| Interactive |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| Heavy Metal Bands |
|
| |
| |
| |
| Present Time |
| |
| |
| |
| Specials |
| |
| |
| |
| |
|
| |
| |
| |
| Other References |
| |
| |
|
|
A-Z Heavy Metal - Heavy Metal News, Mp3, Videos, Photos and More
|
QUEENSRYCHE - Frontman Says The American Public 'Has Really Dumbed Down'
|
|
Jeff Kerby of KNAC.COM recently conducted an interview with QUEENSRŸCHE
frontman Geoff Tate. An excerpt from the chat follows:
[http://www.knac.com/]
KNAC.COM: Don't you have to have a certain expectation about your fans to
even attempt a sequel to the record that in many
ways has defined what QUEENSRŸCHE has been? Wouldn't the audience have
to want to evolve from that point in order to make this successful?
Geoff Tate: "You're getting into a really big can of worms. "
KNAC.COM: In fact those were the exact words I was going to use when I was
going to ask you how many times a day you go, "Man, I have really opened
up a big can of worms here with this new 'Mindcrime' thing."
Geoff Tate: "Oh, I never think that."
KNAC.COM: Never?
Geoff Tate: "No, not with the record. Any time you take into account the
expectations of people, you are taking a wrong turn. I refuse to go down
that path. I have taken it before in my life, and there is no end to the
problems and issues that brings up. I want to live my life with no feeling
of regret. What I have tried to do with my art is to act upon what moves
me. If people like it or they don't, I don't give a shit about that. It
isn't for them — it's for me. In that respect it is completely selfish,
but that's self expression. That is how I've lived my life, and it has worked."
KNAC.COM: In your defense, in order for anything to be truly authentic,
you would have to be focused and committed to the idea of your project rather
than replicating a preexisting movement or merely copying a work that you've
already produced.
Geoff Tate: "Yeah, I don't think anyone could be successful operating that
way because you're constantly chasing public opinion which is so damn fickle.
It's like you're constantly chasing a tail that's wagging in front of you.
I just don't even think that way. It isn't like we're trying to capitalize
on the original 'Operation: Mindcrime' either. If we were going to do that,
we would have picked a more successful album. We're just looking to extend
the story because it was left open ended. The timing just seems right to
revisit the story now and tell the tale because the times we're in now are
so similar. The time the original 'Mindcrime' was written was so similar
to now — it's really weird. We have Bush in power now along with the conservative,
religious right that are limiting freedoms for Americans. We are invested
in a no win war overseas that we are putting millions and millions of dollars
into while running up an enormous deficit. We are all back in debt again,
and these similarities are so ironic that it would almost be a crime not
to explore the idea again. In our minds it is time to do that. This record
is really a continuation that takes place eighteen years later, and we drop
in on Nikki's life and see what he has become.
KNAC.COM: I know you have been bandying around this idea of having a sequel
to "Mindcrime" for awhile, and I also know you want to express yourself
with this, but did you become more committed after this November's election
or instead were you discouraged by the results?
Geoff Tate: "Well, I'm not really out to change anything or any person's
mind with this album. It's more of a study of the human condition or a study
of power — a kind of cause and effect. Regarding the election though,
I don't think that at any given time in my life have I been so disappointed
as in this one. I have never been so puzzled by the supposed polarization
of the public — actually, I don't necessarily even believe there is a
polarization of the public. I don't think the election was an honest election
— why should it have been any different than the last one? I think the
Bushes are just an incredibly powerful family, and their power extends back
through American history. They have so much wealth and power and the ability
to sway public policy that they can basically get away with murder. I actually
believe that. I'm not talking about conspiracy theories or all of that kind
of crap. I'm just talking about reality. The American public in the last
ten to fifteen years has really dumbed down. We are just so programmed to
accept commerciality and the idea of a consumer society. We have to purchase…stuff.
Our culture is basically consumerism."
Read the entire interview at KNAC.COM.
[http://www.knac.com/article.asp?ArticleID=3781]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|