Killswitch
Engage have been spreading the good word since
1999, and not even the founding member, bassist
Mike D’Antonio, thought the band would be
this successful. Now, with their fifth studio
album out (their second that is self-titled) and
showing distinct signs of experimentation and
progression, they have brought the KsE roadshow
back to Europe. John Skibeat and Rich Etteridge
managed to catch up with bassist Mike D’Antonio
to discuss gall bladders, Amsterdam, NYHC and
‘sports rage’.
You
just got back from touring South America. What
was that like?
Totally amazing. Blew our
minds. I don't know why we hadn't done it sooner
but we'll definitely be doing it again. Rabid
fans really excited to see the bands, some of
the loudest singalongs we've ever had - it was
just very heart-warming.
You
had to reschedule some dates due to illness?
Yeah. Howard [Jones, vocals] had some
sort of surgery.
Gall
stone?
Yeah, that was it. He is such a 'man', when
he has a serious illness he just let's it go
and go and go and doesn't go and see a doctor
because he thinks it will fix itself. He let
this thing go to far where they just admitted
him straight into a hospital and he spent 12
days there. All his organs started to simultaneously
shutdown on him. His liver stopped working,
various things just said "okay, we're done,
go get some help you idiot" so he got help.
He's
feeling better now?
Yep, he's lost some weight to boot. Maybe that's
the way to lose weight, girls.
Now
you're just a few days into headlining the European
Taste Of Chaos tour. Quite a bit different from
your last tour then?
It is. We've done this tour before. We've toured
with In Flames before, we've toured with Every
Time I Die before. We feel at home. It's a tour
that's run very, very well. It's very orderly.
The same people that do the Vans Warped Tour
and the Mayhem Fest so we know them pretty well.
When
you're out on the road do you slip into a routine
or do you make each day as different as possible?
It's pretty hard to make each day as different
as possible. It's like Groundhog Day every day.
The only cool part is playing in front of the
fans. There's a lot of nothing, a lot of internet,
searching the same sites over and over again
because there's nothing better to do. Got interviews,
eating, there's always food to take your mind
off what's going on.
You
don't have crazy Thursday or Mad Tuesday or anything?
I wish there was both those things. Maybe I'll
introduce something like that.
What
time do you get up?
As late as possible. Which means going to sleep
as late as possible - maybe 4am, waking up about
1 in the afternoon. And then press starts about
3 and then you go straight in to do that. A
lot of the venues are in the middle of nowhere
so it's not like you can walk around and sightsee.
Today was cool though - did some shopping. It
was very cold though which is another thing
that makes you not want to do a lot.
Do
you ever get lost?
That's part of the thing. Out in Amsterdam it's
pretty easy to get lost what with all those
canals. That can get pretty spooky if you're
in the wrong part of town.
Sharing
a coach with Adam [Dutkiewicz, guitar] must be
quite an experience. Is he the same off stage
as he is on it?
Yeah, there's no difference. Sometimes a little
hard to take, but it's fun to have someone who's
always in good spirits all the time, laughing
constantly - both fun and a headache at the
same time.
The
line-up for this tour is an interesting mixture.
Is there anything you do different when in this
situation to help you stand out?
On this one, we don't really have to. I think
people know what to expect. I think it's diverse
enough that it's not really the same thing over
and over again. On the Warped Tour, or something
like that, where all the people play punk and
stuff like that, radio-pop stuff, we tend to
go for the heaviest music that we've written.
That makes you stand out a real lot - blow 'em
away with some metal. If you're a metal band
why play it safe and do the same thing as everybody
else. Go for the throat.
Do
you vary the set-list over the tour to help keep
it fresh?
We have a new one for this tour. We'd like to
include a lot of the video songs, a lot of people
have paid to come see us play certain songs
and we wouldn't wanna disappoint anybody, but
there are variables in the set and there's a
few songs in the mix that we switch around each
night, just to make it different for people
who come along two nights in a row. We played
Scotland and then, two days later, we played
Newcastle, so we switched it around then 'cos
they're pretty close together.
You
are over here touring the album. Why did you self-title
it again?
There was a bunch of different titles we could
have chosen but nothing was glaringly great,
and since we're a band that needs to agree on
everything, we couldn't really agree on one.
The idea of possibly self-titling it again came
up. I thought it was preposterous but everyone
else said it was a good idea, so, in the interest
of getting the cover done (it's my job to get
the graphic design done) I just said okay. Done.
I got the ball rolling to finish that up, as
it was a strenuous month to two month process,
and it was down to the wire and I needed a name
on this thing to get it out the door, so that
was pretty much it.
So
it wasn't because you felt you'd made significant
changes with the sound of the band or...
Well, I guess, theoretically, that would be
the proper way to answer the question but, if
you want the truth... [Laughs all round]
So,
you've got your own design company. How's that
going?
It's good. Right now, economic trouble has made
the business a little bit slow but it will pick
up again. Right now, I have nothing to do and
I usually have so much to do, so these boring
times seem extra boring. Still, peaks and valleys.
You've
spoken previously about redefining your sound
for this album. How did that affect the writing
process?
Writing process is mainly people bringing demos
to practice. Since I don't play guitar, I kind
of learned how to play guitar to bring demos.
It’s a lot easier if you bring a demo
with the drums, bass and guitars sort of in
place, rather than just walking in and saying
"I got a riff and it sounds like this".
I write in GarageBand a lot - you don't require
any mics or amps, you just plug straight into
a Mac computer. It's real fast. If you have
ideas in your head at 12 at night, you just
run your computer, record it real quick. Listen
to it back the next day, splice a few riffs
together, it's really fast and easy to do. That
was my favourite part of the whole thing. If
you're missing one riff, then 9 times out of
10, someone's got a pretty good idea of what's
supposed to come next.
So
it's more of a collaborative process than before?
The collaboration certainly helps. I Will Do
Anything, from this album, is the first song
I wrote for Killswitch from beginning to end
without any help from any of the guys. Usually
someone will give me one or two riffs to keep
me going but that feels pretty good to be able
to write a full song. Adam brings, like, 5 complete
songs to practice and goes "Here!"
and you're like "What? 5 songs? How are
we gonna keep up with that?" Then he'll
come back the next day with five more and go
"Here! Let's write a record". For
some people, it's a lot easier than for others.
What
was the thinking behind asking Brendan O'Brien
to produce?
Every record we do, Roadrunner comes up with
an idea of trying something different. We thought
the fifth album was a good time to do that.
We got enough of a back catalogue to try and
experiment a little bit. Brendan O'Brien was
actually a fan of the band and he asked if we
needed his services. It felt like a really good
idea, there are a lot of cool bands that have
recorded with him. We specifically were hoping
that he could take Howard under his wing and
help push the lyrics along in a few different
directions. I think that was the one outcome
that we were most happy with. He had Howard
singing in different ranges and expanding some
of his lyrical content some more. A lot catchier,
I think.
You
played the Download Festival again this year.
They had changed the location of the stages since
your last epic visit in 2007. For better or worse?
I liked it better just because we didn't have
to get trucked a lot of places and our dressing
room was kinda near the stage. Rather than having
to drive all over the place and leave 20 minutes
before you're supposed to [go on] and everything,
it just seemed more organised. I got to see
a lot of friends that I hadn't seen in a long
while too. Usually it's just get to the stage,
there's nobody else there, play the stage, go
back to the hotel, a little impersonal. The
best part it was sunny! I've never played Download
when it was sunny.
What
bands did you enjoy growing up, the stuff that
made you want to be a musician?
I loved New York hardcore when I was a kid.
Madball, Agnostic Front, Leeway, Bad Brains,
stuff like that. It's stuff I still listen to
today to get inspiration. I don't think anything
has come close to some of that 80s to early
90s spirit. Back then there was the line where
"this is metal, this is hardcore"
and then this whole blurring section that they
just kept pushing, pushing. Now it's like there's
no line at all and it's all just one lump. Back
then, it was like trying to take hardcore to
the next level by adding this metallic influence.
Not nearly enough genres are getting pushed
to the next level these days.
When
you're not touring what pastimes do you enjoy?
Graphic design, playing with my two pug puppies,
video games (Left 4 Dead 2 just came out on
the Xbox, it rules), PSP when I'm on the road,
horror movies, skateboarding. Baseball is pretty
much my only team sport. There's a big rivalry
on our bus between Boston Red Sox and New York
Yankees fans and people get so bent out of shape
it's hard not to be a fan of watching the 'sports
rage' on our bus. It's better than any TV you'll
ever see.
Didn't
the Yankees win the World Series this year?
Yankees did win this year. I have heard a lot
about it. There's not been a break in the gloating
that's gone on from our drummer and our sound
guy!
Interview By John Skibeat