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Kill Switch
Kill Switch
Jesse: "I think there's been many moments that have reminded me how fortunate
I am to be back in the band, but for sure, that record especially, people still look
back upon it and see it as a benchmark record for us. We're really honored by
that. I didn't get to tour on that first album cycle, so it was great to come back and
play the whole thing from start to finish."
Jesse: "We're going to cut it down and figure out what we're going to do with the
extra songs, just have them in our back pocket. We just want to make the best
record we can and figured why not write a bunch of songs and choose the best
songs out of that so the album is best it can be."
On how KILLSWITCH keeps things fresh in the studio with a core musical
lineup that has been together for several years:
Jesse: "Adam is a highly trained, intelligent musician who reads music and
understands the language of music. I'm a punk rocker. Some of my favorite bands
play three chords and really don't sing much at all, so I come in with passion,
energy, chaos and I don't read music and I don't know if a note is correct or not.
I'm just coming in, singing from my gut. I think when we converge and come
together, [we] complement each other. He polishes my dark edges and helps me
to see how the song could be better if we do it this way because of music theory.
Then I'm able to tell him, 'Loosen up a little bit. It doesn't have to be perfect.
Maybe this part should be more imperfect so people can feel it.' It's a nice little
balance we have, and I think it works well."
Jesse: "I think that's actually a really good point because he's definitely rooted in
punk and hardcore as well and I think that is the aspect that comes out live, his
total dis-concern for how we're supposed to act in a metal band. That's his sort of
middle finger to everybody, to all the people who act very tough and think metal
has to be doom and gloom and trying to be a cool or tough guy, that's his punk
rock way. That's a really good way of putting it. That's his way of twisting it, so
that character definitely comes out live."
Jesse: "Yeah, it is a lot of work, for sure. But I think it's good for a band like us
to sort of realize that there's still so many more people to win over. There were
nights that were tougher than others for sure, but I think toward the end of the set,
we do win over the fans that weren't sure. MAIDEN's audience is really old
school, so from the moment I step onstage and start screaming, you can see
people's faces, like, 'Here we go. I have to sit through this.' Thankfully, we had
won audiences over. The majority of the shows, we held our own. We did well."
On whether he thinks the term "metalcore" is now more accepted and its bands
are now considered to be just "metal":
Jesse: "I never liked the term 'metalcore.' I don't think it's an accurate
representation of the wide variety of bands that get lumped under that category.
But I get it. People have to categorize stuff and put it into their own little
category so they can describe stuff to somebody else. I like to say we're more of a
metal band. It is what it is. People are going to use that term whether I like it or
not."