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Dallas Music Guide: Bands often
make a big deal about how they feel their new records improve on the
past ones – how does “Getting Away With Murder” improve on “lovehatetragedy?”
Coby Dick: As far as my part is, I was really searching out my
vocals and fine-tuning them and trying to work on choruses that
would be just big sing-a-longs. So I tried to write the biggest
anthems I could for Papa Roach songs, you know. I’m just singing my
ass off on this new album and experimenting with some new shit.
There’s some stuff that’s metal style vocals, some stuff that’s more
punk, some that’s more rock n’ roll. I just try to fit into the
character of the song and what the song is doing, instead of just
saying, ‘This is my vocal style, and you have to write everything
around that.’ Then it just expands the horizons for the band, too.
As far as the music goes, it just is. In a weird way, it’s a little
bit scattered, but that’s what makes P. Roach who we are. We’ve
always been a band who – ever since our early releases before we had
a label – our albums were always pretty different from each other.
With this one, we made a progression that I think our fans will
really like, understand and get, so I’m really excited about it.
DMG: “lovehatetragedy” was the follow-up to “Infest,” which had just
blown up, but it wasn’t able to replicate the response – why do you
think that happened?
CD: There was all kinds of shit. We only got one single out of the
label. They only worked us one deep. The label wasn’t backing us
like they were. Granted, we wrote a record that was different, and
not all of our fans understood it, but fuck it, we just go where the
music takes us. It was a good experience for us – we went out and
toured, we went through Europe twice on that record, went to Japan,
went to Australia. Granted, we didn’t sell as many records as we did
the first time, but we sold a good amount of records – one and a
half, almost two million worldwide - so it wasn’t like we fell off
the face of the earth, but as far as promo goes, it as kind of…but
it’s cool, we’re not on Dreamworks anymore. When we were making
“Getting Away With Murder,” Dreamworks got bought out, so we didn’t
have a label telling us what to do and wasn’t telling us, ‘Hurry up,
get the record done,’ and we didn’t have any rushing, so that was
cool. But it was a little nerve-racking, because we didn’t know if
we had a deal or not when we were making this record. But when
Geffen heard it, they were flipping out about it, and that was a
really good thing for us, not to have extra hands in the pot while
we were cooking the shit.
DMG: “Rolling Stone” even listed the record as one of the most
disappointing – commercially – of the year, while they critically
raved about it.
CD: You win some, you lose some. It can be disheartening, you want
to be the biggest band in the world, after you’ve sold so many, but
the reality is that we weren’t. I think we came through it cool,
though. We came through it with a good perspective on where we stood
as a band and what the business is about. It’s hard business, and we
were either going to go and recapture what we had on “Infest” or
push things forward, and the vote was to push things forward. It’s
another risk that we’re taking by not giving them exactly what they
bought the first time, but fuck it, it’s a risk we’re willing to
take.
DMG: One thing that’s mentioned a lot is that the rapping is gone.
CD: That’s right, bitch, the rapping’s gone! I don’t feel like
rapping. I’m just over that shit. It’s cool, I dig hip-hop, I just
kind of became disenchanted with it. What it is and what it
represents in the mainstream…there are some good artists, but just
ninety percent of it is shit. There is good, underground hip-hop,
but I’m a rocker, man. As far as what we’re doing, I just want to be
a rocker. It’s what I wanted to be when I was a kid.
DMG: Who were you in front of the mirror back in the day?
CD: It was Poison for a while, then it was Guns N’ Roses, then I got
into Fugazi and Social Distortion and Helmet. I always wanted to be
a rocker.
DMG: Do you think that jumping ship from the whole rap/rock thing
has helped you guys or hurt you, at least to this point?
CD: I don’t know. It’s hard to say what we’d be like if we stayed a
rap-metal band. We have some people that are bummed, but you can’t
please everybody. We’d be selling ourselves out if we weren’t going
in the direction that we’re going in. We’re completely happy with
what we’ve achieved on this new album – I’m saying this before it
comes out, before we know what it sells or any of that shit. We
think we’re in the right place as a band right now. This is what
Papa Roach is, and where we’re at as artists and musicians in this
point in time. The thing with “lovehatetragedy” was cool because the
fans that got it love it. They’re really feelin’ it, and for me,
that’s rad, to walk away from it and have fans totally digging that
record.
DMG: What are you getting at with the lyrics to “Not Listening?” [chorus
lyric: “I’m not listening, not anymore/The more I learn the more I
ignore]
CD: Lyrically, it’s about looking into media and what’s going on in
the world today and it’s like it’s all half-truths. It’s never the
entire story. It’s filtered. They’re saying, ‘Let’s feed America
what we think they should eat.’ The more I look at all the aspects
of the media and look at what’s going on with it, I realize that
it’s all half-truths, and it’s not really the truth and that’s where
the chorus comes from. When I turn on the news, it’s like, ‘Am I
going to believe everything I see? Hell-motherfucking-no.’ Question
the media. People need to do that. This political shit that’s going
down right now is all shady, and people are okay with it, and I’m
not. People either ignore it on purpose, or they’ve just been
hoodwinked into believing that what’s going on now is the right
thing to be doing.
DMG: The record seems to focus on a theme of self-improvement –
songs frequently mention things you plan on stop doing or ways to
change yourself – are you undergoing some sort of cleansing?
CD: Definitely. Through the process of making this record, I quit
drinking and shit. I was taking a look at my life and saying,
‘What’s broken?’ No one’s going to fix my life for me, I won’t let
that happen. I have to go in and root out the shit that’s making me
crazy and deal with it. As far as fixing myself, that’s what this
music is for. I can cry on this band’s shoulder, and it’s okay, but
this isn’t like a ‘poor me’ record. It’s just a record about what’s
going on in my head. There are moments on this record that aren’t
really ‘I’m going to bare my soul to the entire world’ moments.
There are songs on the record like “Blanket of Fear” and “Tyranny of
Normality” and “Not Listening” and “Stop Looking, Start Seeing” that
are more like ‘rattle-your-bones, wake up and look at what’s going
on around you’ type songs. It takes you into different realms of
what’s going on in my head. I think that’s a good direction, because
we don’t want to be a pity-rock band, that’s not what we’re going
for. I’m not looking for some sympathy – just understanding.
DMG: The title track doesn’t open in typical fashion for you guys –
how did that come together?
CD: For us, it was just like, when we were writing this riff, it had
an industrial, metallic, rugged, insane vibe to it. So when we were
producing the demo, we took and made a drum loop from Dave playing a
beat live in a club, and put it on overdrive so it sounds all
blasted-out, put it in with a regular beat, made a loop, and just
started playing this riff over the loop, and worked on the chorus –
which is fucking huge in this song – and it just became what it is.
It’s like I said earlier, go where the music takes you and get into
the character of the song. It’s this dark, ominous, groovy,
evil-sounding song, and the ‘Getting away with murder’ line really
seemed to fit the character of what that song was. So hence, the
song is very different from a lot of the stuff on the record, but I
don’t think any one song represents the album as a whole, you have
to get into this piece of work we did to understand it. We don’t
want to put out a record that’s carbon-copies of every song –
‘here’s the melody part, this is the scream, and here’s the melody
again,’ and I think we succeeded – I don’t think it’s cookie-cutter,
every song is very different.
DMG: The final track, “Do Or Die,” has almost an Andrew WK vibe to
it – it’s really over the top and has tons of layers of guitars –
whose idea was it to go so over-the-top with that one?
CD: For us, that song is the mood swing within the song that really
makes that chorus pop out. The verse is real dark and has this
groovy riff and it’s kind of slimy, and then you go into this
anthemic, pop-rock chorus, and it has major chords and stuff. I
think the juxtaposition of the verse riff and the chorus make sit
stand out huge. As far as the guitars go, we were just going for big.
We achieved that shit. I think it’s the perfect song to be the last
song on the record. It’s just like you go through all this crazy
shit, these lyrics take you to all these different places, sometimes
dark, sometimes uplifting, and the end is like, ‘It’s never too late
to live your life, the time is now, it’s do or die,’ and through all
of it, there’s clarity, so it kind of caps it off cool. I like that
song a lot.
DMG: What’s the story about the problems with the cover art?
CD: Yeah, we have to put a Wal-Mart version out with a sticker over
our cover. It’s a bunch of skull and bones, and it says “Papa Roach”
with a bloody fingerprint. But since it’s a human heart with bird
wings, apparently it’s too graphic. I figured that in protest to
that, I’m going to go to Wal-Mart on the 31st and I’m going to buy a
shotgun. And our album. A censored version of our album and a
shotgun. It’s fucking ridiculous, the way everything is so uptight
right now and how everyone is trying to be so ultra-sensitive about
everything, it’s fucking obnoxious. There’s no room to be dangerous
anymore. It’s like we got to do what we do, and if they want to
censor us, they’re going to do it. And I’m going to have a middle
finger in the air the whole time.
DMG: What are the plans for touring once the record comes out?
CD: Come October, we’re going to put together a fucking strong
package, so the kids will want to pay their hard-earned money to
come see that shit. We’re going to do 1,500-2,500 person venues. We
want to try to do it while the single is really popping, so the
radio stations can let people know when we’re coming to town. I’m
really excited about this. I think it’s going to be a good run for
us.
DMG: What’s going on with Fight the Sky right now?
CD: Fight the Sky – it’s metal music. Our guitar tech plays guitar
for it, and another friend that’s on the road now with us is playing
guitar, and we have an African-American drummer. We have a mixed-nut
crazy metal band. It’s just crazy metal. It’s just something that’s
totally different than what P. Roach does. They were like, ‘Hey,
want to do some vocals on this?’ So I’ll do some vocals on the road,
pop in on some studios here and there. We’ll throw some shit on the
net, give some shit out for free, and release something once we’re
done touring with Papa Roach. We’re just doing it indie-style, we’re
not doing it through a major label. We’ll just get it out to the
kids through the underground. Who knows what the kids on the
underground will think. They might be surprised, because it’s pretty
fucking good. It’s cool to be involved in something that’s so
different.
Getting Away With Murder is released on August 31.
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