BETWEEN THE BURIED AND ME: Video Interview, Pro-Shot Live Footage Posted Online
April 28, 2010Metal Injection has posted two video clips featuring North Carolina's BETWEEN THE BURIED AND ME. First up, there is a new interview, conducted on the band's recent headlining run with CYNIC, THE DEVIN TOWNSEND PROJECT and SCALE THE SUMMIT. They discuss their recent video, "Obfuscation", the show "Lost", guitarist Paul Waggoner's hair, who has the worst-smelling farts and more. Additionally, Metal Injection has posted a multi-cam live clip of the band's performance of the lead single "Obfuscation" off their most recent release, "The Great Misdirect". The clip was shot at the Sonar in Baltimore, Maryland and features audio mixed by BTBAM's sound guy, Courtney Warner.
BETWEEN THE BURIED AND ME's latest album, "The Great Misdirect", sold 13,400 copies in the United States in its first week of release to debut at position No. 36 on The Billboard 200 chart.
"The Great Misdirect" was released on October 27 via Victory Records.
Vocalist Tommy Rogers recently told Noisecreep about BETWEEN THE BURIED AND ME's Jamie King-produced follow-up to 2007's "Colors", "It's definitely a step forward for us, I think. I don't know ... when we write records, we never want to repeat ourselves, and we definitely have done that. So, I was worried when we started writing this record that we were just going to end up with something that sounds like 'Colors', and that's definitely not the case."
According to Rogers, "The Great Misdirect" is "more dynamic than we've ever been." The band, he said, tried "different things" on this record, resulting in a rather equal mix of "mellow stuff and more intense stuff. It's definitely BETWEEN THE BURIED AND ME," Rogers added. "That's the coolest thing about our records. No matter what we do, it still sounds like us."
He continued, "It's a little over an hour of material, and it's definitely a lot of music. The thing with us is — yeah, we do have long songs, but we just try to never have a lot of filler. Some bands will have long songs, but half of the song will be a lot of filler. On 'Swim to the Moon' [the last track on the disc, which clocks in at over 18 minutes], there's no downtime. We try to pack everything with music, because we like to give people their money's worth."
Comments Disclaimer And Information