Posts Tagged ‘glenn danzig’

TOMMY VICTOR OF PRONG:THE METAL ARMY INTERVIEW

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

Metal Army spent some time chatting it up with PRONG front man Tommy Victor regarding the bands’ new album Carved Into Stone (Longbranch Records/SPV). Tommy is never one to hold back on any topic, so he candidly shared his feelings about the band, recording, past successes and failures, other notable projects and people he’s worked with and a look back his career.

 

 

MAA: Please tell us about the making of Carved Into Stone.

TV: It was a long process. It started about two years ago writing the material, maybe even longer than that. I had some stuff on my computer I was fooling around with out of the initial five songs I started with, maybe one little part made it on to the record. Tony (Campos) came in and we did a couple of tours together, we were writing on the road together at Motel 6′s or what have you. Then we made a demo with Alexi (Rodriguez). We got up to fourteen songs and then up to twenty-five songs and more demos. We did a last pre- production demo before we did the actual recording, kicked a whole bunch of songs out, rearranged somethings in the last ten days before we went in the studio with Steve Evetts. We knocked out twelve basic tracks, eleven made the record. From twenty-five songs completely written down to eleven on the album! In the studio everything was done on the grid, like it was done back in the 90′s where we just played it live, all the basic tracks. It wasn’t a computer record at all. There’s no samples, no drum replacement, no quantizing, no cut and paste on any of it. It was just preformed. That’s what was so grueling for me. I was working on MINISTRY records where you’d lay a riff down and they’d cut and paste it a couple of times, ya know and bam bam! That why people have been doing since people started using Pro Tools and digital technology. Steve had me play every little thing, it was all dialed in precisely, the solos were designed, there was no improvisation. Same thing with the vocals, they’re completely doubled exactly and harmonies done without the use of Melodyne, etc.

 

MAA: What’s it like working with Steve Evetts?

TV: He’s an extremely hard worker and I needed someone like that to kick me in the behind because I’m getting older and stuck in my ways and he directed me to be more clear with the vocals and that was one of the big main reasons we got him for the work he’s done. I was really impressed with the vocal sound and the way he was able to get great performances. At first I thought he was a lot of using technology to do it but he was like ‘No! I get the guys to sing this stuff, the way it is’. I was like ‘Oh wow! Ok he’ll take a crappy singer and make him sound golden. I’m not saying I’m a crappy, but I needed work and he was great on that aspect of things. I knew he could get the guitar sounds and drums and the actual sounds together. Until we actually got in there I didn’t know how he was doing it. Everything was done outside the box. The only difference between then and back in the 90s was its on a hard drive rather then tape. Other then that everything was external and done really pure. Having a little bit of engineering experience, I really appreciated that. We talked about that right before we went in. He’s done like ninety records and his repertoire is unbelievable. We needed somebody broad based. He’s worked on THE CURE to THE DILLINGER ESCAPE PLAN it’s just a broad base of that. He’s unbelievable. He’s a genius all business it was strict work. I’m not saying it wasn’t fun, but it was really hard, strict work.

 

PRONG in 2012: Alexi, Tony and Tommy.

MAA: You have been critical of your own output at times. How does this new album stack up to the history of PRONG?

TV: I thinks its one of the best ones, I mean it doesn’t have the cutting edge impact that Cleansing did where we were going in a new direction for heavy music in general. It isn’t anything ground breaking, but I think it’s up there in the quality of songs are up there with the best we’ve ever done. That was important for me. I wouldn’t know where to start to try to break any ground anymore, it seems like everything’s been done. So with that in mind, it was a matter of just getting the best songs we could possibly put together in reflection of the previous PRONG records, without going off in a complete different direction like we did with Scorpio Rising for instance. Where I think it failed, it wasn’t the right time. We didn’t work at it as hard. I just had a batch of songs I was just fooling around with. This wasn’t like that. This was much more intense. We put the work in and let the chips fall where they may. I feel this is one of the most hard working efforts I’ve ever done as far as PRONG goes. As far as anything really.

 

MAA: Carved In Stone has a lot more thrash feeling and a lot more lead guitar playing on it. Was that a conscious decision?

TV: It was conscious decision. I felt if the solos meant something or were designed properly, that was something I had the energy to work on. I was never been the kinda guy that practices and sits around figuring stuff out. It’s just been when I’m forced to do that like learning like with either MINISTRY: Mike Scaccia’s guitar parts or in DANZIG: with Glenn, John Christ and Todd Youth’s parts. I felt my chops got better. So I was able to do some solos that weren’t a bunch of noise or something that was completely off the cuff. I didn’t wanna do that. We had the option to design some solos that were precise that are actually part of the song, again. I wanted it to be a guitar record and a song record, rather then relying on haphazard routes like loops or other things to get more dynamics.

 

 

MAA: Between your work in DANZIG and MINISTRY would you say one or either have a reverse influence back to your work in PRONG?

TV: Not at all! PRONG is a completely different entity, it’s its own mindset. I don’t really listen to a hell of a lot of stuff. It all comes from the heart, really. I’m not out there scouring the charts or delving into countless hardcore metal records to find influences, I don’t have he energy to do that. I’m not being a snob, I just don’t have the time and energy to do that. I don’t want to do that or bring in any other project I’m involved in. I worked on the last two DANZIG records and Glenn has his own way of arranging stuff. Then with Al, I mentioned with his process, is highly computer oriented and I didn’t wanna do that either.

MAA: Where do you get your lyrical inspirations from?

TV: I think its in personal troubles and a way of coping. I try to find a way to deal with emotions. Then I have opinions too, so its a combination of those two things. There’s also some strict writing on this album, which is more like story lines. Like with the single, “Revenge Best Served Cold”, that is something completely outside. The title track also has a universal element to it where I feel there’s an external power that enables PRONG to still survive. Some outside force that is from the future, from the present and the past. Something paranormal. Then you get the angry ones like list of grievances. Then you have a song like “State of Rebellion”. I have a close friend who’s always talking politics with me. I try to leave these type of things to my songs a little bit. But when I’m hanging out or something I just don’t wanna hear about it. Let’s just ‘watch the game’ and shut the fuck up!’ That’s what that’s all about. I’m over it, ya know? I’m old school. I was brought up to never talk politics or religion with people. I’ve learned the hard way not to do that. (laughs) It’s not necessary.

 

Know your history.

 

MAA: Looking back did you know at the time that Beg To Differ and Prove You Wrong were going to influence so many other bands?

TV: For years I didn’t really see that. People have been saying that for a long time, its mainly people in the press. We’ve toured with younger bands, I don’t wanna name names, but the attitude we got was ‘Who the fuck are you guys?’ I mean completely unfamiliar with PRONG and didn’t like us. I almost feel like I’ve gotten more of that attitude out there then any congratulations. But on a personal side, I had to re-investigate the early PRONG records recently and I listened to Beg to Differ. I haven’t heard it in years! I was like ‘oh my god!’ How did this thing come about? It’s bizarre to me. I don’t know how that really came together like that. It’s like that song “Carved Into Stone”. It was something outside myself made that happen. I have not a clue! I wasn’t even really playing guitar that long when PRONG did that record. Its bizarre to me the things that go down. It wasn’t even calculated. On a personal level, I’m happy with the discography, but it’s not like I go down the street and people are ‘Oh Tommy!” I don’t hear it that much. It’s mainly press people, but other bands, they either don’t recognize it or they don’t know. If anything about the past, like when I was forced to re-investigate Beg To Differ, I just kinda of zap it into the void. Like anything in the past, I think everyone needs to do that, its like a personal psycho-therapy in a way. It’s all good. I don’t have any bitterness towards anything, maybe at one time I did. It’s been so worn out, I just have a different attitude about that stuff.

 

(Special thanks to Tommy Victor, PRONG and Freeman Promotions)

Keith (Keefy) Chachkes

 

 

 

 

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ALBUM REVIEW: THE RESURRECTION SORROW

Friday, July 8th, 2011

Scorpion Savior Sessions (Self-Released)

Another band coming out of the scene in New York City is THE RESURRECTION SORROW. While they are busy preparing their full length due out later this year, they have just out an EP to prepare fans for what is to come. As a hybrid of classic proto-metal, doom  and  thrash the band is both heavy and catchy all at once with cool melodic elements at play. The first song “Pale Kiss (Endless Storm) sounds like a lost out take from an early  DANZIG record both musically and vocally. Singer Alex Dementia (AFTER DARK) is one part Glenn and two parts Peter Steele with his wailing, mournful delivery. The songs urgent tone and rocking beat will definitely have heads banging away. The guitar tone has a very swampy doom metal quality to it that I really like too. Bassist Alex Coelho (ex-MALESTROM) does some very fine melodic walking lines that really give the track it’s soulfulness. “Scorpion Savior” is next and has a really sinister riff and has a lot in common with EXHORDER, DOWN or even CROWBAR. The band has a knack for low-down, dirty southern metal at its finest. This track has a hypnotic groove that captures the imagination and makes you think evil thoughts, man. Dementia uses his more growling voice on this track and it works to full effect. With its excellent chorus I would imagine this song would go over great in a live setting.  Closing out the short-player is the raucous “Burning Halo”. More great riffs, nods to the blues and devilish guitar licks punctuate the grinding track. This release has whetted my appetite for TRS and I’m anxious to see how they build off of this when the full album drops.

 

(For press inquiries please contact EarsplitPR)

 

GRADE: B+

by Keith (Keefy) Chachkes

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Live Show Review: DANZIG

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

House of Blues
Boston, MA

Since I had just seen ISIS and THE MELVINS the night before I was only able to catch DANZIG tonight. Too bad because I like the SEVENTH VOID album and heard a good review of GORGEOUS FRANKENSTEIN (featuring Doyle Only!) from my p.i.c. Metal Manny when I arrived at the venue. Danzig rarely tours anymore and I was really excited to see him- exhaustion be damned! Touring behind the long-awaited new record Deth Red Saboth (Evilive/The End Records) it is great to see Glenn out on the road doing his thing as he should be. His disdain of touring aside he always puts on a great show. Besides, the world of metal needs its remaining heroes to shine brightly right now. With the recent passing of Ronnie James Dio and several others it just cements the fact that you should never pass up a chance to see a legacy artist.

No sooner had I showed up but the lights go down, the giant skull logo is unveiled to cheers and the show began. After the creepy dirge-like intro music Tommy Victor (PRONG/MINISTRY) came on stage and kicked off the riff to “Skin Carver”. Glenn hit the stage like a maniac, high five-ing the front row of fans and looking ready to kill. People knock him for a lot of reasons, but no one can dispute his talent or tenacity as a performer. His performance was so visceral and intense it is impossible not to feel the emotions his bleak lyrics. He spent a lot of the time during the show crouched at the front of the stage so fans could sing along and join the fun. In a live setting Glenn sacrifices some of his ranges’ subtleties for the power he needs to pull off his songs, but he does a fine job nonetheless. Following the opener with the classic “Twist of Cain” set up the pace for the night of classics and more recent hits from his solo catalogue. Next was a new song, the killer “Hammer of the Gods” which has the speed and the gusto of the early DANZIG records.

This song featured the kick-ass drumming of Johnny Kelly (TYPE-O-NEGATIVE/SEVENTH VOID) who really shined tonight. Joined by Steve Zing (SAMHAIN) this is the most talented and heavy band Glenn has had behind him since the beloved I-IV albums lineup. Knowing that the fans have been fiending to hear those classics he obliged with the epic “Her Black Wings”, “Tired of Being Alive” and the chill inducing “How the Gods Kill”. Another new song, “On a Wicked Night” was played and went over very well since it is the lead single if such a thing still exists for metal bands. A few songs surprised me tonight like “It’s Coming Down” and “Thirteen” which I had never heard before live. The latter is known as the theme song from the movie “The Hangover” and Glenn mentioned it was written for and recorded by his hero Johnny Cash. For the heavier, more recent songs like “Unspeakable” and “Black Angel, White Angel” Tommy Victor played a version of his trademark Schecter axe with a cool skeletal paint job on the body.
(more…)

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Gitter vs. Shay: Gitter’s 10 Hardcore Essentials (Part G)

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

  1. Bad Brains –“The ROIR Cassette” – Zeppelin fused into the Projects in Chocolate City (Washington DC). The Brains were about as “outsider” as you could get. Typical scenario: White America plundering Black Soul. The Brains are responsible for everything that came afterwards. Everything.  First time I saw them they blew my world to pieces.  MY Led Zeppelin.
  2. SS Decontrol –’Get It Away”-  Guitarist Al “Lethal” Barile & Co. lived two towns over from where I grew up on Boston’s North Shore.  Aside from being known as the most powerful band in the land, the mythos that sprung around these Puritanical Bostonians was incredible.  The tale was they were so Straight Edge they would walk around their own shows with flashlights and slap beers out of people’s hands. Straight Edge of the most evil proportions.  I hated all the jocks and beer-guzzlers in my High School.  So did they. And they were willing to dole out punishment.
  3. Black Flag “’82 Demos” – This one’s a relatively easy bootleg to find of the mighty Flag 5-piece lineup demoing three albums of post-Damaged material. The reason I go with this rather than a full “proper” Flag album is simple: Black Flag was the band that bended and broke the hardcore template early on.  Yes, the classic songs were sung by Keith Morris, Ron Reyes and Dez Cadena, but c’mon, Henry was the piece of the puzzle that brought it a whole step up. Catch them here with Hammerin’ Hank, Dez  Cadena on 2nd guitar and Chuck Dukowski  on bass. This was the band’s best line-up. These very live demo versions simply crush any studio takes you already know. “My War” never sounded so good.
  4. Minor Threat-“Salad Days” 7”- “The baby has grown ugly, it’s no longer cute,” sang Ian MacKaye. It felt like a whole chapter closing on all of our lives. “Do you remember when?  Yeah, so do I…” Minor Threat had already broken up when this was released. It was   time to leave it all to someone else.
  5. Dag Nasty-“Can I Say”-This felt like a rebirth of the hardcore spirit in 1985. When former Minor Threater Brian Baker’s guitar comes charging  in “Values Here” and Dave Smalley (ex-DYS)  starts yelling, it sounds like hardcore matters again.
  6. Corrosion of Conformity-“Animosity”-Pepper Keenan had yet to sauté these North Caolinians with his New Orleans special sauce. This is a whole different C.O.C.. Packaged in a colorful Pushead sleeve, C.O.C.  anno 1985 was a blindingly powerful trio that started to push hardcore into metallic turf.  Mike Dean howled, Reed Mullin bashed and Woody Weatherman made it sound like Tony Iommi was playing at triple speed.
  7. Cro-Mags –“Age of Quarrel” – Hare Krishnas trippin’ on Motorhead and Bad Brains. This might be the record where hardcore’s paradigm shifted towards metal. “Age of Quarrel” remains as fresh now as it did in 1986.  Fronted by one John Joseph and backed by the just as visible bassist Harley Flanangan (who have spent  a couple decades now  hatin’ on each other), the ‘Mags were truly a band to be afraid of both musically and personally.
  8. Discharge-“Fight Back” 7” – “Fight the system/Fight Back!”  It doesn’t get more straightforward than this.  The first word in hardcore compressed into  1:20.  You should wake up every day and put  this on before pouring milk into your Count Chocula.
  9. Siege-“Drop Dead” demo-Thankfully, this has been bootlegged, mastered and remastered a zillion times.  If ever there was an outcast bunch, Siege were it. Scorned by the Boston hardcore crew, their 7 song demo endures pretty much better than every record from 1983-1984. Yeah, they may have played eight shows but their short lived legacy casts a long shadow.  Modern metal, crust and grind are all in Siege’s debt.  Legend is that as this tape got passed around the underground by the time it got into the hands of the Napalm Death members-to-be, it sounded so fucked it gave rise to the sound of grind. It still makes me want to kill.
  10. Samhain-“November  Coming Fire” – Glenn Danzig’s last stop before pairing up with Rick Rubin. It may not be as poppy or enduring as the Misfits but it just feels more muscular, sexier and more evil. I still go bananas when I hear “Let The Day Begin”.

Honorable Mentions: Gism-Detestation, Die Kreuzen-Die Kreuzen, Negative Approach-Tied Down, Jerry’s Kids-Is This My World?, Gorilla Biscuits-Start Today, Adolescents-Adolescents, Earth Crisis-Gommorah’s Season Ends, Leeway-Born To Expire, Disfear-Face The Storm, Rites of Spring-Rites of Spring, Rollins Band-Lifetime, 7Seconds-Committed for Life EP, Snapcase-Progression Through Unlearning, Articles of Faith-Give Thanks, Bad Religion-Generator, GBH-City Baby Attacked By Rats, Sick of It All-Blood, Sweat and No Tears.

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