The Meaning Of Metal With DERRICK BRUMLEY From CONQUEST
Interview by Kris Peters Sometimes the best brand of heavy metal is
the one that follows a straight line. While bands of the modern era
generally tend to mix a plethora of styles and genres into each
recording, there are still the die-hard old-school...
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Interview by Kris Peters
Sometimes the best brand of heavy metal is the one that follows a
straight line. While bands of the modern era generally tend to mix
a plethora of styles and genres into each recording, there are
still the die-hard old-school metalheads that subscribe to the old
adage of if it ain't broke, don't try to fix it.
Veteran MidWest thrash metal outfit Conquest are one of those
bands.
Over successive previous albums, Conquest have flown the flag high
for old-school metal, with crushing guitars and blinding speed
punctuating their material. So it comes as no surprise then that
their latest album Paradox - out now - is cut from the same
cloth.
More of the same, if you will, only better.
Vocalist/guitarist Derrick Brumley joined HEAVY to talk us through
more, starting with the reaction to Paradox thus far.
"So far really good," he enthused. "I mean, we're pretty blessed on
how much attention it's getting these days. It's awesome. When
you're a musician, and you're an artist at it, you hope for the
best. Expect the worst, but keep pushing for the best
(laughs)."
We ask him to go deeper into the musical side of Paradox.
"The record Paradox is 16 songs, one is a cover of The Man On The
Silver Mountain," he began. "Dio and Richie Blackmore early on was
a big inspiration for me, so I was really into that old stuff like
that. That's how that song found its way on the record. Just
something I always wanted to record and that kind of spawned the
whole thing. And then for the other tracks, we had a bunch of tunes
written for the record, but then COVID hit, and the original
drummer had left the band for a little bit because he had major
personal issues. He was out of the band, then Lee came in and
filled in the next two years - I should say became a member of the
band - and just killed it on the drums. He brought this thunder to
the songs, so we put all these songs together and ended up with 16
tracks after writing with Lee. It just piled in, next one, next
one, and it was really cool and a really diverse record. It's very
old school with a little touch of new stuff here and there. I tried
to keep the production raw. I don't like overproduced stuff."
In the full interview, Derrick talked more about the songs on
Paradox, keeping true to your influences, writing and recording in
the studio, the obstacles the band had to overcome in order to
finish the album, a bit of history about Conquest, their upcoming
show with Burning Witches and more.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.
Sometimes the best brand of heavy metal is the one that follows a
straight line. While bands of the modern era generally tend to mix
a plethora of styles and genres into each recording, there are
still the die-hard old-school metalheads that subscribe to the old
adage of if it ain't broke, don't try to fix it.
Veteran MidWest thrash metal outfit Conquest are one of those
bands.
Over successive previous albums, Conquest have flown the flag high
for old-school metal, with crushing guitars and blinding speed
punctuating their material. So it comes as no surprise then that
their latest album Paradox - out now - is cut from the same
cloth.
More of the same, if you will, only better.
Vocalist/guitarist Derrick Brumley joined HEAVY to talk us through
more, starting with the reaction to Paradox thus far.
"So far really good," he enthused. "I mean, we're pretty blessed on
how much attention it's getting these days. It's awesome. When
you're a musician, and you're an artist at it, you hope for the
best. Expect the worst, but keep pushing for the best
(laughs)."
We ask him to go deeper into the musical side of Paradox.
"The record Paradox is 16 songs, one is a cover of The Man On The
Silver Mountain," he began. "Dio and Richie Blackmore early on was
a big inspiration for me, so I was really into that old stuff like
that. That's how that song found its way on the record. Just
something I always wanted to record and that kind of spawned the
whole thing. And then for the other tracks, we had a bunch of tunes
written for the record, but then COVID hit, and the original
drummer had left the band for a little bit because he had major
personal issues. He was out of the band, then Lee came in and
filled in the next two years - I should say became a member of the
band - and just killed it on the drums. He brought this thunder to
the songs, so we put all these songs together and ended up with 16
tracks after writing with Lee. It just piled in, next one, next
one, and it was really cool and a really diverse record. It's very
old school with a little touch of new stuff here and there. I tried
to keep the production raw. I don't like overproduced stuff."
In the full interview, Derrick talked more about the songs on
Paradox, keeping true to your influences, writing and recording in
the studio, the obstacles the band had to overcome in order to
finish the album, a bit of history about Conquest, their upcoming
show with Burning Witches and more.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.
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