| Ron: How would you compare Gateways to the previous
albums?
Trey: Well, on the old albums, most of the stuff is really fast and
racy, and kind of a raw sound, and this one is more atmospheric, a lot
of groove type patterns, most of the songs on seven string guitars, so
its, you know down tuned, kind of a heavier laid out album with a few fast
tracks but most of the stuff is really deep and kinda spiraling around,
and flowing
R: About the lyrics, Steve has credit for most
of the lyrics on the new album. What’s the writing process like now
that Steve is more entrenched in the band?
T: Before we started writing stuff as far as lyrics, we had a lot of
talks about what the stuff is about, and he had been on formulas and did
a lot of touring, and we pretty much connected, he knew what things were
about. And we had talked about the theme of this record being "The
silent spaces between mans thoughts" and how there’s no inherent meaning
to anything in the universe, and how beliefs are just a perception filter,
and things that we attach meaning to, its just in the mind, its not that
the object holds this meaning. So basically the human race puts together
these meanings to feel more comfortable with things, and to define them,
and you know, that has its place in the world and life, but also it becomes
blinding. Whatever you believe, that’s going to highlight what you
see and pay attention to, and the things you don't believe, you may miss.
You may miss feelings and experiences and in some way you're blinded to
what things could come from them. People will just see "the path"
as opposed to new experiences, because they're reference points are from
the path. Kind of a deep thing, its basically from studying the Kabala,
Deepak Chopra, Indian mysticism. A lot of that philosophy goes into
what these lyrics are about. The main thing is in life everything
that we do is to achieve a feeling, its all to move towards something that’s
pleasurable, and to move away from something that’s painful. For
me this album is all about feeling. You can put any meaning you want
to it, but its the next level, beyond the meaning, its the actual feeling.
That’s the way I play guitar, not from a bunch of theory or calculated
technique and scales, its more just, not knowing what I'm doing, just playing,
and seeing what it feels like. Trying to get that feel.
R: Would you say you want people to get that meaning
and deepness from the lyrics, or do you leave it up to interpretation?
T: Definitely up to interpretation. The lyrics are like poems.
When you read a poem or you look at a painting, there’s not some presented
meaning attached to it, its usually for the one who’s looking at it to
come to his own conclusion, and put it up against his own reference points,
and it kind then becomes something bigger than one thing. It kind
of moves into a limitless type of thing. For me, its about having
people listen to the album completely open minded, to try to approach it
from a place like meditation. Like silent meditation where you go
out to nature or the sea, and just listen to stuff, and not try to define
it, don't let it trigger memories or anything, but actually have a stillness
of the mind and find no separation between the sound and the listener,
and just grab into that power, because there’s this power there.
And that’s the real stuff, that’s where we're one with the great ocean,
besides being a separate cup filled with this water. I break it down
like this, the real stuff, energy, nature, it’s like the great ocean, and
all of us people are like cups, goblets whatever, filled with the water.
If you realize yourself as being the cup, then you're limited. You're
in the realm of time and space, and you're separated, but if you find yourself
as being the water, then you're connected, you're one. I believe
that all living things are connected as this water, and the cup is your
personality and beliefs, and the things that make you seem more diverse.
But they're like clothes, they're not the stuff. Cause what we are
as people as living beings are the creators of ourselves, and when you
find yourself being the creator of yourself, you find out any behavior
you have you created it, you find that you're not that behavior, you can
be another behavior. You're bigger than your behavior, something
like what Tony Robbins said. We're bigger than our ideas, and our
behaviors. We're the one who creates that, and it’s all about how
you see yourself. Cause if you believe that if you're this
particular person and you've got these particular limitations, whatever.
Then there you go, there’s your life, you just dictated it for yourself.
But if you believe you can transcend these limitations, then that’s tapping
into that larger energy. So it goes back to belief. Belief
is like the floodgates to your potential.
R: It's interesting with this type of heavy philosophy,
its usually not associated with the brutality of the type of music you
guys are playing. Do you feel it’s a good medium to try and convey
this type of stuff?
T: I hadn't really thought about it like that. I just do it because
its what I do. I've been doin' this type of stuff for a long time,
and all the stuff I do comes more from my heart and my soul than from my
mind. But as far as when I write music, I don't think about what’s
cool or what’s fashionable or what’s trendy, and try to jump into
that. I just do what I feel. And that’s the root of it.
From what I feel, without considering what other people might think about
it.
R: Do you think that’s given Morbid Angel the
staying power to remain pretty much true to the original intentions of
the bands for so many years, compared to other bands that have changed
their styles?
T: Sure it’s all about purpose. For me, I've always felt that
I've had this connection, ever since I was a kid, to this thing... I come
from this place when I create. All the creation comes from this state,
from a more contemplative meditative state. Where you're not really
sitting there discussing stuff or analyzing stuff, you're just grabbing
at feelings, or flowing with a feeling, and its a realization of energy,
and then later you put a label to it. Contemplation is more thinking
about stuff in the intellect, and working with meanings, and that’s more
for communication, when you're talking with other people you gotta use
words to find an understanding, but when you communicate with yourself
you don't need words. When you communicate with nature there’s no
need for words or meaning. So there’s the two things. Its all
important. I don't think someone goes through life just being blank in
the mind and all they are is just formless spirit. I think the reason
to be here, to be alive, is to have fun. To receive the joy that’s
all around us, and to not build up these walls that separate us from the
joy. That’s why in the one lyric that I wrote "the freedoms and the
prisons are in the mind" cause they are. It's all based on interpretation,
and interpretation is based on experience, and experience is based on interpretation,
so you've got a lot of illusions floating around in that, the way I look
at it. Cause you've got two different people who look at the same
thing and get a different meaning out of it, does that mean that one person
is more right than the other? I think the best way to look at that
is, how is this belief working towards their goals? Is it making
them feel good, and helping them flourish in their life, or is it making
them feel lacking, or like they're inadequate. It's really more of
a subjective thing. So to me the main thing is about feeling.
And that’s why I listen to music. I don't listen to music like "what
does it mean?" its more like "how does it move me" I don't think about
is it major or minor, or is it correct, just what kind of vibe is coming
out of it.
R: What were some of your influences musically
when you started up Morbid Angel?
T: Mainly stuff like Eddie Van Halen's guitar playing, and Jimi Hendrix,
and Pink Floyd, the kind of feelings that they had going on with their
stuff. And you know, Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, the stuff that
was real heavy, the extreme or heavy metal. Louder than what’s considered
pop. The more extreme stuff, where people were tapping into some
kind of fury or energy. I've always been into the more energetic
music. If its gonna be metal and loud I want it to be real energetic,
but also I like stuff that’s dreamy and floaty and stuff like Pink Floyd
or like The Gathering. Its all about feeling. I just listen
to the kind of music that moves me. I've liked music that other people
didn't like and it didn't matter to me. But me, I base my opinions
on how something moves me, see what it does to me personally.
R: And that would tie into your songwriting too,
trying to get that feeling to other people right?
T: Yeah, I've always been interested in the bands that came out with
something unique. When Eddie Van Halen came out, and with their first few
albums there was really nothing like that, at least nothing on record,
and it was special, and it was paradigm shifting, and it was breaking models
and molds and throwing out the rules. Like Jimi Hendrix as well,
with the sounds and some of the expressions he played, it was different,
it was fresh. It seemed like it went beyond the theory of music,
or starting from the theory and adding all this expression to it.
But it was this kind of personal thing that was really unique, and that’s
what drew me to it. I think Eddie Van Halen was one of the most incredible
guitar players ever, and he still is, because he came out at this time
and played a whole brand new kind of way, and it was incredible, and very
energetic and exciting, and exotic and different and unique. So I
guess that’s what I try to do with what I do, cause that’s what I'm interested
in. Make stuff that’s not mediocre or common, that’s special.
I don't think I could do anything normal if I wanted to, cause I'm a freak!
R: Would you consider Morbid Angel a death metal
band? I read an interview with Deicide, and they don't consider themselves
death metal. Do you accept the label?
T: It's fine with me, because for me, death metal seems like the more
extreme form of music. Stuff that doesn't have to abide by rules,
but has its own order to it, its not just a bunch of garbage. Because
there’s extreme music that doesn't have any depth to it, and I don't think
of that as death metal. Death metal is music, its got timing signatures,
even though they can be really wacked out, and its trying to develop new
sounds, to make the guitar do new things, rather than the traditional rock
chords. It's trying to make the guitar sound like a legion of demons
marching, or zombies coming out of the ground, or a hurricane blowing over
and devastating.
R: The big news right now is that the tour you
guys were going to head out on with Pantera is cancelled. What are
you going to do now?
T: Well, it just gives us a little more time at home. We're going
to Europe in December. The thing with Pantera though, it was just
postponed, and it'll pick up next year and we're still on it. For
every album we do some serious touring... we had everything planned for
these Pantera tour dates, and it was just gonna be for a month, this initial
thing, so we were thinking it would be a really good opportunity, you know
Pantera draws a lot of people, they're really cool, we were thinking it'd
be really good. So it falling through changed the situation a little
bit, but if we were NOT going to do the Pantera tour, we'd probably have
toured the states headlining for that month anyway. It always takes
time to set up shows though, so it was kind of weird that it wasn't even
a week... within a week of leaving for the tour we heard it was over!
So it was disheartening, cause we were all geared up and ready, and now
we're just sitting around the house. But it worked out, because now
we're going to be on the Pantera tour for like two months instead of just
one. So it worked out well.
R: Do you think you'll tour again as a headliner?
Or is the Pantera tour going to be it?
T: No, I think we'll still do a headlining tour, maybe two.
R: Well, we'll hope to see you guys up here in
Rochester. Are you getting sick of questions about what you're going
to name your 27th album?
T: I haven't even thought about it... that's pretty far in the future.
R: Do you have any advice for young people that
are getting into music? What would you say to a new band that's trying
to break into the scene?
T: I think the number one thing is to play the kind of music that is
so fun, that you don't think about all the hours of preparation it takes
to do something with a band. Make it into play and not work.
When you start to find that your band is work, then change what you're
doing. Because you could go work a day job or something and probably
have more security. A band is supposed to be fun. So you should
play music that makes you feel ecstasy. And you should play stuff
from the heart. I think that's the most important thing. The
rest is just details you can talk to a lawyer or a manager about.
But the core of it is to come from a place of passion. The spirit
needs to come through in the music, because its all about vibration.
That’s where it happens. And I think that's the power, that’s the
whole deal.
R: I noticed in the 'Thanks' on the album you
thanked your Quake 3 clan, are you into gaming a lot?
T: Actually yeah, this year I played quite a bit. I've kinda 'lived'
in the arena's. I recorded my solos while I was watching people play.
Cause I record my solos at my house. And yeah, its great. It's
actually rail quake, that’s the way I like to play. It's more of
a fun clan, we have some good players and we have a lot of fun. I
was always into Doom, and I play ZDoom online. But Quake 3 with the
Rail has hooked me pretty well.
R: What kind of gaming rig do you have?
T: Right now I have a p3 600 with 256mb of RAM. The area I live
in doesn't have cable or DSL, so I'm on some stupid asshole modem.
R: That sucks
T: Yeah, it does, but you know, I still have some good games.
I have a lot of fun. The thing is I would play for like 3 days without
sleeping, and I'd be in such a zone, that my ping didn't matter.
I just had it going.
R: Well maybe I’ll see you on a server some time.
Thanks very much for talkin' to me here. Hopefully we'll see you
up in here in Rochester.
T: Thank you man, have a good one. |