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1. If you were starting your band today, what would you do differently?
I’d stop waiting for permission. Early on, we thought the right opportunities would come if we played the game correctly. Now I know momentum matters more than approval. I’d release music faster, focus on connection over polish, and build directly with the people who actually care. 2. What’s one risk you took creatively that paid off? Pulling things back instead of adding more. Less flash, fewer layers, more space. Letting riffs breathe and emotions sit longer than what’s comfortable. It made the music heavier in a real way, not just louder. 3. What scares you about making new music at this stage of your career? Becoming predictable. It’s easy to recycle what’s already worked. That fear keeps us honest it forces us to write from where we actually are now, not where we were five years ago. 4. Which song in your catalog still hits you the hardest when you play it live, and why? “Forevermore.” Every time. That song is tied to real pain and things you don’t just get over. Playing it live doesn’t feel like a performance it feels like reopening something that never fully healed. You can feel the room change when it starts. 5. Why does rock music still matter right now? Because it’s one of the last places where people are allowed to be uncomfortable. Rock music gives space for anger, grief, doubt, and frustration without pretending everything’s fine. In a world that’s overly curated, that honesty still matters. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |