Freddy Cricien has been a part of the New York hardcore scene for most of his life, having performed onstage with his brother/Agnostic Front vocalist Roger Miret by the time he was 7 years old. And not only did he go on to form Madball, but also recorded their highly revered debut Ball Of Destruction, all at the age of 12. Since then, Freddy and Madball have continued to go strong, most recently releasing their new EP Rebellionvia his own label Black N Blue.
In other words, not many could better evoke the spirit of NYHC better than Freddy Cricien. That’s why we thought it would be interesting to see which five NYHC albums the Madball frontman would pick as his favorite. So without further ado, click on the page numbers below to see which albums Cricien picked (along with favorite tracks) and what he had to say about the releases’ significance to the NYHC scene. Click here to read more at Metalinsider.net
The Verizon Insider contest allowing one lucky Nickelback fan to win an electric guitar signed by all four members of the band ends at 11:59 PM PST today (Friday, July 20). Click here to enter!
[This interview was conducted in 2011, to coincide with the 10th Anniversary reissue of Slipknot‘s landmark second studio album, Iowa.]
Once upon a time, a gang of masked Midwesterners went from cult favorites to metal gods overnight. On August 28, 2001, Slipknot dropped an acidic, boiling slab of brutality on the world called Iowa, and percussionist M. Shawn Crahan– a.k.a.Number Six, a.k.a. Clown– was one of the group’s masterminds. One of the two founding members of The Pale Ones, the group that became Slipknot, along with late bassist Paul Gray, Crahan has been a crucial force shaping the nine-piece band’s image and concept from the very beginning, right up to directing the hour-long documentary Goat, included with the 10th Anniversary deluxe edition of Iowa, out now. He spoke to us about his memories of how and why Iowa came to be, whether the band will ever play the whole album live, and more.
Iowa seems heavily inspired by the band’s experiences traveling the world during the touring cycle following the debut, so why was it called Iowa?
Well, basically, you have your whole life to make your first record, and because of that, you have a lot of expectations for your dreams, and in this life, I think we all know how hard it is to achieve a dream that’s not so easily obtainable. And when this happens, your whole outlook on life changes. So going through what we went through on the first record, which was basically receiving the dream, making the record, going through preproduction, recording, mastering, mixing, seeing Los Angeles, being exposed to people we’d never been exposed to before, then running the gauntlet of what touring is—because touring certainly isn’t my idea of how I would do things. And once you go out there and you play all the sheds and you play all the clubs—it’s pretty easy to think about, because you roll through a certain town and there’s only so many clubs you can play at, so that’s where you play. And we got big kinda quick, so within that first cycle we went from alternating opening slots on Ozzfest to being the second band on the Coal Chamber tour to pretty much doing our own tour, always coming back to the same clubs. So we’d realize, “Oh, we’re coming back to this city. I hate this club, and I hate these people. And I hate this circumstance.” So we’re learning all this while having achieved the only thing we all ever wanted to do, which is get out of Iowa in search of a larger world and live our dreams. So not only did we get out of Iowa, we got all over the United States, all over Canada, Australia, Europe, all on one album cycle, learning all the ups and downs. Then you start hearing about the sophomore curse, and for us it was just strange that people wanted to even interject their opinions into a place they shouldn’t even be sticking their noses in. And I think that’s how it all came about. We came home from such an intense cycle and went right into work—Paul and Joey and Jim just went right in, and they took all the angst and frustration of everything we were forced to learn and wished we hadn’t—but don’t get me wrong, there were just as many if not more better times, doing everything we did. All the beautiful people we met, all the beautiful places we got to go, all the amazing shows. But there was also the opposite side, the things you didn’t think were going to come with your dream. So it was about nine guys having this dream to do the only thing they ever wanted to do since they were little kids, and we put it all into perspective, saying, look, this is what we wanted to do our whole lives, and going through all that dark shit on the first cycle and just having it shoved down your throat and falling into a dark place, whether it be, I’m not embarrassed to say, drugs and alcohol and situations that you normally would never be in and having the wrong people around you and all these things, they’re all there for the second record while people are talking to you about the sophomore curse and how many more “Wait and Bleed”s they want, and that’s not what we want. So it was truly a way for us to dig deep and remember the roots of why we needed to get out, and pinpoint it to an exact word, and there’s no better word than just Iowa. Where we’re from, what raised us, where the thought process came from, where we were born and maybe where we would die.
Was there a song that, once you recorded it, you sort of realized, oh, okay, this is the kind of record we’re making?
Well, you know, it’s gonna be different for each person. For me, when we wrote “Skin Ticket”…everything started over at Paul’s little brother’s house, and then everything moved over to a big warehouse, and we used to practice at my house all the time. I bought a house, and the band moved in my house before I moved into it, to finish this record Iowa. And we started writing this song “Skin Ticket.” I can remember being in the basement—we built a room just for us and it’s still like that, same carpet and everything from ten years ago. I put outlets everywhere for everybody. It’s hard to explain without being in front of you, but at the end there’s this breakdown, a crescendo that’s also a falling apart. And a lot of it’s in the drums. There’s myself and Chris and Joey, and if you listen, everything is building just to this crescendo of crazy, distraught, dysfunctional whatever, but at the same time it’s breaking down like into different times and everybody is on but off, but off in the right sense. And I can remember playing that and watching us, going, Wow, this is the farthest we’ve ever gotten in our heads as a band. We’re gone right now. I’m watching everyone working to something that’s going up and getting tighter and angrier and more intense and at the same time it’s falling apart in different areas to get to that end, and I was like, Whoa, this is what being in a band is really like when your thought processes can meet and you can connect so beautifully. And I was like, this next shit is gonna hurt people. This whole album is gonna hurt people in a way that they have been hurt, and they’re gonna use it to heal, and it’s gonna help, and really exorcise the demons and be something that’s very, very needed in today’s world.
How did the band’s relationship with producer Ross Robinson change between album #1 and album #2?
I think maybe back then I might have said, you know, pressure this, pressure that, but in all honesty, you have to learn and Ross is the best coach ever. He taught us how to let go, he subjected us to things that we didn’t want to be subjected to. As much as he was scared of Iowa, we were scared of L.A., and as much as he doesn’t understand Iowa, we didn’t understand L.A. We didn’t understand preproduction, or what it meant to get in a room and have the door locked on you and some guy in your face telling you your part sucks for the song. Ross never came up to me or to anybody in the band and said “That sucks,” it was always like “OK, I hear what you’re doing, but I think you can do better.” So there was a learning curve on that first record, and I think Ross was such an excellent mentor and teacher and producer that when we came to the second record, we had blood in our eyes. We had been through it. And he came to many shows, so he knew it, and I can remember he got into motocross and he did some insane fuckin’ jump and broke his back, and that’s how he started the record with us. With a broken back! Complete pain, just dysfunctional insanity. And I can remember talking to him on the phone and him saying he was running and working out, just to get ready to do the next record, to be healthy for us and to be able to work longer days and longer nights and get ready to fight the people that were trying to get in so we wouldn’t be imprinted by what people wanted. In fact, I can remember Ross making me smash my cell phone against the wall ’cause the outside influences were trying to get in. He’s always been just a great fuckin’ producer, one of a kind…he does not give a fuck when it comes to making music, you know what I mean? If you’re not in the band, then he doesn’t give a fuck. He is the man. So he’s always been on our side. He always let us make the final decision on what we wanted, and if it wasn’t something he necessarily agreed with, he did his best to make sure that he got the best out of us. I think we always got along. There was never any pressure with Ross. Never.
A lot of bands have been going out and playing albums front to back in recent years. Would you consider doing that with Iowa?
Well, we’ve talked about these things, you know, but our fans are so rabid—I don’t think our fans are really ready to get into that thought process as of yet. We’re still a fairly new band, in that we’ve been together 12, 13 years, something like that, and we still have only four records, because we take a while to do one, we do it right, then we tour it to hell, we kill ourselves, we take a year to repair, we take another year to get bored, refocus, pay attention to what’s around us, reflect on what was, get back in the studio and do it again. So over this whole time, we haven’t been a band that’s wanted to get off its record label, make a bunch of shitty fuckin’ records, and whatever. We’ve stuck to painting masterpieces in our minds, and I think when the maggots and our culture—we’re not a band, we’re a culture—there’s a certain thought process that comes with needing to see Slipknot, and I don’t think anybody’s ready to commit to, “OK, Slipknot is coming to my town to just play Iowa and that’s all we’re gonna see.” I mean, people still need to hear “[sic].” They need to hear “Surfacing.” Now they need to hear “Duality.” “Psychosocial.” “Pulse of the Maggots.” “Left Behind.” They need all these songs to carry them through this world they live in.
Joey and I have sat down a lot of times and talked about it, but this is how crazy we are—we’ve been like, “Fuck it, we’ll just play all four records in one night.” We didn’t even say hey, we could come down to a smaller venue and do four nights in a row, an album a night. We were like, fuck it, we’ll play all four albums in a row, from beginning to end. That’s kinda how we talked about it, ’cause we’re into the thought process of it, not the logistics of it. But yeah, I do believe there’ll be a day when we do that, but I don’t think our fans would want that right now. But I can’t speak for them. I could be 100 percent wrong. But I know we just played Rock In Rio in front of 150,000 people, and when you’re going from “[sic]” to “Eyeless” to “Wait and Bleed,” and ending with “Surfacing” and “People = Shit” and “Left Behind”…it’s like a meal. You’re not just eating steak, there’s gravy and potatoes and something you like to drink. You got all the best things you want to enjoy your meal. In the future, when it’s time and we can settle down and get into that thought process of returning to that era and doing it correctly, I’m sure we will do it. Because I think it’d be good for us and I think it’d be good for people. Because I look at our whole career here, and there are so many songs off the first album we’ve never played live. There are so many songs off the second record that we’ve never played live. Same with the third, same with the fourth. And I remember on the Vol. 3 tour cycle, towards the end we decided to add “Skin Ticket,” and I remember us looking at each other thinking, that was the best thing of the night. And I don’t know if it was new and we got to add it to this rigorous thing we’d been doing, but looking back on it and watching the tapes and listening to it, we were like, No, it’s just really good. And we can still do it. And we’re a good enough band to bring ourselves to those occasions, and it just felt good mixing it in with all the other stuff, and we realized that all the other colors on our palette are attainable at any time. It’s just up to us to mix ’em.
Slipknot‘s first-ever compilation, Antennas to Hell, will be available everywhere July 24; pre-order it now on iTunes, or grab the deluxe three-disc version (which includes a DVD featuring every one of the band’s videos, and more) from the Roadrunner webstore!
Goregrind roadhounds EXHUMED will bring their hymns of repugnance to the live arena again on this year’s edition of the Summer Slaughter tour, set to commence tomorrow at the House Of Blues in Los Angeles. This run will mark the return of former bassist Bud Burke, who will take the place of Wes Caley on guitar.
Comments EXHUMED frontman Matt Harvey: “We’re psyched to welcome Bud Burke back in the ranks of EXHUMED, this time on lead guitar. For those of you who knew him as our bassist (from ’99 – ’04), you will be pleasantly surprised when he melts your face onstage with the band for the Summer Slaughter tour. Rob [Babcock], Mike [Hamilton] and I are all excited to have someone with killer chops and a deep history with the band on board. We look forward to coming to your town, drinking all your beer and then making fun of your record collection as usual!
“After the Canadian Ritual tour with THE BLACK DAHLIA MURDER, we made the decision to part ways with guitarist Wes Caley, and Bud was the perfect person to step in on lead guitar. I know Wes‘ new project, DOWNFALL, is currently in the works and will be awesome and we wish him the best. In the meantime, we’ll see all your drooling, sweaty faces on the road!”
EXHUMED is continuing to tour in support of its latest album, “All Guts, No Glory”, which sold around 900 copies in the United States in its first week of release. The CD debuted at No. 32 on the Top New Artist Albums (Heatseekers) chart, which lists the best-selling albums by new and developing artists, defined as those who have never appeared in the Top 100 of The Billboard 200.
“All Guts, No Glory” was released on July 5, 2011 via Relapse Records. The follow-up to 2003’s “Anatomy Is Destiny” was recorded at Arcane Digital Recordings in Arizona with engineer Ryan Butler (MISERY INDEX) and at Trench Studios with John Haddad (ABYSMAL DAWN, INTRONAUT). It was mixed and mastered at Mana Recording Studios by Brian Elliott (GRAVES OF VALOR). The album was also made available on deluxe, saw-blade shaped vinyl and as a limited-edition two-disc set.
HALFORD guitarist“Metal” Mike Chlasciak will release a digital-only EP, “This Is War”, next month. The offering named after the second single from Mike‘s upcoming solo album, “The Metalworker”, will also feature additional tracks from the full-length CD.
“This Is War” will be released on Tuesday, August 14 via Chlasciak‘s own imprint CMM Entertainment and will be available via iTunes, Amazon MP3 and most other major digital distributors.
“This Is War” track listing:
01. This Is War
02. Tonight We Ride (Instrumental)
03. Hell No!
04. M Is For Metal (Instrumental)
“The Metalworker” features Chlasciak and vocalist Carlos Zema (OUTWORLD, VOUGAN) alongside Kevin Talley (DAATH, CHIMAIRA, HATE ETERNAL, SIX FEET UNDER) on drums and Mike LePond (SYMPHONY X) on bass.
Produced by Mike, “The Metalworker” was mostly recorded at Mike‘s House Of Metal Studios in New Jersey and mixed by Orlando Villasenor at Dead Room Studio in San Antonio, Texas. Artwork was provided by Guilherme Sevens of Sevens Design Studio (ADAGIO, PAINSIDE).
“I am looking forward to releasing ‘This Is War’ in just a few weeks,” says Mike. “It is a four-song collection of uncompromising metal that also features some definite straight-up sick guitar shred. You have two songs that Carlos sang on, one of them being ‘This Is War’, while ‘Tonight We Ride’ and ‘M Is For Metal’ are great, over-the-top, heavy guitar-hero instrumental tracks.”
In other news, in the prog-rock special September issue of Guitar World magazine (Steve Vai/Tosin Abasi cover) you can find the latest installment of Mike‘s “Metal For Life” guitar column called “Pick Your Power Metal”. In this column, Mike shows metal guitarists a wide variety of pick-hand techniques, from using all downstrokes the alternate picking to economy picking and more. The lesson offers guitarists a systematic approach to building up an arsenal of techniques that will allow them to play with more expression, control and power.
Thrash metal band PIROSAINT have announced the addition of Billy Cunningham (former NJ’s WARHORSE) as their new vocalist. Currently the band is recording 5 tracks for the upcoming EP album that will be named simply “Pirosaint”, the promo track will be release in a few weeks.
Drummer Ignacio Orellana has commented on the vocalist’s addition:
“Now that we have found Billy C., everything is going to be easier, we already had some tracks ready to be worked on, we supposed to have guest musicians on those tracks but now is a whole new story. Billy C. has been great and he is a great fit for our music. The people will get to hear PIROSAINT’s live shows, exactly the way that we do on the records.”
PIROSAINT have been confirmed as a supporting act for STATIC X on Aug 19th @ The Chance Theater, this event marks the return of the band to the live shows. PIROSAINT is:
Bill Smith – guitars Ignacio Orellana – drums Billy Cunningham – vocals RonBuckner – bass
THE ROCK ALCHEMIST – Italian Rock Band from Turin with a strong sonic identity that blends modern rock with progressive, hard, alternative, and pop elements!
Kimmo Kuusniemi’s SARCOFAGUS return with a Historic 2010 Concert Video Premiere on YouTube! Click image to watch the video