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Mastodon working on follow-up to Crack the Skye |
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Pekka ![]() MMA Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: 26 Mar 2010 Location: Helsinki Status: Offline Points: 1366 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 15 Apr 2011 at 3:05pm |
Woohaa!
![]() Mastodon Hard at Work on Follow-up to 'Crack the Skye'
Something dark, cerebral, and dizzying is gathering power in the streets of Atlanta. Four hyper-talented musicians are working together to create the ultimate combination of memorable riffs, jaw-dropping beats, mild-altering vocal harmonies, and unearthly guitar passages. Yes, "We've got a ProTools rig set up and [guitarist] Bill [Kelliher's] been learning how to use that," Mastodon drummer Brann Dailor recently told Noisecreep. "We're recording bits and pieces and stringing up three or four riffs together and testing them out. It's super-heavy and it sounds killer, so it doing what it's supposed to do. It's doing what every other Mastodon song has done for us. We really just try to play music that we dig and that's bad-ass. Our approach has always been exactly the same, and we've learned that we need to do it that way. Otherwise, it's just not right." Between earth-rattling jam sessions, Dailor talked to Noisecreep about the band's creative process, the sonic vibe of the songs, the tentative concept for the record, and how his feelings about religion, mortality, and mythology are factoring into the music. Dailor also discussed Mastodon's recent experience scoring the movie 'Jonah Hexx,' as well as his predilection for Spongebob Squarepants. Brann Dailor: We've got tons of stuff. We've got too much stuff. We go in there every day and just work on it. It's coming out great. I think it's a little more collaborative, with everyone chipping in. Brent has a lot of great stuff. [Guitarist] Bill [Kelliher]'s got a lot of cool riffs, too. There are so many, it's hard to know which ones we're gonna use. But we go in and jam all the time and record stuff. Then we sort it out later. It doesn't seem as proggy. There's moments, but it seems more riff-oriented. It seems a little more stripped down. [2004's] 'Leviathan' was a little more stripped down, and it feels like that to me. Everything always changes once you go in the studio, but at the moment it seems like a really super-heavy We do and he said he'd do it, but nothing's finalized and we still have to meet with some other people just to make sure. But for us, we don't need that much production. We just need to get in a room with somebody and hit record, and if they have some cool ideas, that's cool too. But I don't feel we lack any vision as a band. We usually have everything mapped out, as far as how the story line goes and what the visual imagery looks like. And that kind of plays in your head along with the riffage. We're pretty good at arranging and making the parts flow as a song. We just kind of need somebody to put the mics in the right spots and make it sound great and feed our egos as we go along. Yeah, totally. It's all worked out. I don't want to talk about it yet, though. It's not totally ready, but it's gonna be cool. I feel like it's a classic story about redemption. It's a mythology that's invented because we care so deeply as human beings for one another, it's hard to think that you just go into a hole [after you die] and that's it. So you want to see your loved ones be exalted in some way, or be a part of something that's much more grandiose. I think you go into a hole and that's pretty much it. It's depressing, so I don't want to think of life that way. As much as I try to fool myself that Bigfoot exists and there is a Santa Claus, and when I finally do pass away I'm gonna go somewhere awesome, I can't do it. There's just no evidence for it. I think we're just a bunch of f---in' animals and we live, then we die. But no one likes to think that way. If that's your best friend or your mom or your grandmother, you want to think that she's going to go to this amazing place, and that makes it okay for people, and that's a big part of why religion exists in the first place. Everything dies and everyone dies and the last thing you want to think is, "Oh, well, it's just over. There's just darkness and nothing." You want to think that Grandma is in a better place, and you say that to yourself to console yourself. And also, for people who are dying, it makes them feel better to think they're going somewhere else. They rationalize. They go, "Well, that was really good, and I'm ready to go to this great place, so I'm f---in' set. No problem." We're not working on any other films, but I thought that was a really cool experience. It gave us a chance to be spontaneously creative and write music on the spot, which I think has helped with our writing process with this record. We're writing things and then moving on and not dwelling too much on anything. And then we'll come back and visit it later and say, "Okay, what's great about this and what's not so great?" I would definitely do it again if anybody needed some riffage for their movie picture film. We'd be willing to create some. It was cool, it was fun and we made some great friends out of it. I'm pretty much knee-deep in Mastodon. Bill's got the I've been watching a lot of documentaries on streaming Netflix through my Xbox. I saw 'The Staircase' recently. It was a Sundance true crime miniseries program where this guy's wife supposedly falls down the stairs. And then you go and see it. And they show her and there's blood everywhere. And you're like, "How the f--- did a fall down the stairs produce that much blood? I don't see it." That was pretty incredible. I also watched one called 'The Suicide Tourists,' which was a PBS [Frontline] program. Assisted suicide is legal in Switzerland, so a lot of people with terminal illnesses have traveled there for assisted suicides. If you like to cry then you should watch that. It's pretty depressing. I like depressing movies, though. They work for me. But after I watched 'The Suicide Tourists,' I had to watch two episodes of 'Spongebob Squarepants' back to back or I wouldn't have been able to sleep. Edited by Pekka - 15 Apr 2011 at 3:05pm |
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Stooge ![]() MMA Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator/Retired Admin Joined: 25 Mar 2010 Location: Whitby, ON, CAN Status: Offline Points: 5637 |
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I was wondering when they'd start a follow-up album. Looking forward to it.
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The Angry Scotsman ![]() MMA Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: 08 Aug 2010 Location: New Jersey, US Status: Offline Points: 1076 |
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It is well known I didn't really like CtS at all.
I did enjoy Blood Mountain a good bit, but not like their first 2 albums. So I guess Mastodon is really on the downslide for me. I'll listen whenever their next comes out, but with no expectations. ![]() |
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Megadeth, Metallica, Slayer and Testament. The real Big Four of thrash metal!
Listen to doom metal, worship Satan |
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Pekka ![]() MMA Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: 26 Mar 2010 Location: Helsinki Status: Offline Points: 1366 |
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Did you read the story? Dailor said it seemed a lot less proggy, kind of Leviathanish, I thought immediately that you should be excited.
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Balthamel ![]() MMA Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: 26 Mar 2010 Location: Norway Status: Offline Points: 1336 |
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sounds like it is gonna by an epic dooooooooooooooooooooooooooooom metal album with a focus on the ooooooooms droning, dark, corupting darkness, that will eat matter
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Coffin Joe ![]() Forum Groupie ![]() ![]() Joined: 25 Apr 2011 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Points: 56 |
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I'm looking forward to this!
![]() ![]() Edited by Coffin Joe - 29 Apr 2011 at 12:16am |
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Balthamel ![]() MMA Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: 26 Mar 2010 Location: Norway Status: Offline Points: 1336 |
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fixed
![]() i think all the four albums were good and they were able to progress in a natural way without forceing it, like their willingness to push for being headliner bands, thye waited til the chance was offerd, not the other way around,. This is one of the big misconceptions about Mastodon, "everyone" think they are like these metal primadonas and media hores "signed to a major record labal". In all honesty, few metal bands have shown more modesty, honesty, maturety when needed, when it comes to self promoting, setting goals, but not bite to much from the cake take on small bite at a time and not force to get famous and not crave for the riches.
they were cool like ice, not hot headed (but with some small fists trown at for example at the journalist who asked about their likeings of DT were they just gave a kind of mocking answer. like showed that (if needed) they can thorw mental punches.
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Coffin Joe ![]() Forum Groupie ![]() ![]() Joined: 25 Apr 2011 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Points: 56 |
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I've been a fan since blood mountain, and in my opinion they have only gotten better and better. CtS just blew me away... a full fledge concept prog-metal album incorporating their southern-sludge sound - wow!! I was lucky enough to get my hands on the Mastodon vinylboxset at an affordable price, so later on I have delved down in the earlier recordings, those are great, but the record that really stands out is still CtS.
They seem like a hardworking band, that keeps focus both in writing and regarding the press. Imagine getting asked the same questions over and over again, it's a miracle they haven't killed anyone yet!
Edited by Coffin Joe - 29 Apr 2011 at 9:32am |
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Time Signature ![]() MMA Special Collaborator ![]() ![]() Honorary Collaborator Joined: 04 Apr 2010 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Points: 7690 |
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I prefer "Blood Mountain" to "Crack the Skye", but they're both very good albums, and I am very interested to hear what they come up with this time.
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