Turning Time Against Itself With MIKE IX From EYEHATEGOD
Interview by Kris Peters Heavy metal and blues music have a long
history that is ignored by some and refuted by others, but when
push comes to shove there can be no denying the two genres can not
only co-exist in the same musical realm, but also owe...
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Interview by Kris Peters
Heavy metal and blues music have a long history that is ignored by
some and refuted by others, but when push comes to shove there can
be no denying the two genres can not only co-exist in the same
musical realm, but also owe much of their existence to the
influence of the other.
This is perhaps no more evident than in the case of New Orleans
sludge metal outfit EYEHATEGOD, who combine the sounds of southern
rock, blues riffs and hardcore punk to create a musical division of
their own that while being unashamedly metal is still a bastardised
love child of centuries of history and tradition that has come
before.
Born into a musical climate that shunned their very existence and
forced them to evolve, adapt and create unto themselves to
negotiate the treacherous waters of the music industry, the band
have gone on to become a dominant force, with many bands citing
EYEHATEGOD as being hugely influential on their own career
trajectory.
They are a band with no master and therefore no guiding light other
than their own darkness and have become such a pivotal catalyst in
the amalgamation of musical diversity that Phil Anselmo, Pepper
Keenan and Randy Blythe have all crossed musical paths on their
journeys, with each leaving better for the experience.
With EYEHATEGOD on the cusp of their first Australian tour in half
a decade with Goatwhore, vocalist Mike IX sat down for a chat with
HEAVY to tell us more.
"It's gonna get crazy," he laughed. "It will definitely get weird
at some point."
When talk turns to the early days of EYEHATEGOD Mike was
unapologetic in regards to their early insistence to do things that
made them happy, not that were considered safe or acceptable.
"We didn't fit in," he shrugged. "People hated us. People couldn't
stand us. We had very few fans locally. The climate back then was
still mostly thrash metal with bands doing the Exodus, Slayer type
of thing. There was a lot of different styles, but there was some
hardcore punk bands, then there was the thrash stuff. There wasn't
a lot new going on at the time. We were big fans of Black Sabbath
and Black Flag and all these bands, so we thought let's just do
that. That's all we wanted to do."
In the full interview, Mike talks more about the upcoming tour and
what to expect, what has changed with EYEHATEGOD since their last
visit, the name of the tour and what significance that has on what
we can expect, touring with Goatwhore, putting local supports at
each show, new material and more.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.
Heavy metal and blues music have a long history that is ignored by
some and refuted by others, but when push comes to shove there can
be no denying the two genres can not only co-exist in the same
musical realm, but also owe much of their existence to the
influence of the other.
This is perhaps no more evident than in the case of New Orleans
sludge metal outfit EYEHATEGOD, who combine the sounds of southern
rock, blues riffs and hardcore punk to create a musical division of
their own that while being unashamedly metal is still a bastardised
love child of centuries of history and tradition that has come
before.
Born into a musical climate that shunned their very existence and
forced them to evolve, adapt and create unto themselves to
negotiate the treacherous waters of the music industry, the band
have gone on to become a dominant force, with many bands citing
EYEHATEGOD as being hugely influential on their own career
trajectory.
They are a band with no master and therefore no guiding light other
than their own darkness and have become such a pivotal catalyst in
the amalgamation of musical diversity that Phil Anselmo, Pepper
Keenan and Randy Blythe have all crossed musical paths on their
journeys, with each leaving better for the experience.
With EYEHATEGOD on the cusp of their first Australian tour in half
a decade with Goatwhore, vocalist Mike IX sat down for a chat with
HEAVY to tell us more.
"It's gonna get crazy," he laughed. "It will definitely get weird
at some point."
When talk turns to the early days of EYEHATEGOD Mike was
unapologetic in regards to their early insistence to do things that
made them happy, not that were considered safe or acceptable.
"We didn't fit in," he shrugged. "People hated us. People couldn't
stand us. We had very few fans locally. The climate back then was
still mostly thrash metal with bands doing the Exodus, Slayer type
of thing. There was a lot of different styles, but there was some
hardcore punk bands, then there was the thrash stuff. There wasn't
a lot new going on at the time. We were big fans of Black Sabbath
and Black Flag and all these bands, so we thought let's just do
that. That's all we wanted to do."
In the full interview, Mike talks more about the upcoming tour and
what to expect, what has changed with EYEHATEGOD since their last
visit, the name of the tour and what significance that has on what
we can expect, touring with Goatwhore, putting local supports at
each show, new material and more.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.
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