Revitalised Spirit With CHAD GREY From MUDVAYNE
Interview by Kris Peters Mudvayne are one of the most influential
bands when it comes to the genre of music they helped to pioneer.
When they dropped their debut album L.D 50 in the year 2000 it is
fair to say the entire sonic landscape of heavy metal...
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Interview by Kris Peters
Mudvayne are one of the most influential bands when it comes to the
genre of music they helped to pioneer.
When they dropped their debut album L.D 50 in the year 2000 it is
fair to say the entire sonic landscape of heavy metal shifted
irreversibly and the nu-metal movement that had until then just
been threatening to take flight now had a tough-as-nails pilot who
was unafraid to break convention and expectation without fear of
retribution.
Quite simply, Mudvayne took a collective musical vision and
rebirthed that vision in their own image.
And, more importantly, made it work.
After continuing their steep upward trajectory for another decade
after that debut release, Mudvayne disbanded without a declaration
of resolve and just like that it was feared the four menacing
nu-metal warriors would be lost to a world with still so much left
to give.
Frontman Chad Grey went on to form Hellyeah and the success of that
band all but extinguished any rumblings of a Mudvayne reunion
before tragedy struck when Hellyeah drummer Vinnie Paul succumbed
to illness and passed this world, leaving Grey with an empty
musical chasm that was still far from being satiated.
In 2021 the news the metal world had been sweating on broke that
Mudvayne would be getting back together for select festival shows
which planted the seeds of revival that grew and flourished rapidly
to the stage that Mudvayne could now be recognised as a
fully-fledged touring outfit once more.
Having always held a soft spot for their Australian fans, Mudvayne
have declared February 2024 as payback time for their patient
followers on this side of the world, bringing with them another
reunion success story in the once more Dez Fafara led Coal
Chamber.
Shortly after news of the tour broke HEAVY sat down for some
quality time with Chad Grey who was more than happy to open up
about the past, present and future of Mudvayne.
We start by extending a warm display of gratitude on behalf of all
Australian metal lovers.
"It's been almost two decades, so…" he laughed. "I guess it's about
time."
Such is the global hype generated by Mudvayne being back together
the band could have pretty much asked any other international
outfit to join them for this tour, so why settle on Coal
Chamber?
"I go way back with Miguel and Mikey," he explained. "We go back a
long way. It's just gonna be rad. I mean, we just did it here in
this past Summer with them - a couple of weeks ago actually, we
just got home - but we had a blast with those guys, so it was kind
of a no-brainer to bring them down with us. We figured that you
guys would enjoy them too. Everybody is just playing really well.
They did phenomenal over the Summer, so we had to bring them with
us."
It's been a large number of years between visits, so we press Grey
on - aside from the obvious - has changed with the band since they
were last here.
"Man, not much," he measured. "We weren't a band for ten years, and
then we started out the conversation and everybody started being
genuinely excited about it again. We surrounded ourselves with some
new people that we're working with and doing business with, and
they're exciting and fun and really helping us embrace Mudvayne and
what we've done. We're just so excited to be coming to Australia.
We had those three comeback festivals and then wedid the tour last
year with Zombie, and we've just been sitting around. We did this
most recent tour, and we heard mutterings of Australia and was so
excited about it because I love Australia. There's a lot of history
down there. When we heard it was solidified we were on a conference
call and everyone was so excited and so jived and so pumped about
coming back. We all absolutely love Australia. We love as much as
how beautiful the country is, it's the people. The metal community
in Australia is so dope. We're just really excited to get back down
there and play for you guys again. You guys are very, very special
to us. I always say if you're going to release an album somewhere,
you better be going some place warm. We've released albums in
Australia, so we've gotta go down and play there for you. That's
the way it goes."
Aside from camera footage that has emerged from their US shows,
little has surfaced surrounding Mudvayne's live performances.
Despite already knowing the answer to an extent we ask Grey what
fans can expect from Mudvayne 2024.
"Intensity," he deadpanned. "It's there, and solid man. We're
really feeding off each other; we're feeding off the crowd. There's
an awesome energy that goes back and forth between us and our
crowd, and it just builds and builds and builds and builds through
the whole set. It's just amazing. It's intense, it's helpless, it's
frenetic, it's crazy, it's angsty and angry and almost violent, but
on the other sense it's sad, and it's helpless. But there's a lot
of good feelings in there too. Metal runs the gamut of human
emotion and that's always been something that we've tried to tap
into. It's important to us to bring that to our live performance.
That level of emotion that is very true and very real and very
honest and very vulnerable."
In the full interview, Chad talks about the 2010 breakup of
Mudvayne and what changed ten years later to make them try again,
how the first couple of shows went after being apart for so long,
the progression from festival shows to touring with Rob Zombie to
doing headline shows and if that was a planned progression, if
Mudvayne will be touring in full makeup, the early days of the band
and their formation, how far nu metal has come since Mudvayne
started and if it has evolved the way he thought, what he considers
Mudvayne's role in heavy metal, new music or an album and more.
Mudvayne are one of the most influential bands when it comes to the
genre of music they helped to pioneer.
When they dropped their debut album L.D 50 in the year 2000 it is
fair to say the entire sonic landscape of heavy metal shifted
irreversibly and the nu-metal movement that had until then just
been threatening to take flight now had a tough-as-nails pilot who
was unafraid to break convention and expectation without fear of
retribution.
Quite simply, Mudvayne took a collective musical vision and
rebirthed that vision in their own image.
And, more importantly, made it work.
After continuing their steep upward trajectory for another decade
after that debut release, Mudvayne disbanded without a declaration
of resolve and just like that it was feared the four menacing
nu-metal warriors would be lost to a world with still so much left
to give.
Frontman Chad Grey went on to form Hellyeah and the success of that
band all but extinguished any rumblings of a Mudvayne reunion
before tragedy struck when Hellyeah drummer Vinnie Paul succumbed
to illness and passed this world, leaving Grey with an empty
musical chasm that was still far from being satiated.
In 2021 the news the metal world had been sweating on broke that
Mudvayne would be getting back together for select festival shows
which planted the seeds of revival that grew and flourished rapidly
to the stage that Mudvayne could now be recognised as a
fully-fledged touring outfit once more.
Having always held a soft spot for their Australian fans, Mudvayne
have declared February 2024 as payback time for their patient
followers on this side of the world, bringing with them another
reunion success story in the once more Dez Fafara led Coal
Chamber.
Shortly after news of the tour broke HEAVY sat down for some
quality time with Chad Grey who was more than happy to open up
about the past, present and future of Mudvayne.
We start by extending a warm display of gratitude on behalf of all
Australian metal lovers.
"It's been almost two decades, so…" he laughed. "I guess it's about
time."
Such is the global hype generated by Mudvayne being back together
the band could have pretty much asked any other international
outfit to join them for this tour, so why settle on Coal
Chamber?
"I go way back with Miguel and Mikey," he explained. "We go back a
long way. It's just gonna be rad. I mean, we just did it here in
this past Summer with them - a couple of weeks ago actually, we
just got home - but we had a blast with those guys, so it was kind
of a no-brainer to bring them down with us. We figured that you
guys would enjoy them too. Everybody is just playing really well.
They did phenomenal over the Summer, so we had to bring them with
us."
It's been a large number of years between visits, so we press Grey
on - aside from the obvious - has changed with the band since they
were last here.
"Man, not much," he measured. "We weren't a band for ten years, and
then we started out the conversation and everybody started being
genuinely excited about it again. We surrounded ourselves with some
new people that we're working with and doing business with, and
they're exciting and fun and really helping us embrace Mudvayne and
what we've done. We're just so excited to be coming to Australia.
We had those three comeback festivals and then wedid the tour last
year with Zombie, and we've just been sitting around. We did this
most recent tour, and we heard mutterings of Australia and was so
excited about it because I love Australia. There's a lot of history
down there. When we heard it was solidified we were on a conference
call and everyone was so excited and so jived and so pumped about
coming back. We all absolutely love Australia. We love as much as
how beautiful the country is, it's the people. The metal community
in Australia is so dope. We're just really excited to get back down
there and play for you guys again. You guys are very, very special
to us. I always say if you're going to release an album somewhere,
you better be going some place warm. We've released albums in
Australia, so we've gotta go down and play there for you. That's
the way it goes."
Aside from camera footage that has emerged from their US shows,
little has surfaced surrounding Mudvayne's live performances.
Despite already knowing the answer to an extent we ask Grey what
fans can expect from Mudvayne 2024.
"Intensity," he deadpanned. "It's there, and solid man. We're
really feeding off each other; we're feeding off the crowd. There's
an awesome energy that goes back and forth between us and our
crowd, and it just builds and builds and builds and builds through
the whole set. It's just amazing. It's intense, it's helpless, it's
frenetic, it's crazy, it's angsty and angry and almost violent, but
on the other sense it's sad, and it's helpless. But there's a lot
of good feelings in there too. Metal runs the gamut of human
emotion and that's always been something that we've tried to tap
into. It's important to us to bring that to our live performance.
That level of emotion that is very true and very real and very
honest and very vulnerable."
In the full interview, Chad talks about the 2010 breakup of
Mudvayne and what changed ten years later to make them try again,
how the first couple of shows went after being apart for so long,
the progression from festival shows to touring with Rob Zombie to
doing headline shows and if that was a planned progression, if
Mudvayne will be touring in full makeup, the early days of the band
and their formation, how far nu metal has come since Mudvayne
started and if it has evolved the way he thought, what he considers
Mudvayne's role in heavy metal, new music or an album and more.
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