Me meto un tiro,
¡Pum!
El eco suena,
¡Pum!
O quizás es el corazón,
¡Pum!
Que todavía sueña.

Categoría: Entrevistas

Dave Grohl nos da más información sobre el próximo disco de Foo Fighters

Dave Grohl nos da más información sobre el próximo disco de Foo Fighters

Dave Grohl gives us more information about the new album of Foo Fighters

dave

Sacado de // From: www.sopitas.com

R: Hablas mucho de este nuevo disco, que es misterioso, poco convencional. Necesitamos algunas pistas

 DG: Oh, Dios. ¿Puedo darte pistas? Déjame pensar en algunas buenas pistas. No se trata de llegar al estudio y grabar el disco. Ésa es una. Hay un tema más grande alrededor del disco que cualquier otro álbum de los Foo Fighters. No es un musical ni es una ópera, pero hay un motivo por el cual lo estamos haciendo de esta manera y nadie lo ha hecho antes, esta es la primera vez. Estoy muy emocionado porque a todos los que les he contado me han dicho “esa sí que es una idea chingona, no puedo esperar a escucharlo”. Creativamente, es mucho más que grabar un disco. Es un proyecto más grande y es genial. Yo he estado trabajando en esto por seis meses. Es algo grande y va a suceder el año que viene y va a estar en todo el mundo.

No puedo esperar más. La música es increíble, para mí es de un disco clásico. Y una de las cosas que nos gusta sobre todo lo demás es tocar en vivo, creo que ese es nuestro punto más fuerte. Cuando lleguemos al estadio a tocar, nosotros no tocamos nada más por hora y media, ni tocamos por dos horas, a veces tocamos por tres y te sabes casi todas las canciones que tocamos, y yo estoy corriendo tan rápido como puedo de un lado del escenario a otro durante todo el pinche show, animando a la audiencia para que se una a las canciones. Cada noche de mi vida lo único que quiero hacer es recrear a Queen en Live Aid 1985. Para mí eso es un concierto de rock. Ahí está nuestra fuerza. Y si tienes canciones que son divertidas en el estudio, entonces van a ser divertidas en vivo. Estoy emocionado.

IN ENGLISH

-You talk a lot about this new album, you say that is mysterious, unconventional . We need some clues.

DG : Oh , God. Can I give you clues? Let me think of some good leads. It won’t be just going into a studio and making a record. There’s a bigger theme to the record than any other Foo Fighters record. Not a musical, and it’s not an opera, but there’s a reason why we’re making it this way. No ones ever done it.. I’m very excited because all I’ve told them I’ve been told » this really is a fucking great idea can not wait to hear it.» Creatively , it’s much more than a record. It’s a bigger project and it’s great. I’ve been working on this for six months. It’s big and it’s going to happen next year and will be worldwide .

I can’t wait. The music is amazing to me, is a classic album. And one of the things we love about everything else is playing live , I think that is our strongest point . When we get to the stadium to play, we don’t play around an hour and a half , we played for two hours, sometimes played for three and I know almost all the songs we play, and I’m running as fast as I can from one side of stage to another throughout the fucking show , encouraging the audience to join the songs. Every night of my life all I want to do is recreate Queen at Live Aid 1985 . To me that’s a rock concert . That is our strength. And if you have songs that are fun in the studio , then they will be fun live . I’m excited .

Habrá un larga duración de Stone Temple Pilots en 2014

Habrá un larga duración de Stone Temple Pilots en 2014

There will be a Stone Temple Pilots’ LP in 2014

http://zildjian.com/~/media/Z/Artists/962x307/K/Kretz-Eric-lg.ashx

En una reciente entrevista de Eric Kretz con Songfacts lo confirmó:

«Definitivamente vamos a sacar un disco, y vamos a seguir girando por ahora. El plan ahora es hacer el Tour Soundwave con Green Day alrededor de todo Australia, eso en Febrero. Linkin Park van a comenzar a engrasar su máquina en algún momento el próximo año, por lo que creo que completaremos el larga duración  el próximo año mientras Linkin Park estén girando con el disco que están preparando».

IN ENGLISH

In a recent interview with Songfacts Eric Kretz tolf this:

«We’re definitely going to have an album out, and we’re going to keep touring now. The plan now is to do the Soundwave tour with Green Day over in Australia, and that’s in February. Linkin Park’s going to fire up their machine at some point next year, so I would say we would complete a full-length LP next year while Linkin Park is out touring the record they’re working on right now».

Kim Thayil espera que Soundgarden se pongan a trabajar en su nuevo disco en los próximos dos años

Kim Thayil espera que Soundgarden se pongan a trabajar en su nuevo disco en los próximos dos años

Soundgarden’s Kim Thayil on Reissues, Rarities and What’s Next

Sacado de // From: http://portalternativo.com (traducción) // http://www.rollingstone.com

La Rolling Stone ha aprovechado la reedición del “Screaming Life” y “Fopp” de Soundgarden para charlar con el guitarrista Kim Thayil.

Habla del tema “Sub Pop Rock City”:

Sale del genial recopilatorio “Sub Pop 200″. Ese es un disco imprescindible, “Sub Pop 200″ – es una cajita con un puñado de canciones que captura casi todas las bandas que estaban en Sub Pop por entonces además de otras bandas que nunca habían sacado discos en Sub Pop pero estaban en esa comunidad y escena. Aportamos la canción “Sub Pop Rock City”. Creo que yo compuse la música y escribí la letra con Chris (Cornell).

Sobre la escena que empezaba a cocerse en Seattle:

Sabía que algo había ahí porque el álbum “Deep Six” salió en el 86, se grabó en el 85 y eso era un puñado de colegas nuestros de Seattle – U-Men, Green River, Melvins, Malfunkshun y Skin Yard. Los seis hicimos conciertos juntos y había otra media docena de buenas bandas como Feast, My Eye, Bundle of Hiss, Girl Trouble, 64 Spiders. Había una comunidad potente. Las bandas de Seattle superaban en asistencia a las bandas de punk rock o metal que venían a tocar aquí y tocaban ante quinientas o mil personas. Y luego Green River, Soundgarden o Mother Love Bone tocaban y atraían a mil trescientas o mil quinientas. La cosa marchaba. Así que éramos muy conscientes de ello.

Antes de hacer un disco, ya era bastante grande. Ya llenábamos locales en los que tocaba una banda local o indie – bares o clubs. Marcábamos records de asistencia y había una grandísima escena ahí. Muchos skateboards y mucha ropa oscura. Éramos muy conscientes del crecimiento de la escena y de que había muchas otras bandas.

Del álbum de caras B que prepara:

Es casi exclusivamente -quizá haya una o dos excepciones- material publicado, centrándonos en material original publicado por Soundgarden y material publicado que nunca antes había sido recopilado en un álbum de Soundgarden. Cosas de discos recopilatorios, como por ejemplo, “Sub Pop Rock City”, saldrían en el disco de caras B.

Hicimos covers como el “Girl U Want” de Devo o el “Homicidal Suicidal” de Budgie pero si nos centramos solo en originales, hay suficiente para un álbum y más. En la época de “Badmotorfinger” hicimos el tema “Cold Bitch”, que era original. Hicimos “Birth Ritual”, que salió en la banda sonora de “Singles”. “Birth Ritual” lo pusimos en el álbum “Telephantasm” pero eso es un recopilatorio de canciones ya publicadas. Pero en cuanto a recopilar un álbum completo de material original que no había sido recopilado en otros álbumes de Soundgarden, esto sería como otro álbum de estudio.

Aparecerá “Heretic”, quizá “Toy Box”. “Toy Box” se grabó durante el periodo de “Screaming Life”, un ocho pistas con Jack Endino. Quizá haya algún interés en juntar eso con otro material de aquel periodo de tiempo.

Sobre los próximos planes de Soundgarden:

Ahora mismo, un par de chicos están comprometidos en otras giras – Chris está haciendo una gira acústica en solitario y Matt (Cameron) está en la carretera con Pearl Jam. Así que este año va a ser complicado salir de gira. Pero yo iré mirando el catálogo, recopilando el disco de caras B, que anuncié por primera vez allá por 1995… Lleva casi 20 años ahí en la despensa de forma negligente. Los últimos cuatro años he tomado algo de acción para que la banda echara a rodar. Ahora es cosa de Jeff Fura de A&M Records y que esto funcione. Y por supuesto, la reedición de “Screaming Life” y la posible remezcla y reedición de “Ultraomega OK”.

La banda ha hablado de la continuación de “King Animal”. Es algo que miraremos en los próximos dos años.

 

 

IN ENGLISH

Although the tour in support of their reunion album, King Animal has apparently ended, Soundgarden will keep up their profile in the coming months with a few new releases. The first will arrive Tuesday, when Sub Pop reissues the band’s first two classic EPs, 1987’s Screaming Life and 1988’s Fopp, together as a remastered single release (available as a CD, double LP and download), with a bonus track tacked on.

Where Does ‘Superunknown’ Rank on Our 100 Best Albums of the Nineties List?

Guitarist Kim Thayil recently spoke to Rolling Stone on several topics, including the Screaming Life/Fopp reissue, the early days and what’s next for the grunge band.

Why did the Screaming Life and Fopp EPs go out of print?
There was a little bit of neglect with our band and management together. The way we looked at catalog issues, we kind of thought, «We’ll get back to that. Let’s go forward.» So we were always looking forward. And unfortunately, the forward thinking of the band and management did not include having all the properties that we invested our creative and labor into keeping them active. For some reason, we let that slide, and that slid even more after the band broke up. So when we got back together again in 2010, it was really focusing on these catalog issues, merchandise and online presence.

What’s the story behind the extra track «Sub Pop Rock City»?
«Sub Pop Rock City» was off of the great compilation Sub Pop 200. Now that’s a must-have record, Sub Pop 200 – it’s a nice little box of a bunch of songs capturing just about every band that was on Sub Pop then, as well as other bands that never released records on Sub Pop but were affiliated with the community and scene. And we contributed the song «Sub Pop Rock City» to that. I think I wrote the music and I wrote the lyrics with Chris [Cornell].

Screaming Life was the second-ever band release by Sub Pop. At that point, did you realize there was something special brewing with other Seattle bands?
Oh yeah, totally. Because the Deep Six album came out in ’86, it was recorded in ’85, and that was a bunch of our colleagues from Seattle – the U-Men, Green River, the Melvins, Malfunkshun, and Skin Yard. The six of us played shows together, and there was another good half dozen bands, like Feast, My Eye, Bundle of Hiss, Girl Trouble, 64 Spiders. There was a really strong community. The Seattle bands would outdraw the national punk rock or metal bands that would come here and play for five hundred or a thousand people. And then Green River, Soundgarden, or Mother Love Bone would play, and they’d draw thirteen/fifteen hundred. It was going. So we were very aware of that.

I’m chronologically off by a little bit – by the time that Mother Love Bone, Green River, and Soundgarden were drawing really well, we had all made records. But prior to us making a record, it was pretty big. We were packing in all the venues that a local or indie band would play – mostly bars and clubs. We were setting attendance records, and there was a huge scene here. A lot of skateboards and a lot of black clothing. We were very aware of the growing scene and the fact that there were a lot of other bands.

There’s also the possibility of a collection of unreleased material. Will this upcoming set be just strictly B-sides, or also include some unreleased songs?
This is almost exclusively – there might be one or two exceptions – released material, focusing on original Soundgarden released and published material that has never been compiled on a Soundgarden album. Things from compilation records, like «Sub Pop Rock City,» for instance, might have been on the B-sides album.

I recall around the time of Badmotorfinger, a lot of non-album cover songs were issued overseas, like Devo’s «Girl U Want» and Budgie’s «Homicidal Suicidal.»
Those are covers, but if we focus on originals, there’s certainly enough for another album-plus. Around Badmotorfinger, we did the song «Cold Bitch,» which was an original. We did «Birth Ritual,» which was in the movie soundtrack for Singles. «Birth Ritual» we put out on the Telephantasm album, but that’s a compilation of already released songs. But as far as compiling an album’s worth of original material that hadn’t been compiled on other Soundgarden albums, this would be like another studio album.

So originals such as «Heretic» and «Toy Box» will be included?
Yeah, «Heretic,» maybe «Toy Box.» «Toy Box» was recorded during the Screaming Life period, eight-track with Jack Endino. There might be some interest in putting that together with other material from that period of time.

What’s next for Soundgarden?
Right now, a couple of guys are committed to other tours – Chris is doing a solo acoustic tour and Matt [Cameron] is out on the road with Pearl Jam. So this year [2014] is going to be kind of tough for touring. But I will be tending to the catalog, compiling the B-sides record, which I first announced back in 1995 . . . it’s been almost 20 years of backburner neglect. The past four years, I’ve taken some action toward getting the ball rolling. Now it’s just a matter of working with Jeff Fura at A&M Records and getting this thing going. And of course, the reissue of Screaming Life, and the eventual remixing and re-release of Ultramega OK.

Would you like to see a follow-up to King Animal?
Yeah, the band has talked about that. That’s something that we’ll look at in the next two years.

Q&A: Mike McCready sobre el lugar de Pearl Jam en la historia del Rock

Q&A: Mike McCready sobre el lugar de Pearl Jam en la historia del Rock

Q&A: Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready on the Band’s Place in Rock History

Sacado de // From: http://www.esquire.com and http://portalternativo.com

Oh, no, no. En nuestros comienzos pensaba que todo terminaría al día siguiente… He querido hacer esto toda mi vida así que cuando finalmente logramos un contrato discográfico y poder salir a tocar… Fue como, “Está pasando. Todo va a llevar a algo”.

Ando ahora mismo trabajando en un documental llamado “The Glamour and the Squalor”, sobre un DJ llamado Marco Collins, de Seattle y también de San Diego. Fue parte integrante de aquellos tiempos, con las bandas alternativas, todos nosotros, en la radio, en Seattle. Hay imágenes de Kurt (Cobain), hablando de “In Utero” y me hizo pensar, “Guau, qué joven es”. Tenía veintipico años, cuando le entrevistaban, y me hizo recordar aquellos tiempos en los que había aquella supuesta tensión entre nosotros, este rollo creado por la prensa. Probablemente hubo algo pero al final, no. Creo que él y Ed (Vedder) habían hablado. Recuerdo que estábamos en los VMAs de la MTV y salté sobre algunos asientos y le dije (a Cobain), “Hey, he oído que tu y Ed vais a hacer un disco algún día”. Y me dijo, “Oh, hablaremos de ello en otro momento”. Sentí que tenía que acercarme porque había ese extraño muro entre nosotros, nosotros contra ellos y ellos contra nosotros, y no existía. Todos salíamos de la misma escena, según veo. Salimos de una ciudad muy provinciana que no apoyaba mucho la música y tuvimos que hacerlo todo nosotros, con flyers por doquier. Nunca hubo apoyo municipal para hacer música, tampoco lo hay ahora. Tuvimos que hacer eso, Nirvana tuvo que hacerlo, los chicos de Soundgarden tuvieron que hacerlo, pero todos íbamos a los conciertos de los otros. Íbamos a las mismas fiestas. Así que acabamos todos juntos. Cuando la cosa se hizo grande y todos salimos a la carretera, nos alegrábamos por todos y espero que Kurt fuese feliz también. En este documental, me entristeció, obviamente, verle tan joven y desearía que pudiera estar aquí, para ver donde estaría ahora, ¿sabes a lo que me refiero? Es conmovedor y festivo pero también hay tristeza y oscuridad. Dicho eso, “In Utero” es un disco fantástico. Me alegra que sigamos aquí. Soundgarden sacaron un disco el año pasado. Mudhoney tocaron en lo alto del Space Needle. Toda clase de cosas guays nos han pasado y yo lo celebro. Lo que significa eso hoy es que, guau, seguimos aquí. Estoy muy agradecido por ello. Hay algo de belleza en ello. Y hay algo de tristeza.

El guitarrista muestra su ilusión por ver como entre el público de sus conciertos hay nuevas generaciones de fans.

Eso es lo que me flipa. Veo adolescentes en el público. Está ocurriendo un rollo generacional con nosotros que desearía que Kurt hubiera visto. Chavales jóvenes están redescubriendo esta era musical y, eso, para mi, es atemporal e importante y divertido y es emocional y significa algo. Desearía que hubiera podido ver eso.

IN ENGLISH

There’s a band onstage in an arena somewhere, and its members are wailing through an impromptu take on Van Halen’s «Eruption,» covering the Dead Boys’ punk anthem «Sonic Reducer,» dousing the stage with whatever they’re drinking, smashing the dangling lights that hang from their elaborate stage setup with the necks of their guitars, and mounting one of said lighting fixtures like Tarzan for the sole purpose of swinging over the sweaty, screaming, feeding frenzy of a crowd. The front man, more often than not, is engaged in some kind of sinister back-and-forth with the microphone stand, which appears to be holding him up at times throughout the two-hour assaultive marathon. They calm down for a minute or two to play an acoustic set before the lights go up, and they barrel through the encore the audience is growing hoarse screaming over. They thank the crowd profusely, they grin, they hand their guitars to the stage techs, and they leave.

That band, at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn last week, was Pearl Jam. The Seattle grunge gods, best known for crafting coffeehouse and college-radio standards of the ’90s like «Jeremy» and «Daughter,» are currently plowing through a list of dates that’ll take them on a national tour in celebration of Lightning Bolt, their tenth studio effort and the scorching, loud record that sounds nothing like the stuff that made them famous back when MTV Unplugged was still a thing and Kurt Cobain was sneering at them for «pioneering a corporate alternative and cock-rock fusion.» (Cobain would later apologize for these remarks.) The current fervor for Pearl Jam doesn’t quit with the tour: Lightning Bolt and other Pearl Jam picks will soundtrack the World Series this week, and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon is in the middle of its own Pearl Jam week. As Pearl Jam continue to learn about themselves as musicians while touring behind Lightning Bolt, Mike McCready, Pearl Jam’s lead guitarist, walks us through their milestones, the band’s meager beginnings, the Kurt Cobain feud, and why «relevance» isn’t necessarily a word that concerns them at this point in their smoldering career.

ESQUIRE.COM: There were four years in between Backspacer and Lightning Bolt. Do you think this heightens the kind of enthusiasm that your fans greet you with?

MIKE MCCREADY: We toured a bunch within those four years. We don’t go out for a year straight like U2. We did two tours in Europe, two in South America, and a tour through part of the U.S. I think that absence maybe makes the heart grow fonder, as they say, so maybe that’s what our fans are feeling. That’s one thing I’m excited about, our fans listening to the new material. A lot of times, bands will go on tour and people only wanna hear the hits. Luckily our fans are receptive to our new stuff. That’s another crazy thing, that they want to hear what Ed’s singing about now, that they want to sing along with it, or feel it, or cry with it. That’s great, because we’re all growing together, the band and the fans. Lyrically, Ed’s dealing with stuff that maybe a lot of our fans are. That’s always something he’s been good at, kind of writing across the board and touching a lot of people because of his honesty and realness.

ESQ: «Jeremy» and «Even Flow» were noticeably absent from the set list at Barclays — or at least on the night we saw you there — and those are two of Pearl Jam’s biggest hits. Is this a consistent thing on the Lightning Bolt tour? 

MM: We have 188 songs or something like that. When Ed’s working on the set list, say, tonight in Philly, he goes, «Here’s every set list we’ve done here.» He’ll look at every set list to see how we started the show, and compare it to what we should do in his mind. He worries about this stuff all day. If we played «Even Flow» last night, which we did, we may not play it tonight. We want to get «Sirens» in there because it’s on the radio, or «Mind Your Manners» because people may be expecting to hear that. Those songs are growing as we play them. They’re turning into something different from what they were when we recorded them, and it’s exciting to see which songs make that happen. «Lightning Bolt» is a fun song to play live. I kind of knew it would be. We’ve got to fit in as much as we can in three hours and cover all the records. Sometimes «Jeremy» might not get played, but you’ll get «Alive,» or you’ll get something from that era, and we can’t do it every night. And sometimes it’s how Ed reads the crowd. He’ll go, «I don’t know if I’m feeling it tonight,» and he’ll call out an audible and we’ll do something different. That’s been happening a lot, which gets super-confusing.

ESQ: Is that what happened with «Eruption»?

MM: Exactly. There was some kind of guitar malfunction, and Ed’s guitar was out of tune or not working or something, so he goes, «Hey, will you do ‘Eruption’ on the guitar?» And I said yes. I changed guitars, because I’d rather do it on a Strat. At any rate, he was having some sound problems and wanted to nail them down very quickly and buy some time. I’ve been working on «Eruption» — it’s been sort of a personal challenge of mine to figure it out since I was 11, when I first started playing guitar. It’s been something that I was intimidated by, of course, because it’s so crazy, but I thought, «I might be able to learn this, but it’ll take some time,» so I worked on it for every night for six months. I didn’t realize I was going to play it that night. Luckily, I had it in me, Ed got to buy some time, and something like that will happen tonight, I’ll guarantee you, but you never know what it is, so you have to be ready. That’s the dance we do.

ESQ: It’s a dance you do well, though.

MM: It’s a panic dance.

ESQ: Don’t tell people that!

MM: Oh, I panic. I’ll tell them. It’s all right. [Laughs]

ESQ: Everyone’s so excited about Lightning Bolt, and its songs are popping up everywhere, from Late Night to the World Series. If there’s one cable network that goes against what Pearl Jam seems to be about politically, it’s Fox, and they’re the ones airing the World Series. Did that come up when getting involved with the World Series broadcast was a possibility for you?

MM: There are certainly elements of Fox that I hesitate to call «news,» but we were looking at it purely as baseball fans. This is a great opportunity to be a part of the mythology and greatness of what this sport has been. Us being fans of it, to get to be involved in it and have music played in it, we’re excited about that. We’re not looking at the political leanings of a network more than the excitement of what the World Series means to us as individuals and as Americans and just the height of sports. I think it’s more in that. That’s a good question, because we never really discussed that aspect of it. We discussed, «Wow, they’re going to put our songs in the World Series, that’s pretty cool!»

ESQ: But this is a big year for Seattle grunge in general. You’re celebrating your tenth studio album, with Lightning Bolt. Mudhoney just observed their 25th anniversary. In Utero just turned 20, with a big reissue behind it. It seems like members of the Seattle scene are hitting milestones left, right, and sideways. Relevancy comes up a lot in that context, too, as people are perpetually listing you as an influence. How is it to acknowledge your own achievements alongside these other bands? Are you where you thought you’d be 22 years ago?

MM: Oh no, no. I felt that in the early days that this could be all over tomorrow… I’ve been wanting to do that my whole life, so when I finally got a record contract, and got to play… It was like, «It’s all happening. It’s all gonna lead somewhere else.» I’m working on a documentary called The Glamour and the Squalor right now, about a DJ named Marco Collins from Seattle and also San Diego. He was kind of integral to that time, with the alternative bands, all of us, on the radio, in Seattle. There’s some footage of Kurt [Cobain, in the documentary], of him talking about In Utero, and it made me think, «Wow, he’s so young.» He was in his mid-20s, when they interviewed him, and it brought me back to that time when there was this supposed tension between all of us, this press-created thing. There probably was some of that, but toward the end of it, there wasn’t. I think he and Ed had talked. I remember we were at the MTV VMAs, and I just jumped over the seats, and I said [to Cobain], «Hey, I heard you and Ed might be doing a record some day. I’d love to play a lead on it.» And he goes, «Oh, we’ll talk about it some other time.» I just felt like I had to reach out, because there was this weird wall between us, us versus them or them versus us, and it wasn’t. We all came from the same scene, in my mind. We came out of a very provincial city that was not very supportive of music, and we had to do our own thing, and flyer everywhere. There was never support from the city to do music there, not as there is now. We had to do that, Nirvana had to do that, the Soundgarden guys did that, but we’d all go to each other’s shows, too. We’d go to the same parties. So we all kind of came up together. When it got huge and we all went on the road, we were happy for everyone else, and I wish Kurt was happy, too. In this documentary, it made me kind of sad, obviously, to see him as such a young man, and wish he could be around to see where they’d be now, you know what I mean? It’s poignant and it’s celebratory, but also, there’s some sadness and darkness that goes along with it. That being said, In Utero is a fantastic record. I’m glad we’re still around. Soundgarden put out a record last year. Mudhoney played on top of the Space Needle. All sorts of cool stuff has happened, and I celebrate that. What that means today is, wow, we’re still around, I’m very grateful for it. There’s some beauty to it. And there’s some sadness.

ESQ: Do you think that those supportive bones of the Seattle grunge scene make the music that came from it perpetually relevant?

MM: That’s what blows me away. I’m seeing teenagers in the crowd. There’s a generational thing that’s happening with us now that I wish Kurt could’ve seen. Younger kids are rediscovering this era of music, and that, to me, is timeless and important and fun and it’s emotional and it means something. I wish he could’ve seen that.

ESQ: Is that something that feeds into the intensity you feel for Lightning Bolt? Do you look at your most recent releases differently when you take your history as a band — and the history you play such an active part in — into consideration? Is Lightning Bolt a record 22 years in the making?

MM: It kind of is. It’s all of our past experiences. It’s how long we’ve been together. It’s how many things we’ve learned from doing side projects. It’s how many times we’ve played on stage together. It’s how we communicate and non-verbally communicate onstage. It’s how we’ve learned how to write songs. We all get a chance to write a song in this band, which is the really cool part about being in this. I feel very grateful about that. That’s a situation that doesn’t happen in all bands, and Ed can go out and write a lot of great stuff, and he chooses to want to hear other stuff from us. And it’s all kind of cool in that way. In that, we can have a lot of songwriters coming in, and that can be a blessing.