden las primeras canciones del disco, y la gente responde muy animada. Y es que más de 20 años de historia, de canciones que hacen parte del subconsciente colectivo de la escena hardcore Colombia, se notan en como recibe el público las canciones, cantada por el que sea (porque hasta La Puya cantó un pedazo de “En El Ataque”), y termina uno bailando contagiado de la energía de todos, porque al final, Ataque en Contra está por encima de cualquiera de sus integrantes, es propiedad de todos los que hacen e hicieron parte de la escena hardcore capitalina.



Mi primera impresión al terminar y salir a la calle fue que al vocalista le había quedado grande la banda, ¿y cómo no? ¿A quién no le hubiera quedado grande la banda más reconocida de hardcore capitalino? Pero luego uno escucha la historia, las razones de escoger a esta persona, la consistencia de discurso y solo quedan las ganas de seguir viéndolos reinventarse, de esperar un nuevo disco, con música nueva, que pueda superar este “Grandes Éxitos”.


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Pd: Esto me recuerda cuando Ice Cube decia  "You lookin' like straight bozos / I saw it comin' that's why I went solo / Kept on stompin' / When y'all Muthafuckas moved Straight outta Compton / You got jealous when I got my own company / But I'm a man, and ain't nobody humpin' me" en No Vaseline