The
following review was taken from Metal
Edge Magazine's August 1998 issue.
The
Elephantine Sound of Clutch
Pachyderms
On Parade
by
Paul Gargano
It
didn't take long to notice the odd band out on the
Ladies Night In Cambodia tour, where Clutch emerged
a mutant metal-spawn grinding gargantuan riffs between
Sevendust's high energy attack and Limp Bizkit's
metallic hip hop hybrid. A daunting task for the
West Virginia quartet? Hardly, with a resume' boasting
genre-twisting tours including the likes of Marilyn
Manson, Bad Religion and Prong, and recently released
third album, The Elephant Riders, which continues
frontman Neil Fallon, guitarist Tim Sult, drummer
Jean-Paul Gaster and bassist Dan Maines' uncompromising
tradition of thick, syrupy grooves and hearty, robust
arrangements. Catching up with the band before a
stop on the Cambodia trek, a month before the April
14 release of their album and two months before
they would play a string of dates with Slayer prior
to headlining clubs on their own, Neil Fallon and
Jean-Paul Gaster discussed the past, present and
future that helped create The Elephant Riders.
P:
You're on Columbia Records now. Does it feel like
you're getting a new start?
JP:
It's gotten to the point now where we've been on
so many labels it's just another label and it doesn't
really mean anything. You can't really judge a career
by labels. We're not dependent on what they do,
they're dependent on us. Obviously, they're the
ones with the cash, but we're the ones with the
jams.
P:
So, you're not about to accuse any label of not
promoting the band adequately?
JP:
I mean, that's obviously the case, but these aren't
things that we sit around and let effect the music.
It's music first. We would be making these same
songs with the same band if we were on whatever
label. It doesn't matter.
P:
Nothing has changed as far as your outlook goes?
N:
I think we're more optimistic because we're not
being suppressed. That's basically what was going
on with Atlantic, and East West was even worse.
Columbia seems excited, which makes us feel good.
P:
Given the state of today's market, do you think
this album Is capable of reaching a broader audience?
JP:
It's hard to say. I think we've gotten to the point
where the quality of the music on the radio's gotten
so poor, we're going for the lowest common denominator.
It's worse that its ever, ever been. I suppose it
could pop. Maybe something will happen with it,
I think people are definitely ready fur something
new. They're talking about how record sales across
the board are down, but look what they've got to
choose from!
N:
I think if it blows up, it's going to blow up huge.
I think every once in a while there's a watershed
album like when Nirvana came out. That's what people
wanted to hear all of a sudden, so it blew up. The
best possible situation is that we could be that,
but most likely not. But I definitely think it will
do a lot better than the last one, given the promotion
and what not.
P:
Did you approach anything differently with this
album? Do you think a Clutch fan from day one will
turn it around and say that Clutch has changed?
JP:
I hope so. I certainly don't ever want to make the
same record twice. But then again, it's the four
of us, so how different is the approach going to
be? It's no about reinventing yourself. It's more
about just growing and becoming better at what you
do, trying to learn something every day.
P:
How do you think you've evolved with Elephant Riders?
JP:
I think on this album we've definitely changed our
approach to arrangements. I think the arrangements
are more mature than the last ones were. I think
the ideas have just gone to the next level that
we could bring them.
N:
They're a little more technical now. We're more
like your favorite technical metal band. [laughs]
P:
Do you have a problem with being of considered a
metal band?
N:
I think that's a word people don't use for many
things these days. It's fine by us.
JP:
It has other connotations. Some people think metal,
they think Poison. Other people think Black Sabbath.
Other people think Deicide. So I guess it's like
Clutch metal. Rock N' Roll is the best word,
but heavy metal is probably the more specific genre.
I guess when you write about music, you've got to
use words. Sometimes that means different things
to different people.
P:
Clutch is notorious for touring with diverse acts--whether
it be this tour, or past bills with Manson, Pantera,
Bad Religion.... What would your ideal tour be?
JP:
I'd like to put together a package where a lot of
people come. We like to play for different audiences.
This one isn't all together different, but I think
it's a younger crowd.
N:
This is more of a hip hop oriented audience than
we're used to. We toured with Pantera, those crowds
have some things in common with us, but not a lot.
So down the line, when we do a headlining tour,
we get people from both those crowds, and that's
good because it kind of confuses people. They realize,
"Shit, I have to just look at the band and
not fool around."
JP:
The point is, your playing for new people.
P:
How would you define your audiences?
JP:
If you want to talk about genres, we've got hardcore
kids, punk rock kids, you've got speedcore kids,
you've got thrash kids...
N:
...Metal adults, we've got hip hop kids... 1 guess
there's something in the music that they dig because
we're not focusing on, "Well, we've got to
make this the fastest album ever." We just
want to write a song that's, by itself, a good song.
If a person can hear that, then there's bound to
be something that they like, which is a good thing.
I take pride in that. That makes me proud.
P:
Do you have different individual tastes and influences
that reflect Clutch's sound?
JP:
All of us have very extensive record collections
that sort encompass everything. All of us own some
jazz records, blues records, metal records, hip
hop records, some country records, blues records...
Everybody tries to draw a in a little bit of everything.
Every guys taste is individual, though it's not
like we sit around and only listen to... Who do
we only listen? (laughing) It's not like we sit
around and listen to only Machine Head, Black Sabbath,
the Cro-Mags...
N:
Which we do, but we have our own tastes. So when
we write a song, maybe that kind of explains why
different people can hear different things. Its
not like in the Village People, where one of us
is the metal head, one of us is the country music
guy...
P:
So when you sit down to write a song, you write
with the band in mind, not the audience.
N:
Right. Each song in itself. We try to make each
one like a little book.
P:
There do seem to be themes that run through each
of the albums.
N:
I think it's a mood thing. When we're writing an
album there are certain things that we take an interest
in because it's written in such a short period of
time it's like a snapshot. Like the last one. At
the time I was reading a bunch of stuff on UFOs,
looking out the window waiting to see UFOs. So that
ended up in the album. This last one, that wasn't
the case, I was reading more about historical things
and they just crept in. The next one I don't know.
Maybe I'll be into, I don't know, scuba diving.
It'll be an underwater album.
P:
Do you write all the lyrics yourself?
N:
Pretty much.
P:
Does everybody write their own parts?
JP:
Everybody does their own thing. Like the song starts
with a drum or it starts with just one riff, then
maybe we'll be like, "Alright this is cool."
Or maybe Tim's got a riff that fits with it, too.
it's very much a democracy.
P:
Do you write on guitar?
JP:
No. But I'll think of a riff in my head and I'll
sing it to Tim and I'll say, "Play this riff
for me."
N:
That's what keeps it interesting, I can't see if
I were the dictator and said, "You've got to
play this bass line and this beat." Then it
wouldn't be a very interesting song, but Jean-Paul's
going to do a beat that I don't expect, and that's
just going to make me think about the song all the
more. It makes it more interesting. I think that
goes for everybody. Tim's not going to play the
guitar in a way that I would expect so it makes
it an interesting song.
P:
Do you ever feel that if you did any thing a little
differently. and compromised your sound, you might
have a hit single?
JP:
This record was actually recorded twice. It was
recorded first in W. Virginia when we were on Atlantic
Records, and then it was rejected and we came to
New York City to work with a producer. So we thought
to ourselves, "Obviously we're never going
to sound like Counting
Crows," but we thought maybe we could do something
with the arrangement to make it a little more acceptable
to, say, a radio program. We found that really and
truly, we were completely incapable of writing it.
We actually tried. I suppose that if we really wanted
to sit down, we
could sit down and write a Seven Mary Three song...
N:
...But we'd become so disgusted with ourselves after
the fact that it would just do more harm than good.
I think if the planets are looking kindly on us,
and that's what people like anyway, that's a great.
But you can't be a follower. I, You've got to lead.
P:
What was the mood like when you recorded Elephant
Riders?
N:
I think you can attribute a lot of it to the fact
that we moved into a house, and wrote a good portion
of that music in the house. It was a very rural
atmosphere, a lot like camping. It was a very run
down house. I don't know if there's an actual attribute
to that that's in the album but it
was a good way to be inspired, better than sitting
in a studio. Studios are not very inspiring. It
was In W. Virginia, in a very old home, stone walls
and hard wood floors, a great sounding place. We
didn't have a mission statement, or anything like
that, It was just a rustic atmosphere.
P:
Where did the title Elephant Riders come from?
N:
That was just a flight of fancy. Fantasy metal about
the civil war. There was a b-side for this album
that's about Dungeons & Dragons. It's not about
fantasy metal--It's more about that cult time period
where stuff like D&D was king. Yeah, I kind
of dig that. I think that's more entertaining than
listening to someone whine about their childhood
trauma.
P: What was "The Elephant Riders"?
N:
It was just an idea I came up with. It was sort
of an ultimate civil war scenario where elephants
were being used as part of the cavalry and there
were different technological developments, like
zeppelins, that came out before they actually did,
so I guess it's sort of historical fiction, but
that makes it sounds a lot more heavy than it actually
is. Its almost like a role playing game. We named
the album Elephant Riders, but the album itself
isn't a concept. Its just a song.
P:
Were you trying to pick up a sound on this album
that you haven't done before?
JP:
Very rarely do we ever sit down and say, "Lets
try to make the next Clutch song sound like this."
It happens unconsciously. I listen to parts and
I try to make them flow and stick together. Wherever
we are at that point, we end up. We just sort of
let things lie where they are. Whatever you end
up with is what you get.
P:
Do you think there's a lot of room out there for
bands that don't follow the trends?
N:
What happens is, sometimes record executives dig
themselves a hole. There'll be a whole batch of
the whole alternative thing that goes on right now.
And they figured out what kind of bands that people
will buy so they keep signing them and putting them
out. Some people are going to lose interest and
all these record executives are going to get fired
and then another record executive will figure out,
"Well, now people want to hear electronic music."
They call it electronica and try to do that for
a couple years. First it was industrial, then they
can change the name to techno, electronica, putting
'a's on the ends of words just to make them sound
more intelligent... Heavy Metala, it's just unreal.
JP:
I think the smartest people out there today are
the people that buy records. The actual consumers.
The people who sit on the top of record labels are
actually the most ignorant when it comes to music.
Those are the people who are constantly shooting
for this lowest common denominator I was talking
about. That's stupid. The people are very intelligent
and they'll buy intelligent, smart music. All you
have to do is put it out there and let them know
it's available to them. It sucks that most people,
when they hear a new record, hear it on the radio.
There's not very many people that go out to the
record stores and search for good albums. There's
nothing wrong with doing that.