SUICIDE SILENCE: New Video Interview Posted Online
August 15, 2012Bryan Odell, a reporter from Lincoln, Nebraska, conducted an interview with California deathcore masters SUICIDE SILENCE. You can now watch the chat below.
During a June 2012 interview with Finland's Kaaos TV, SUICIDE SILENCE frontman Mitch Lucker stated about the progress of the songwriting sessions for the band's next album, "We've only pre-productioned the riffs, we haven't done pre-production with vocals, it's just programmed drums and guitars and bass so far, and then what we do with that, we take that into pre-production mode where we all go into a studio that we have at our drummer's house and write it, record it, track it with real drums so it's not programmed drums. Do all the click tracks out to make sure everyony's happy with how fast this is or how slow that is, and then bass tracks and then vocals, and then we start talking about sampling. And once that's done and we'll do 15 to 20 songs, then we take that to the studo and actually do it 100 percent and record it and then pick between those 20 songs which 12 or 13 we're gonna put on the record and what we're gonna do with the rest. So right now we're in phase, like, two of the new record, which is actually really far."
He added, "We've never taken this much time to write a record. We wrote 'The Cleansing' [2007] and recorded it live in two weeks. 'No Time To Bleed' [2009] took five weeks, 'The Black Crown' [2011] took three months. And this new one we're working on, we've been working on it for a longer amount of time than we've worked on any other record, so it should be by far another step up. I don't think we've ever gone back or retracted in the writing and the recording of our records. From 'The Cleansing' being live in two weeks to 'No Time To Bleed' to now where 'The Black Crown''s at, I think we're just gonna keep moving forward and never hitting a plateau. We always wanna incorporate new things, do new things, improve the quality of the sound, improve the quality of the songwriting, improve everything. And if we're not doing that, then we're just being fucking lazy, and we're not a lazy band; we work our asses off."
Regarding the lyrical inspiration for the next SUICIDE SILENCE album, Mitch said, "I write all the time; I write, like, 24/7. 'Cause just beng alive and everything inspires you day to day. Even being on a flight looking at the people that are two rows over from you, something they do can inspire an entire song. I'll write fucking 10 pages about it and then just decipher that and break that down into a song that means something to someone else. A lot of it is [being] homesick, missing my daughter. But not just like, 'Ahh, I'm homesick, I miss my daughter.' It's more along the lines of being put in the position where you need to fulfill something and you have people that want you to be there to fulfill their needs and also there's people back at home that need you there to fulfill what they need and desire. So it's definitely a lot deeper, a lot more personal. I think as each record goes, it gets a lot deeper and a lot more personal."
SUICIDE SILENCE's latest album, "The Black Crown", sold around 14,400 copies in the United States in its first week of release to debut at position No. 28 on The Billboard 200 chart.
The band's previous CD, "No Time To Bleed", opened with 14,000 units in July 2009 to land at No. 32 on The Billboard 200 chart.
"The Black Crown" was released in North America on July 12, 2010 via Century Media Records.
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