Thursday, June 17, 2010

Interview with Halloween Alaska







WRITTEN BY NATTALIE TEHRANI









Interview with Halloween Alaska in support of Champagne Downtown

By: Nattalie Tehrani


PunkTV.ca: So your new album Champagne Downtown is coming out on April 7th…can you tell us a little about how the recording process was and what fans can expect on this album?


Yeah well, it was recorded mainly in Minneapolis. It took us over a couple of years to get us in the studio. I was in Los Angeles for a while and then in Wisconsin, so we just had to pull together and we hooked up with Chad Blake and he was incredible. There are much more distinctive sounds on this album than our previous albums. I think it’s broader, unlike our other stuff which was mellower. In this one we are more guitar oriented rather than pop oriented.



PunkTV.ca: You guys have a song based loosely off of a novel called Jerk, California…are you guys into literature and do you derive some influence from reading?


It was actually like a one time thing, we loosely based that song off of the novel. In general I love to read, we love to watch movies and just keep up on everything. Reading isn’t our direct influence.


PunkTV.ca: You guys did a song for the OC. Doing a song for a mainstream show....was there ever that fear of being called sell outs or were you guys sure as soon as you hear about the project?


Well, no because the songs that were played on the OC was released on our record first and then the director of the OC licensed a couple of our songs. Um, so it wasn’t written for the show, it wasn’t a conscience decision. Mostly we were interested in having our music exposed to a larger audience and people we haven’t been able to reach yet. It was a cool opportunity.


PunkTV.ca: Exactly, you guys reached out to people who didn’t have the opportunity to check you guys out. It got you guys a wider scale of fans, I’m sure.


Definitely, it was a very positive experience.


PunkTV.ca: So you guys covered an LL COOL J song…so in the future what other covers do you guys plan on doing?


Well, the new record is just all original music. We didn’t include any covers on the album but we didn’t consider doing some covers just for the fun and releasing it. A certain number of people took our LL Cool J cover to be more ironic and clever than it was intended. I think it was just very Ernest kind of cover. I was a fan of LL records since the beginning. People thought we were trying to start a new genre, when it wasn’t what we intended at all.


PunkTV.ca: I thought it was quite refreshing. Very unique. It was a very cool collision of genres.


Aw cool, thank you!


PunkTV.ca: If you could ask your fans a question…what would it be?


Well, I would ask how they feel about music formats. With this record we decided to put it out on CD’s and on vinyl and of course on itunes. It seems like that the business is changing so people aren’t buying physical CD’s or records anymore, so, is it still worth while to buy physical music products.

PunkTV.ca: So basically are you an old school CD shopper or a more modern digital user.

I will say, the vinyl might not rank as high as most people don’t have record players.

PunkTV.ca: For those that do, however, it would be pretty legit to have a vinyl! The audio quality usually exceeds that of digital too.


I agree!


PunkTV.ca: We have two questions that PunkTV.CA usually asks all our interviewees. The first is, which of the following have you experienced: seen the face of God, seen a ghost, or had an alien encounter before.


Well, I don’t think I have seen a ghost but I might have heard a ghost actually. I heard a voice that there was no logical explanation. Hopefully it wasn’t a schizophrenic episode. I have not seen any aliens and I haven’t seen god.


PunkTV.ca: What would surprise people to learn about you?


O gosh….


PunkTV.ca: Sorry, threw a tough one at you.


Well, I’m not sure if it is surprising but our base player Matt is sort of a singular person out of the group. So pretty much every song, he changes the tuning of his base, which at times can be very difficult for us. The scary think is, is that he wrote all the tunings for each song on a piece of paper and only made one copy of it. So if he lost it, are band would be done. We were terrified to hear that.


PunkTV.ca: Oh no! Tell me you guys hit the nearest Kinko’s and made copies of it! That’s your band’s life line in a file!


Yeah, we made sure we did.


PunkTV.ca: Well awesome talking to you, thank you so much for taking the time out to do this!


Oh it was my pleasure! Thank you!


Interview with Frank Iero from Leathermouth



PunkTV.ca: Hi Frank, how are you?

I’m good, Nattalie, how are you?


PunkTV.ca: I’m doing excellent, thank you very much!


PunkTV.ca: So Frank, LeATHERMOUTH is debuting XO on January 27th. Can you tell us a little bit about the recording process and what were some of the inspirations for this album?

Sure, um, the recording process was kind of like a war process…it took about a year, year and a half, off and on. Recorded in basement, we had a couple of mics and then we just started doing it. The song writing was with just a couple of friends, you know and uh, we pieced it together.


PunkTV.ca: XO has some controversial titles and lyrics. The public, (especially those overly concerned parents) see it as taboo. What is your opinion on that and would you ever self censor because of that?

Um, well that was the only thing that I was concerned about especially since we’re on a label, I mean it’s not major but its way more major than our own label, um, but I wouldn’t censor out any subject or you know lyrics because I just you know, don’t do that. If it was a problem I would just release it myself, then actually sensor everything.


PunkTV.ca: Definitely, I mean it creatively limits you.

Yeah, here’s the thing, in this day and age and I think that the entertainment industry….you know they think the public is very stupid or they know everyone is very quick to suit. I don’t think people should cover their children’s eyes to everything that’s happening. I think that should answer the problem.

PunkTV.ca: People can be closed minded because our society has hidden so many things and labeled it taboo.. Do you feel as though the lyrics of killing the president, incorporations from Jack the Ripper’s letters and other references, will open the world’s eyes to the monstrosities the world really does offer?

Ah I hope so. If anything, it will cause people to really take care of other feelings and maybe spark discussion. That’s the main thing. As long as people talk about their feelings and thoughts on things.


PunkTV.ca: Yeah it’s kind of sparking an idea in people’s minds that they haven’t brushed on before.

Yeah, exactly!


PunkTV.ca: You mentioned in an interview that you have 2 personalities. You have you gentle side which comes through My Chemical Romance’s music, and then the dark, more violent and intense side that comes through in Leathermouth. Do you feel that without music you wouldn’t be able to balance those personalities?

Uh yeah, I’ve always expressed myself was through music and being in bands and writing lyrics. That was always my outlet because it was part of my upbringing so much. If it wasn’t for my parents or my grandfather I’d probably be working out a post office. I’ve been really lucky to have music in my family and it taught me to express myself that way. I think that’s the best way, for me at least, to release emotion.


PunkTV.ca: Right and you know I was thinking that you know how people seek comfort and therapy in religion, I would say that music is the same thing.

Exactly…just with not as much rules.


PunkTV.ca: The lyrics in LeATHERMOUTH are definitely be perceived as being grim. You have seen so much while touring, the negative aspects seen around you, have inspired the way you deliver your vocals?

You know, yeah the topics that we cover are very grim. I try to sit down and write positive lyrics and it just becomes more violent. So, at the end of the day getting out that negativity ends up being positive because you get it out.


PunkTV.ca: In a sense its like taking all that negative energy that you have stored up and put it on a piece of paper and it becomes positive, I totally agree with that.

Yeah, otherwise you just bottle it up and you become a crazy miserable fuck. At the end of the day you’d end up being more and more miserable if you didn’t get it out.

PunkTV.ca: You say you are inspired by a lot of horror movies so what elements of that genre fascinate you?

Aw everything. I’ve definitely been inspired by a lot of B horror movies and lots of flicks and those movies really have a lot less back story and plot and gets to the killing. That’s kind of like the record. The music itself gets right to the killing.


PunkTV.ca: That’s how it should be!


PunkTV.ca: Have you ever looked into the actual people these movies were based off of, such as Ed Gein, John Wayne Gacy and other famous murders and in a odd way, do they inspire your love for the dark side?

Um, to tell you the truth I am kind of obsessed with the memorabilia, you know, stuff that that counterculture…I mean not that I collect the pit that Gacy went into, but I watch a lot of documentary’s and read a lot about them. I really like the serial killers that haven’t been caught like the Zodiac and Jack the Ripper. These killers, you know, no one can be sure if these letters were written by the killer I mean, they did attach little pieces of shirts or skins to the letters, so those make sense that they were from the killer but no one could be sure why it happened, or how it happened. They couldn’t actually tie anything back to the killer. These are more interesting than the ones behind the bars.


PunkTV.ca: It’s a little off topic but there is a new museum that just opened up in LA called the Museum of Death, and they have letters by John Wayne Gacy and stuff like Manson’s bed where the victims were killed and serial killer paintings…it’s insane, it’s definitely worth checking out if you’re in LA.

Really?! Where is it?


PunkTV.ca: It’s on Hollywood Blvd. It’s pretty amazing.

I will be there!


PunkTV.ca: Yeah they’re getting Manson’s bed soon…so it should be fascinating.

Ok!


PunkTV.ca: LeATEHERMOUTH has every letter capitalized but the e...why is that and is there a reason for the word combinations with the letters in LeATHERMOUTH u have on your website?

Um, you know, the way it’s written with the lower case e is because I have horrible handwriting. The website, where the letters form together when you movie the cursor over it is just the idea of taking a step back and looking at those words in different ways, something that you might already know about, but in a different perspective, to trigger a thought.


PunkTV.ca: I got pretty excited over that, it was a cool idea to have on there.

Why, thank you.


PunkTV.ca: Throughout all the experiences you have in traveling and being in a band, do you feel you have changed as a person?

Definitely. I think anything you do or see or experience at an early age changes what and who you become. At an early age I jumped in a van with either My Chem. or any other band and being a kid in van and seeing place I never thought I would see in the world, it just changes the way you see things or the way you think about yourself. You see that you’re not the most important thing in the world and the world doesn’t revolve around you…very quickly. There is definitely a sense of no one gives a fuck really about you and if you’re not looking out for yourself, no one else really is. Then you know, when you are in a band, they are the people that give a fuck about you. They are your family and friends. And you can count them all in one hand, and those are the people that care about you.


PunkTV.ca: Like a traveling bubble.

Absolutely.


PunkTV.ca: Lately what was the most interesting movie book or piece of art you have seen lately?

Oh man…I’m trying to think…one of the greatest movies I’ve seen in a while was Funny Games.


PunkTV.ca: Oh I saw that, it was like a preppy slasher movie.

It’s so….I mean it’s just about torture. The most amazing thing is that they don’t care about anything. They’re just after the families around that lake, and they get away with it. They don’t have any sympathy on dear life in any sense.


PunkTV.ca: Definitely, it was all a game to them. Quite the appropriate title.

Yeah exactly, as far as reading…um, geese, I really liked Crooked Little Vein, a book by an amazing comic book author, Warren Ellis. This was one of his first ventures in writing a novel and it was amazing.


PunkTV.ca: Right now I’m just waiting for Watchmen, I’ve been dying for that movie to come out.

I know! I’m right there with you. I can’t wait to see it.


PunkTV.ca: Punktv.ca has two questions that we ask all of our interviewees. The first is have you ever seen ghosts, aliens, or the face of god?

Ha! Oh man, I don’t think any of that exists. I’ve tried really hard to see all of the above. You want to believe that there is something out there but uh, I don’t think there is.


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, and most of the time the stuff that you think you see is all in your mind because you want to see it so bad.

Exactly yeah. Once I saw Jesus’ face in toast, but that’s about it.

Oh there we go! Nice! You should sell that on eBay, I’m sure you’ll get something out of it.


PunkTV.ca: Haha!


PunkTV.ca: What would surprise most people to learn about you?

Oh man, nothing hopefully surprise people. I think that I’m addicted to Coke a Cola.


PunkTV.ca: Man, I’m all about Dr. Pepper, so I’m right there with you!

Really? Ha!


PunkTV.ca: Well, thank you so much for taking the time out to do this! I really appreciate it!

No thank you for doing it! That was great!


PunkTV.ca: Can’t wait for the album and I’m sure we’ll be catching you on tour!

Great hope you like it!


PunkTV.ca: Thanks again, Bye!

interview with the Becoming





The Becoming Interview in Support of Vol. 1

By Nattalie Tehrani

PunkTV.ca: Hey how’s it going?
It’s going absolutely great, just sitting outside, taking a break!

PunkTV.ca: Aw sweet! So I wanted to talk to you a little about Vol 1. You guys just released it on September 30th, can you tell me a little about the fan reaction you guys have been getting?
Ah its been going really well. We went out on a tour, and it was real fun, it was about 30 to 40 kids…played about 4 shows and sold over a 100 records. Unfortunately with the time of the year…touring is a bit scarce right now.

PunkTV.ca: I totally agree, you know, fall and winter doesn’t consist of as much touring as summer time does…with Warped Tour and Projekt Revolution.
Yeah, right now we’re playing every show we get. Since we’re from the Midwest, some music stores had 4 or 5 of our copies and they all sold out. So they’ve been getting more shipment which is really cool.

PunkTV.ca: Definitely, I really think that it does actually get a bit more difficult to promote a record in the fall.
I feel like the record has a fall/winter feel. We wanted to release it in the fall because the theme of the record. The problem was the tours we wanted to go on were already booked. And we didn’t have a booking agent or manager at all.
PunkTV.ca: I bet life is a lot easier now!
Oh yeah!

PunkTV.ca: In an interview you guys mentioned that you have been a lot of bands before. What makes this band any different than the previous bands you have been in.
Um, finally it’s the style of music that I’ve always wanted to play. I have always been fascinated by the dark aspect of life. What I mean by that is that I have always been interested in the more horrific part of life. Um, I definitely think something’s you can’t escape and like writing about that. Other bands…you know, I’m not so down to sing about a girl, or you know, I used to be in a pop punk band when I was younger and I love it. I loved music because you can sing about anything you want to but I just like to sing about things that have a meaning behind it.

PunkTV.ca: Yeah, stuff that touches the real aspects of lives that anyone can relate to.
We’re the type of band that doesn’t want to hide anything. We want to be the band that takes chances, and we like to fall in love with what we do and keep our music true to ourselves.

PunkTV.ca: Especially with your genre of music, you can get a lot more emotion out of people and I think that’s the most important part of music and that’s getting a reaction out of people.
We’ve been put in the Goth label, and right below that s Emo, but we let people put us in whatever genre they want to, but we really don’t think we belong to any specific genre. I think music has changed our lives individually. We like to all take our influences…throw it in a pot and mix it together to make our sound.

PunkTV.ca: That’s the best way to do it! What bands inspired you back in the day, as well as any contemporary bands?
Well we’re all young, I mean I’m the oldest, I’m 25 and the youngest is 23 and uh, the style of music we listen to is the dark wave movement of the e 80s which is right when we were born and younger. My first record was The Sniper and the second was The Cure. They still have influence on my song writing.

PunkTV.ca: That’s a great decade to be inspired by, for sure.
Some of my personal favorite bands are you know, Sisters Of Mercy, which I am lucky enough to go see in 2 weeks!

PunkTV.ca: Oh nice! That should be one hell of a show.
Type O Negative was another favorite.

PunkTV.ca: Oh man, they were playing in LA a while back and I was so bummed that I missed it!
See I caught that too. There are a few things that I would drop anything for, and one is the Type O shows.

PunkTV.ca: I’m sure being on tour can be tiring, you know, get in the way of going to shows and puts a stop on regular life. Do you need more motivation to get going?
You know, we have done a quite a bit of runs, but we’ve never done anything for more than 3 or 4 weeks. We’re still a baby band, because we’ve only been around for 3 years. Most of the time we’re just stoked to be out there. We get tired but we don’t need motivation. I don’t think we’ve had enough touring under our belts to need motivation.

PunkTV.ca: I think maybe when you start getting smelly cloths, then it will start to get a bit difficult?
Yeah! Right? We’re pretty clean guys, and we look hard for some place where we can wash our stuff or we stay at some friends houses in the cities we tour in.

PunkTV.ca: Yeah, that’s good because there are some bands that get down and dirty with that kind of stuff.
We’re definitely not one of those grungy bands…we don’t use it as an excuse. Ha!

PunkTV.ca: Is it ever difficult for you guys to maintain your uniqueness and try and invent something new that hasn’t been done before?
It’s almost impossible to do something right now that hasn’t been done before. I mean, there are not many bands that are poppy and dark at the same time. It’s either one or the other. It’s definitely hard to be original. We try to take things that have already been done and make it better. In the end you’re always going to be compared to somebody. Originality is out of the question. It’s hard to reach but I do think that we’ve done a good job.

PunkTV.ca: I was thinking about it the other day, and it’s like artwork if you think about it. There are artists everywhere but in the end it’s your opinion and your take on things that makes it your own, you know?
Right, right! I do feel like we have an original approach our songs and lyrics. When you get to mainstream however, there will always be someone that will try and compare you to someone else. But we’ll see…we’re just strolling along for now.

PunkTV.ca: What’s next for you guys?
Well we got a few shows booked and we’re just jumping on tour with some bands that are touring at the moment. So we’re hoping to do some small runs…we’re not saying anything yet because we don’t want to jinx ourselves. We just landed a booking agent because it’s going to help us out a lot.

PunkTV.ca: PunkTV.ca has two questions that we ask all of our interviewees. The first is, have you ever seen a ghost, the face of god, or had an alien encounter?
Um, I can say that I’ve felt the hand of god, but never seen the face. I have seen many ghosts, but I don’t call them ghosts, I call them demons.

PunkTV.ca: What would surprise most people to learn most about your or your band?
Oh good question. You know, the way we dress, we dress all serious and you know we look hard, but our music isn’t like that. Because of the way we portray ourselves people think were jerks. But you know we go out and talk to people before and after shows, because we want to get everyone involved. So people think we act tough and our music’s tough because of how we look. Which is not true at all.

PunkTV.ca: Great answer…audio and visual experience! It keeps the element of surprise going.
Exactly, that’s what we’re going for.

PunkTV.ca: Well thank you so much, it was great talking to you!
Thank you, thanks a bunch for the interview!

PunkTV.ca: It was great talking to you and hope to see you soon! Take care!

Interview with Max Green from Escape the Fate





Escape the Fate Interview With Max Green in Support of Dying Is Your Latest Fashion

By Nattalie Tehrani


PunkTV.ca: Hey, this is Nattalie Tehrani from PunkTV and I’m here with Max Green from Escape the Fate. So I saw you guys back in April at Bamboozle and it was one of the greatest sets I’ve ever seen, but I have to ask you though, what was going through your head when Craig climbed the side of the stage and dived into the crowd and didn’t come up for a while?


At Bamboozle, when he jumped out into the crowd? Yeah that was kind of intense, I had seen him do it before and I’d seen him do that when he was in Bless the Fall a couple of times, but yeah, he wasn’t getting out. I was like, yeah he jumped but then I was like, “Where’s he at? Why isn’t he getting up?” I thought he had broken his legs or something.


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, that was a good three or four minutes of you guys just playing and him disappearing in the crowd. Definitely intense. So, considering all of the speculation on the net, our readers totally want to know, could you please set us straight on what happened with Ronnie, why he left, and about the decision to move forward…


Absolutely. Okay, so the deal with Ronnie, that guy, everybody has problems, nobody’s perfect, okay. That’s what I want to get across right now. Ronnie was battling issues, and I was down that road battling issues, too. But the difference is, when it comes down to change and do what’s right, you got to do what you got to do, and Ronnie made some bad choices along the path, and we totally gave him an ultimatum. We said, “Hey man, you either have to clean up your act and do what you got to do, or we can’t have you in this band. We can’t have one person in control of the lives of four other people. It’s just not fair, it’s not right.” And he just refused to do that. Then he got involved in some other bad things and had some legal issues going on, and it was going to stop us from doing what we had to do as a band. We just decided, well, it’s come to the point where either we hit the ditch and move on with a new singer and lineup or there could be no more Escape the Fate. We all love what we do and we all love playing together, so we decided to suck it up and continue on.


PunkTV.ca: Exactly, and like you said, sometimes you have to do what you have to do, it was the best for the band. If you have the passion, you can’t let it go.


The thing is that the fans, they don’t know that side. They just speculate, and listen to what Ronnie has to say and it makes us sound like bad guys. Since I’ve met that guy, which was in high school, since day one, we’ve been in a band together and if we weren’t in a band together, we were hanging out, or living together, or were on a tour together. When shit went down and he got out of the band, I still tried to get him back in and it just didn’t work out. He had other plans or whatever. Everyone thinks we’re awful, but we gave that kid way more chances than anybody deserves.


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, and if you guys hadn’t done that, then there would be no fans because there would be no Escape the Fate.


Yeah.


PunkTV.ca: So you guys had thousands of options I’m sure, tell us about choosing Craig Mabbit.


Um, we took Bless the Fall out, and toured with us. We saw him perform every night and watched him on Warped Tour. And he is a crazy, cool dude. He has such a big powerful voice and when shit went down with Ronnie, us and our management tried to think about who to pick and we wanted to have someone in the band that wasn’t just some random kid or whatever. We kind of wanted someone who had the experience and knew what they were doing and what they wanted to do and shit like that. And Craig crossed our minds and we had him try out and I’m going to be honest, at first, we weren’t really feelin’ it. We were like, “oh I don’t know…” and he came from a band with a scream-o vibe and we wanted to get away from screaming so much. We still love rock and we want to be badass but we wanted it to be big. We want to play to as many people as we can. So we played with Craig a little bit, he got used to our style, we got used to his style and one day at practice it just clicked. And we were like “This is Escape the Fate now.”


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, and I saw you guys live, and it was awesome and you guys clicked, so it worked really well. I think everything just takes some getting used to. And we read varying reports on whether or not he will be staying with the band, but your May 6 Myspace announcement told the world that you were entering the studio and Craig would be singing with you...


Actually, we’re at the studio right now. With Craig and John Feldmann, and he’s recording right now, and after he’s done recording his stuff, I’m going to go in there and lay down my vocals.


PunkTV.ca: Oh nice! And you chose John Feldmann, who’s producing and songwriting, so can you tell us how the direction of the whole production is going?


Oh my gosh, the album is just amazing. This past year we’ve just been through so much shit, having him in, having him out, having to cancel tours, having to lie to cover up for things, just sick and tired, sick and tired. Sick and tired of being pissed, and sick of being hated on, sick of having a bad reputation, and so we took all of those emotions and put it into an album. We’re not going to try and write a metal album, we’re not going to try and write a pop album, we're going to write what we feel, like we did in the beginning. The songs were just coming out and so we literally just took it back to a garage where we started, and that’s how we work. We took the songs to John Feldmann, showed him what was going on and he dug it and now we’re working together and it’s just amazing. I’ve never been so proud of anything in my entire life.


PunkTV.ca: Oh my God, that sounds so awesome. So would you say that this one is rawer, or how would you describe this album?


I would describe this album as…it’s not going to be a mellow album where there’s break downs everywhere or anything like that, and it’s not going to be an album where it’s full of pop songs. We’re not going to pull one of those things where we’re like “We’ve been through enough this past year and we just want to experiment as musicians, and show our artistic side.” No, that’s bullshit and that’s not what we’re about. We write what we like, and we rock, and that’s it.


PunkTV.ca: That’s an awesome mentality right there.


Yeah, that’s what we’re known for. We write songs like “The Guillotine” but then we have songs like “Reverse This Curse” which is a straight up pop song, you know?


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, it’s very melodic.


We write about a lot of different things, and the songs we put together, we just write because it sounds cool to us. And we just got lucky enough that the fans like what we’re into.


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, it just clicked. And when you guys are in the recording process, what medium of art inspires you, if any, like movies, books, music, etc.?


Personally, I read a lot of lyrics, like we all kind of do, I mean personally, I get inspiration from everything, from dreams that I’ve had, and real life experiences that I’ve been through, to video games. We’re doing a part 2 to “The Guillotine”.


PunkTV.ca: Oh my God, that’s awesome!


Yeah, it’s going to be on Halo 3.


PunkTV.ca: So growing up did you always know you want to be in a band, or did that just accidentally happen?


Originally when I was growing up I was into soccer, I was playing a lot of soccer. I played up until my freshman year. I used to travel around and do tournaments in different states, like mostly on the west coast. I wanted to be a professional soccer player for a long time, and then I got into theatre and I got into music and I wanted to be an actor. Then um, when I was in 7th or 8th grade, I got a guitar for Christmas and my step dad wanted me to go to college or be a teacher or some shit. So my mom’s brother gave me his guitar, and from then on, like the second I touched the guitar, I was like, oh my God I want to do this so bad, I’ve never felt anything like this in my whole life. I used to lock myself in my room with just a radio and this sounds so stupid but, I would play air guitar and listen to the song, and listen to the tone of them. It was like nothing I had ever experienced before in my life. I can’t explain it. Something inside you just… it brings something out of me that nothing has ever done before.


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, you found your passion, and it felt right, and I think that’s when you know you’re on the right path.


Yeah, I live my life by two mottos. You read what you say, because whatever you put into something is exactly what you’re going to get out of it, and it’s either all or nothing. If you do anything in your life, it’s either all or nothing.


PunkTV.ca: Exactly, and did you have to give up a lot to be in a band? You know, socially, relationship-wise, is there a lot that you just have to sacrifice?


Yeah, there definitely, definitely is a lot. When we got signed to Epitaph, I was like, “Oh we worked so hard, and we put on these local shows and we’re a local band.” I had been in five bands before that really didn’t get anywhere and didn’t even get close to the amount of success that escape the fate has. We just kept trying and put in a lot. After we got signed I thought it was great, and we were going to make money, it’s going to be awesome, I can do what I love and make a living off of it. I learned really quickly that that’s not how it is. Once you get signed it’s like starting over from the very bottom. You have to work your ass off to get up there because you’re going places where kids have never heard your name, they have no idea who your band is and they could care less because half the shows you’re playing at, they’re there to see some other band. So you really have to work hard at performing and playing your music well. I think the thing that really helped us out, that we learned early on is that…well what’s wrong with music today is that some bands just go up there, play their songs and some bands might get luck and have a hit song on MTV and the next time you see them, they’ll half ass it on stage. But we agreed that we are performers above musicians. People who come to see our show, they are paying to be entertained. Nowadays, the songs they hear is the music they steal, straight up.


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, I definitely agree. I think some bands, you go to see them and that changes the whole meaning of the band for you because they have such an impact on you, whereas you would from some other band standing there and trying to play the same thing you would hear on the CD. Well, kind of change of subject, but what’s been the craziest thing a band has done for you?


Lots have done crazy things. There are a lot of cool things, like they’ll bring cupcakes or cookies, or big things of lasagna or gift bags with pillows or teddy bears or candy. There was this one thing that a fan sent a picture of to me over Myspace. This girl had carved my name into her arm. And I wrote her back right away, said it was flattering but please don’t hurt yourself. It’s cool that you’re passionate about us, but go get a tattoo or something, don’t carve my name in your arm. But it’s cool that you’re passionate about the band.


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, a compliment in the weirdest way. If you were to ask a fan one question, what would you ask them?


If I was to ask a fan? Hm, that’s a good one, no one has ever asked me that before. That’s a really good question.


PunkTV.ca: Why, thank you.


Yeah. I would say if you could have one of your favorite bands do anything for you, what would it be? Like what do you expect when you go see your favorite band, like what is you idea of a perfect show?


PunkTV.ca: Out of your entire career has there been one specific lesson that you learned or a moment that changed the way you think about life, or the way you live?


Most definitely. It kind of happened recently, I mean I really hate to keep talking about everything that happened with us and Ronnie, because I truly, truly do love that person. I love Ronnie Radke to death. He has been a brother to me, and a best friend. Literally we have been attached at the hip since the day we met. And seeing all these things that he went through, and like I said, I’m no angel, I ain’t no saint. All the problems that Ronnie went through, with this and that, I was right there with him the entire time and I made the same decisions he did. The lesson I learned is that life is too short. I have a gift, you know, and I’m lucky enough that God gave me this gift, and people enjoy listening to my passion, and I don’t want to make that mistake. I want to keep going as long as I can and keep doing what I love as long as I can and I don’t want anything to get in the way.


PunkTV.ca: Exactly. You got to keep that motivation, and do what you have to do.


For sure, you only get one shot. I’m just going to hold on to that moment and never let go.


PunkTV.ca: Definitely. We have two questions that PunkTV usually asks all our interviewees. The first is, which of the following have you experienced: seen the face of God, seen a ghost, or had an alien encounter?


I was actually talking about this the other day with John. Okay well, I’ve never seen God; I have had vivid dreams, or nightmares. Okay well, here goes the story. I was possessed by demons. I used to sleepwalk a lot when I was a kid. I snapped out of it for a while, I stopped doing it. But I would do a lot of crazy things when I was sleepwalking. But this one time, I walked into my parent’s bedroom, this was before they were divorced, and I walked to the foot of the bed and I guess started talking in like strange language. And my mom was like “Max, honey, just go to bed, go to bed” you know, she was just sleep talking. And she said I was speaking in this weird language that she had never heard before and it kept getting louder and louder and she flipped on the lights and my eyes were open and my eyes were rolled to the back of my head and she woke up my step dad and he turned on his light on his side of the bed, and I guess he got up to get me and I guess I had, I don’t want to say a knife behind my back or anything like that, but I was holding something in my hands, and my step dad had to shake me to snap me out of my sleep and he said my eyes rolled forward, and I dropped whatever I had in my hands and I just kind of fell into his arms, and he put me back to bed.


PunkTV.ca : Whoa, that is crazy!


Yeah, the next morning my mom got all freaked out, was like, “We need to take you to a priest, we need to get you baptized, oh my God, you’re going to die!” I never did get baptized, but I also had an alien encounter. For real, I swear to god. We were driving back from Washington, and we were driving through these mountains and shit, and we see lights from the sky, and we thought maybe it’s like a power plant or something. We saw another light in the sky, we were like ‘Oh what’s that, what’s that?’ And we pulled over to the side of the road and we got creeped out, so we started driving. In the distance we saw faint blue lights, and as we kept driving, the blue light got closer and closer, and all of a sudden the blue light is right in front of the car, and we were going 85 mph and the light was maybe 10, 12 ft in front of the car. Not getting any closer, not getting any farther away. All of us were like, “What the fuck!?” The blue light was now around the car, like 3 or 4 times, and then it went behind us, and we were going 100 mph and the blue light is behind us, the entire time. Then all of a sudden, it vanishes.


PunkTV.ca: Wow, did you ever find out what it was?


No, that shit was so weird, and we told this story in another interview, and no one believed it. But I swear, I swear, I swear, it happened.


PunkTV.ca: So what would surprise kids to learn about Escape the Fate?


Well, I don’t really know, we’re always under the microscope or there is some rumor about us, so kids pretty much know everything about us already. Um, I hated Ronnie when I first met him. I met Ronnie when he was a freshman in high school, and he was in a band at the time, and he was the most cocky ass motherfucker I had ever met in my entire life. I actually changed seats in class because I didn’t want to sit next to him.


PunkTV.ca: Little did you know that you would be in a band with him.


Ha! Yeah, and after meeting him and getting to know him, I was like three years older than him or something like that, and after getting to know him and stuff like that, I realized, he comes across in certain way, but his problem is that he doesn’t think about things before he says it, but he really is a good honest person, and he has one of the best hearts of all the people I have ever met, and I’ve met a lot of people.


PunkTV.ca: So, it just took some getting to know him, and getting to realize who he really is.


Yeah, he really means so well.


PunkTV.ca: Is there anything I missed, or that you like to say to your fans?


Um, I have a lot of kids and a lot of fans write and ask me if there are any tips that I can give to those who want to start a band, and they look up to us and what can they do to get signed and getting touring and get their music out there. I usually just tell them to give it your all, every single day of your life, practice as much as you can, always put your heart in everything you do and you never know who’s watching and it sounds so cheesy, but it’s so true, I heard these lyrics and it hit me, and I took it to heart. I was listening to this Aerosmith song, “Dream on until your dreams come true,” and it really hit me and I always tell kids don’t ever stop because you can never know what will happen. I’m a kid from Ohio, in the country, in a small town, of like a population of maybe like 100 to 200 people. Then I moved to Las Vegas, picked up a guitar, picked up a bass, and now I’m lucky enough and be on world tours. And it's you know, keep on, keep on.


PunkTV.ca: Yeah, like you said, you just got to do what you got to do.


Yeah, and there is a lot of sacrifice. I was homeless for a while, sleeping on couches, sometimes crashing on bus stop benches in Vegas, it’s hard to have a relationship, you know, but if you want it bad enough there is nothing you can’t do.


Interview with The Used's Jeph Howard



The Used Interview With Jeph Howard in Support of Shadow Believer

By Nattalie Tehrani


PunkTV.ca: Hey, this is Nattalie Tehrani from PunkTV.ca and I’m here with Jeph Howard from The Used. So, your record Shadow Believer, an album full of B-sides, came out recently. When you make an album, how do you decide what stays and what to scrap away?


That’s hard, it’s sort of a fight. Well, not really a fight, but the majority wins. We all want the best record we can possibly make. For me, I don’t mind when my song doesn’t make the record, I don’t mind if it gets hidden a bit. When I was growing up I’d be stoked when I heard the albums from my favorite bands, and then all of a sudden you find an EP with another song and you’d be like, “What is this?!” You’d realize that you’d never heard it before and you get all excited about the band again. Yeah, that didn’t really answer your question at all.

PunkTV.ca: No, It did! It just makes it more special.


Ha! Good, ok.


PunkTV.ca: What has this tour been like, is there more pressure being the headliners?


A little bit. Not really, maybe even less pressure. When you’re the headliner of a show the majority of the people are coming to see you, you know what I mean? Well, at least that’s how it sometimes is. So all the pressure is gone because they’re coming to see you so you don’t have to win them over. You already have it in a way. It’s better and worse at the same time. It’s better because everybody knows the words the vibe is always good, because the crowd is going to make the show what it is. So if we played a bad show, the crowd is going to make it so much better than just us alone, if that makes any sense.

PunkTV.ca: Yeah, so you feed off of each other’s energy.


Yeah, exactly! So if the crowd is louder, we’re louder. If the crowd is better, we’re better. Sometimes I kind of miss going in front of people who don’t like us. Then all of a sudden by the end of the show they start liking you and everything is cool because you have to win them over the whole show, and show them who you are.

PunkTV.ca: So, in a way it’s like fighting a cause.


Yeah, that’s fun too, but I love them both, so it’s been great because of the first reason.


PunkTV.ca: What was the last greatest thing to happen to you guys on tour?


Mario Kart! It just came out for Wii. That was the greatest thing that’s happened on this tour.

PunkTV.ca: Is that what you’ve done to keep yourselves entertained on tour?


That’s all we have done! We haven’t done a single other thing. What, it’s been two weeks now? Yeah, we haven’t done anything else.

PunkTV.ca: So you guys play a lot of video games, do you read…?


Bert reads a lot. Actually, Bert reads a LOT. I don’t read as much, I play games. Which is probably not as good for me, but whatever, I don’t care.

PunkTV.ca: Well the Wii is a good exercise.


Yeah, exactly. We try, but it’s hard because there are days there is so much shit going on, and it’s so stressful, but there is time in between, where you have four hours to do nothing.


PunkTV.ca: I’m sure there is a downside to doing press, can it get tiring at times?
Not for me, I’m happy to do anything to keep busy rather than sitting on my butt and waiting all day. It clashes sometimes when you have other things you need to do. Sometimes when you have too much press it can get stressful, but sometimes when you don’t have enough press it can get bad. When you don’t have any, nobody wants to hear about you anymore. You just have to keep it balanced.

PunkTV.ca: So who writes most of you’re lyrics?
Bert writes 99.9% of the lyrics and melodies.

PunkTV.ca: And where do you guys draw most of your inspirations from?


It’s different. Each song is completely different. Some songs we start out with the guitar line Quinn has, then we all sit down and jam that guitar line out, and then we’ll give a rough song idea to Bert, and Bert will get some words and melodies down, and mesh that together and make something else. There have been times where the bass lines are not as much as the guitar lines only because it’s easier to start some songs off with guitar. So most of the time, it’s going off of other people, and trying to blend guitar and drums together as opposed to coming up with a line and adding things over it. We have some songs that start with drum lines; it’s completely different every time. We’ve had vocals start, too. On the newer stuff is just Bert and Quinn singing over guitar and coming up with a main line and going off that. It’s cool because our band doesn’t have any rules.

PunkTV.ca: That’s awesome, to have that freedom and be able to bounce off each other. So, when did you realize that you’re so good at playing the bass?


I wouldn’t say, “So good.”

PunkTV.ca: When did you realize you love it, though?


I’ve always liked it, growing up I listened to bass more. Like it has always had a sort of calling to me in a weird way. Then when I started playing it, it was like, “Finally. I’ve been waiting this whole time to play it and I’m finally doing it.”

PunkTV.ca: And bass is very evident in, say, punk music. Is that what you were listening to?
A little bit. Growing up, my first favorite band was Sepultura. I was into hip hop, and a little bit into punk rock. But it didn’t catch me that much. I liked Green Day back then. And hip hop and bass kind of go together. I like drums too, but I can’t play them.

PunkTV.ca: I think it’s great that you guys have different tastes in music. Makes it more versatile. Do you get a lot of inspiration from music out there currently?


Honestly, no. I’ve only heard two new bands that I really like. Most stuff that I’ve been listening to lately is stuff that I listened to as a kid more. I listened to a lot of noise when I was a kid. There was this band called the Secret Chiefs 3 which is kind of noisy, Arabian and weird. They’re a very incredible band. I love them; I’ve been listening to them for years.

PunkTV.ca: You guys played MusInk back in February, which was the first tattoo/music festival. What was that like?


It was weird. It was fun. We didn’t really get to see much of the tattoo part, so for me it was just a show. They put us in this little trailer out back, so we just waited in the trailer. It was weird because we were in the trailers, which were backstage, and then there was another backstage where the food was, but then there were tons of kids in the backstage part, waiting at the gate watching us. So it looked like they were in jail. It was like this little confined area. Then there was the other side, there was like, the show, and there were people watching us from behind bars. So it was like, two different jail ends, separated.

PunkTV.ca: Why?!


I guess there were two different tickets to each part and the backstage part, so I guess you had to pay money to get to the backstage part, but they didn’t tell us that. I think there were actually some tickets to meet the band, but they didn’t tell us that either, we had no clue. And everybody got mad at us because we didn’t go over there and talk to people, and we were supposed to sign stuff but we didn’t know we were supposed to, so we were having meetings in the bus, we got out and they’re like, “Why aren’t you guys coming out to hang out?” It was weird. But it was a really good show.

PunkTV.ca: Was it a tough crowd?


Not really. It was a fun show.


PunkTV.ca: You guys recently had a cutout of Bush on stage, and it was a bit of a political statement. Do you see your future stuff being more political?


Not really. Everybody hates Bush, always have. It’s like leaving the country and the rest of the world hates you because of him, and even though you have nothing in common with this dude. It sucks. You’re sort of doomed no matter what. I hate that association kind of thing. I’m not very political, but I have a lot of views on life and different things that I just keep to myself. Bert says vote for … uh, Bert.

PunkTV.ca: So after you guys are done touring do you still hang out?


Yeah, we’re all really good friends. I live maybe about a half hour from Bert, and Quinn just moved. I wish Dan lived around us, but he lives in Utah and we live in LA and I love it, whatever. Dan is one of my best friends, Quinn is one of my best friends, Bert is one of my best friends; we hang out all the time. When we had those two months of recording, we would record and then go hang out at Bert’s house all night. So I don’t really get sick of these dudes, ever.

PunkTV.ca: That must be so cool to tour with your best buddies.


Yeah, it’s pretty cool.

PunkTV.ca: What’s the sketchiest place you’ve ever toured?


Sketchiest place? Brazil. It wasn’t the shows, the shows were awesome, the kids were awesome, the vibe was incredible and I would love to go back there. It’s just a little scary because I heard rumors about how bad the cops are, and if you get pulled over they take away anything electronic that you have, you know what I mean. They take money from you, and they bribe you, they’re like “Hey, here, drugs.” It’s a little sketchy, but nothing happened to us, so you just hear stories.

PunkTV.ca: Yeah, you’re like on the edge the whole time.


They just try and scare you the whole time. But it was cool, it was fun. I would play anywhere. Sketchier places even. One of the scariest cities I’ve been to is one of my favorite cities in the world. Well, not the world, but in America. The Warfield, in San Francisco. The venue is awesome, all the people that work at the venue are awesome, and San Francisco is awesome. I love San Francisco. I love it, like the people are cool, everything is cool. For some reason, that venue is in like, Cracktown. It’s like the back alley, there is stuff going on, and people are crazy, out of their minds. It’s sort of scary, but at the same time it’s kind of fun, well not fun for them, obviously, but you go, “This is insane.” Cause we usually stay elsewhere. But we stayed at the hotel, where there was the venue, sketchy Cracktown, then our hotel. Overlooking it. So I was watching out the window, like people selling crack, the whole day. It was pretty interesting. Usually they hide it, but they didn’t care. They were in wheel chairs, smoking crack.

PunkTV.ca: Screw the TV. Watch that all day.


I left my windows open, ‘cause the rooms were kind of shitty, all I could hear were people screaming all night long. It was pretty fun, like a movie.

PunkTV.ca: Yeah, a horror movie.


It wasn’t that bad. I’m not shit talking Frisco or anything. Frisco is cool.

PunkTV.ca: You learn a lot about different cultures, I guess.


Yeah, I love cultures, learning about cultures. Culture learning.

PunkTV.ca: So when fans approach you hysterically, can it be uncomfortable at times?


Yeah. It is what it is. I mean, I understand. I mean, we put out so many videos and DVDs and stuff and people get to know us, to the point of really getting to know us. But we don’t know them and never met them, but they do know us in every way, so they feel really comfortable around us, but we’ve never met them. I understand it. But it gets a little sketchy for Bert when people are tackling him and pulling his hair and stuff.

PunkTV.ca: Yeah, that can be a little bothersome.


Yeah, he gets a bit crazed about it. But, I mean, I’m usually ok. I’ve been overwhelmed before, but I’m usually ok.

PunkTV.ca: And your next album is going to be produced by Rivers Cuomo (Weezer)?


I don’t know exactly what’s going on. He’s working with us on the next album, but I’m not sure. He was going to produce a couple songs, but now he wants to write a couple songs with us, which will be cool too. Collaboration, like a Rivers/Used thing going on. Yeah, like three or four songs. Maybe the whole record…I’m not sure right now, we have 20 something songs written right now so it would be cool to see what happens with it.

PunkTV.ca: What can fans expect from you next?


Um, rock. I mean, so far, I want to say 60% of the songs are pretty rock and we consider ourselves a rock band, because rock bands also do ballads and melodic stuff. I want it to be more rock, so we’ll see.