¿Qué sucede si pestañeas frente a la estatua de un ángel de mármol? «Pestañea y estás muerto» reza una reconocida frase entre los capítulo de una serie de culto británica. Esa no era la razón por la que no quería pestañear esta ocasión.
La tensión y el deseo, la ansiedad y también la incertidumbre, todo aumentaba conforme pasaban los segundos para aquellas personas de pie en el Shrine Hall de Los Ángeles, California, y también para otros clavados con la mirada fija en la pantalla del celular donde, conectados a la transmisión en vivo desde las cuentas de @dietshampoo y otros en Instagram, casi 30 mil personas alrededor del mundo veían fijo sin parpadear a los ojos a aquel ángel que señalaba acusador. «Ustedes, son los últimos segundos antes de que se unan a esta gran Marcha Negra, ¿están listos?»
Tras una mezcla de emociones rememorando con una mezcla de melodías y frases que cubrieron perfectamente cada época de la banda, la respuesta vino al unísono cuando quebró el silencio la frase que todos gritamos eufóricos, liderados por Ray Toro. Todos volvimos a sentir la emoción de empatizar con aquel fanático de los juegos de rol y poco habilidoso en los deportes que jamás iba a lograr su objetivo. Nosotros al menos llegamos a contemplar el nuestro: Verlos y oírlos en un regreso triunfal ante los ojos de todo el mundo.
Las primeras notas pusieron a todos, presentes y desde lejos, a vibrar. El grito lo compartimos en niveles espirituales que pocos comprenderían, pero que llenaron más allá de Los Ángeles de sentimientos encontrados. El cuarteto más esperado se hacía presente tras casi siete años de espera, como lo habían prometido. ¿De qué manera podíamos hacerles conocer que esto era algo anhelado desde la profundidad de nuestros pensamientos? Solo coreando los versos que nos aprendimos tras cantarlo miles de veces. Y sí, en ese momento todos alzamos el puño al ritmo de “I’m not okay”, alzando nuestras voces al unísono, celebrando el regreso triunfal de una parte importante de nuestras vidas. La espera no fue en vano.
Las personas aparecían a borbotones al frente de aquel escenario donde el sudor y lágrimas de aquel cuarteto de New Jersey se hicieron presentes, solo por tener el deseo inconmesurable de revivir las épocas cuando estas canciones sonaban por primera vez en el oído de muchos en vivo. Mientras tanto, para muchos tantos fans de la banda, esta era aquella ocasión surrealista de presenciarlos, de sentirlos, de notar que en realidad esas canciones tenían una carga poderosa. A muchos los salvaron de situaciones oscuras, a otros los animaron día a día. Esa noche, a miles de personas nos devolvía la esperanza. Desde el primer instante en que vimos a Gerard interpretar con la misma pasión cada palabra supimos que iniciaba una nueva época para todos: Ahora él nos volverá a guiar hacia otro mar de experiencias que fluirá por la lírica y el canto.
La banda se mostraba contenta, como era de esperarse. En sus rostros se notaba el empeño y dedicación que le ponían, tras haber silenciado tanto tiempo su arte. La energía de cada uno de ellos seguía tan presente como la última vez que estuvieron delante de las personas en un concierto, como la última vez que se unieron para formar música. Con el carisma que nosotros entendemos, Gerard Way lograba que todos estuvieran en su lugar en esa noche: El micrófono no era sólo de él, sino de todos que en varias ocasiones lograron hacerse escuchar aún más fuerte que las bocinas del lugar. Nadie opacaba a nadie, de todas maneras, porque también fuimos todos testigos de que la voz de Way persistía en entregar lo mejor de sí, casi como si el tiempo se hubiera detenido en sus cuerdas vocales. Por otro lado, en el bajo, su hermano. Mikey Way, quien también hacía una presencia más notoria al frente, que lucía mucho más conectado con la interacción en la primera fila, conduciendo con los ritmos base los latidos de la música que hacía estallar el local.
House of Wolves sin duda es una de las canciones del ahora cuarteto que pone a saltar a todos. Para el instante en que esta canción sonó, todos dejaron de lado el canto e hicieron lo que mejor encajaba con la canción: Bailar. Danzar. Mover el cuerpo. Ahí es donde claramente abrimos más allá de nuestra mente para entender que el impacto que las canciones de My Chemical Romance está en nuestra vida hasta la última fibra de nuestros cuerpos. Pocos intervalos existieron donde se conversaba: En el primero que surgió tras esta canción, Way expresaba que no se sabía cuántas ocasiones más podría repetirse una situación como aquella, y que era válido disfrutarla con todo lo que tuviéramos a mano. Los agradecimientos respectivos se hacían lugar entre las palabras, antes de hacer una sentida entrega de la siguiente canción, Summertime. Una vez más confirmamos a viva voz que correríamos junto a ellos las veces que quisiéramos, y queremos hacerlo más a menudo.
La típica energía intensa de buena vibra y fuerza que pone a todos alerta y en buena disposición para continuar a lo largo de la jornada la ponía, como siempre, Frank Iero. En muchas ocasiones se mantenía a un lado del escenario, pero a la par no desaprovechaba la oportunidad que pudiera tomar para encender el ambiente con saltos y movimientos fuertes mientras interpretaba rápidamente las notas en su guitarra. Movimientos tan propios de él, como el de cerrar las canciones como si de un rifle disparando se tratara, o el eventual head-banging era lo que nos empujaba a todos a soltarnos y envolvernos en su esfera. Del otro lado del plano, Ray Toro también se destacaba, puesto que se veía más animado, con una sonrisa cuando no estaba concentrado plenamente en que las notas salieran totalmente pulidas y perfectas. Impecablemente, y como es sabido por todos nosotros tras tantos años de escucharlo, hacía que la armonía de las canciones perdurara de principio a fin, cosas de genios.
Todos quieren salvar al mundo, pero nadie quiere dar el primer paso. Todos quieren salvar al mundo, pero no quieren hacer espacio. Todos quieren salvar al mundo, pero pocos lo logran. Make Room! y Na Na Na tienen en común esta frase en particular, que desde mi perspectiva sumariza todo lo que My Chemical Romance intenta transmitirnos constantemente. En una época donde estamos sintiendo los estragos de que nadie se disponga a dar una acción para cambiar de lo que nos quejamos constantemente, estas canciones representan no solo un respiro de lo que escuchamos en nuestro entorno día a día, sino también un mensaje de que jamás estuvimos solos, y que siempre hemos sido comprendidos por un equipo de personas, cuyo arma principal es el arte. A lo largo del mundo, quienes esperábamos ver este concierto nos hemos sumado a sus iniciativas desde nuestros propios contextos. Diferentes expresiones de arte, diferentes manifestaciones de esperanza, distintas acepciones de “devoción”. Este día llegó para quienes invirtieron muchos meses organizando una reunión de fans o se pasaron noches enteras haciendo carteles con mensajes pidiendo su regreso. Tantos tuits y tantos reposts, así como videos y llamadas a la radio pidiendo sus canciones. Para quienes no dejamos de creer, supimos que nuestro momento se cristalizó entre esas paredes, especialmente cuando vimos a Way persignarse al cantar “Our Lady of Sorrows”. Empujarnos mentalmente a tantos años atrás cuando esta banda iniciaba sin duda nos hizo reflexionar en medio de la euforia y los gritos que había un propósito más allá de las letras. Un movimiento a nivel global, una gran marea de personas que ahora terminaban de hacerse amigos de quienes tenían a su lado y sabían que no eran aquellos “locos” que muchos señalaron. Un punto de quiebre donde al convertirse en una sola voz pagaban el tributo que pretendían ofrecerles.
Pasó la noche y tras perdernos en las melodías, percibíamos pronto el final. Las dos canciones que ninguno podría olvidar jamás, de las que se sabía cada persona la última coma y el último punto habían llegado. Muchos descubrieron esta banda con el visual magnífico de una bailarina en el limbo entre la vida y la muerte con un grito desesperado de fondo: “¿Puedes oírme, estás cerca de mi? ¿Podemos pretender marcharnos y después encontrarnos de nuevo cuando nuestros automóviles choquen?” Aquella canción que venía con una inmensa carga de recuerdos, memorias, sentimientos… Todo a la vez. Esa misma que hizo miles de corazones latir al unísono aquella noche, fue una de las joyas de la corona. Llegaba el agridulce sentimiento de las lágrimas en los ojos y el nudo en la garganta, porque era el inicio de una nueva etapa, y aún así sabíamos que la noche estaría por acabar. Con las últimas fuerzas cantábamos todos desde donde estuviéramos un “hasta pronto, y buenas noches” que nos liberaba de la espera de estos seis años en los cuáles hubiéramos dado todo lo que poseemos por cantarla como en ese instante. Seis años de espera que cobraban sentido.
“The G note” es uno de los millones de memes circulando por la internet actualmente. Desde el anunciado regreso cobró fuerza en redes sociales como TikTok y Snapchat con alusiones a cómo otras canciones tenían el mismo inicio que esta última canción, y que sonaban similares, causando la nostalgia de muchos fans de My Chemical Romance fluir en videos cortos, demostrando que la llama estaba aún encendida. Muchos caían en bromas de amigos y familiares que evocaban los recuerdos de algo que hasta hace unos meses creíamos imposible. Y el momento estaba ahora ante los ojos de muchos. Esa nota que se impuso sobre los gritos, coreos, vítores y aplausos. Esa intro que nos trasladó en conjunto a La Marcha Negra.
Aunque habían dejado el escenario, Gerard, Ray, Mikey y Frank habían aparecido una vez más para dar sus agradecimientos por una grandiosa bienvenida, anunciando que esta podría ser la canción que todos querían oír esa noche. Y sí, todos estábamos listos. El piano nos anunciaba que ahora era imposible contener las lágrimas. Al final, las voces rugieron como nunca en toda la noche, y se notaba tanto en Los Ángeles, como en el resto del mundo. Sea como sea que presenciamos el concierto, esta canción era necesaria de cantar. El pecado más grande de la vida de cualquiera de nosotros sería justamente dejar pasar el momento y callar. No podíamos permitirnos aquello tras tantos años de incertidumbre: Era real, al fin. Era seguro, era verídico, era la certeza de que la música volvió a nuestras vidas en la forma de una banda que ahora nos unía una vez más. ¿Cómo podría describir más lo que se vivió en aquellos minutos? ¿Acaso todos nos habíamos vuelto The Patient y nos llevaba en un viaje junto a Mother War y The Soldier el ritmo de la guitarra? ¿O ya nos habíamos vuelto como aquellos ángeles de piedra, desfallecidos en un abrazo y soñando lo que tanto deseaban nuestros corazones? ¿Quizá tomábamos forma en las cuerdas de la guitarra de Frank, o el micrófono de Gerard? Lo que era seguro era una sola cosa: Podían ir, intentar, tratar, pero el mundo nunca tomaría nuestros corazones. No podríamos explicarlo, ni decir que lo lamentábamos, y sin miedo mostraríamos nuestras cicatrices.
Éramos solo personas, no héroes. Éramos personas que teníamos que cantar esta canción… Y seguir.
Solo que ahora lo haremos con más esperanza que nunca de verlos, porque han vuelto. Sí, han vuelto, y con la esperanza de que ahora para quedarse.
No te preocupes. Todos podemos ver el concierto si aún no lo hemos hecho, o si queremos volver a recordarlo por muchas ocasiones. Existe un video en YouTube con la grabación del streaming que realizó una de las cuentas de Instagram durante el concierto, con el contenido total del evento. Puedes verlo en este enlace.
Después de 12 años, 4 albums de estudio y 2 en vivo, My Chemical Romance anunció, hace exactamente una semana, de forma repentina e inesperada su separación en la página oficial de la banda:
My Chemical Romance se inició en 2001, cuando Gerard Way – inspirado por, la también banda de Jersey, Thursday e impulsado por los ataques del 9/11 – decidió que tenía que «salir del sótano». Reclutó a Ray Toro y a su propio hermano menor Mikey para tocar el bajo. Iero se unió después de que su banda, Pencey Prep, se separó, y al baterista original Matt Pelissier, quien dejó el grupo después de I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love (2002) y Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge (2004, platino), dando paso a Bob Bryar en 2006 con The Black Parade (platino). La banda se formó a si misma a partir de cero, generando su audiencia en fiestas de sótano en Jersey antes de que explotaran en la «cultura pop», convirtiéndose en la voz de la juventud inadaptada mientras exploraban los límites del rock drámatico. Su sonido emo-punk era apropiado para un comienzo tan sombrío, a pesar de que pasaron mucho tiempo en casi todas las entrevistas de su carrera tratando de distanciarse del género.
Después de su segundo álbum Three Cheers For Sweet Revenge lanzaron su álbum más popular, The Black Parade. Un álbum de ópera rock, que mostraba el amor de la banda por Queen, Pink Floyd y los musicales antiguos y se convirtió en su lanzamiento más exitoso.
Su mas reciente album fue Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys (2010) su álbum más optimista y directo – directo por su significado en una saga post-apocalíptica establecida en 2019, desde ahí Gerard Way ha colaborado con Deadmau5 en «Professional Griefers», y la banda anunció que lanzaría canciones de las sesiones que precedieron a Danger Days lo que se llamó Conventional Weapons. La banda dijo poco acerca de sus planes para nueva música. Sin embargo, continuaron tocando en vivo durante el 2011 y a principios del 2012.
MCR tuvo varios exitos radiales incluyendo el himno del 2004 «I’m not Okay (I Promise)», el épico «Welcome to the Black Parade» en el 2006 y «Na Na Na (Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na Na)» y «Sing » en el 2010, esta última fue interpretada en Glee (tanto en la serie como en la gira) y se utilizó en una campaña de publicidad para American Idol.
En fechas recientes, como octubre del año pasado, la banda informó que estaba trabajando en nuevas canciones para su quinto álbum, y en diciembre del 2011 se presentaron en Yo Gabba Gabba! Especial de Navidad. La última presentación de MCR en vivo fue el 19 de mayo de 2012 en el Bamboozle Festival en New Jersey.
Después de todo esto, el anuncio de su separación, que se puede leer íntegramente en español a continuación, pareció haber salido de la nada.
«Estar en esta banda durante los últimos 12 años ha sido una verdadera bendición. Hemos llegado a lugares que nunca pensamos que lo haríamos. Hemos sido capaces de ver y experimentar cosas que nunca imaginé posibles. Hemos compartido escenario con gente que admiro, personas que admiramos y lo mejor de todo, nuestros amigos. Y ahora, como todas las grandes cosas, ha llegado el tiempo para que termine. Gracias por todo su apoyo y por ser parte de la aventura.»
La primera reacción en Twitter de los integrantes de la banda fue la siguiente:
Por supuesto, antes que este individuo reaccionara, Twitter casi se viene abajo por nuestro llanto. Los comentarios de fans, incluyendo los nuestros made in Ecuador no se hicieron esperar:
Esto nos afectó mucho debido a que eran una banda creada a partir de personas como nosotros, que en algún momento de nuestras vidas nos habiamos vuelto invisibles ante la sociedad, una banda que se basaba en ideas y acciones, esperanzas y sueños. Estaban eternamente en la intersección de la creatividad y el conflicto. Es la razón por la que eran una gran banda, y hoy es una gran perdida.
Contados días después Gerard tomó su cuenta de Twitter para contarnos su versión de la historia en una carta de 2206 palabras en la que encontramos párrafos como este:
«We were spectacular. Every show I knew this, every show I felt it with or without external confirmation. There were some clunkers, sometimes our secondhand gear broke, sometimes I had no voice—we were still great. It is this belief that made us who we were, but also many other things, all of them vital. And all of the things that made us great were the very things that were going to end us,»
Bandas influenciadas por MCR, fans de ellos como nosotros, entre ellos Fall Out Boy, también se pronunciaron al respecto, Pete Wentz en una entrevista dijo lo siguiente:
«Creo que, de alguna manera, hemos estado allí. Cuando estas en una banda como esta, en algún momento, tienes que vivir tu vida. Te enredas tanto en la banda. Así que definitivamente lo entiendo y aprecio y tienen una gran fanáticada siguiendolos, así que estoy seguro de que es duro.»
My Chemical Romance cambió la forma en que veiamos el mundo, no lo hizo necesariamente fácil, no nos pintó un camino amarillo ni nubes de colores alrededor, My Chemical Romance hizo que nuestro mundo sea un poquito mas «vivible», ayudandonos día a día a sobrevivir en el con las líneas de sus canciones, nos mostró que no estamos solos, el MCRmy es un ejercito, pero también es una familia, muchos hemos conocido a personas que hoy podemos llamar AMIGOS.
My Chemical Romance salvó vidas y con nuestra cuota de agradecimiento podemos seguir salvando mas, como digo yo «evangelizando», talvez la banda como tal terminó, pero las canciones quedan y duran mas allá de la vida. My Chemical Romance siempre será parte de nuestro presente, porque para muchos sin ellos hoy la historia sería otra, para muchos hoy no podrían leer este artículo… Para cada uno es diferente, cada fan tiene su historia, es intangible el sentimiento, pero les aseguro que cada uno lleva tatuado en el corazon un lazo muy fuerte con MCR.
El MCRmyEcuador ha tomado la decisión de no separarse, al menos no durante un buen tiempo, y si nuestras cuentas dejan de publicar, desaparecerán las cuentas mas no las personas, el grupo humano que se formó a partir de esta idea es un grupo que no solo se reune para ganar premios, este grupo significa mas que eso.
Como punto final de este articulo, lo que dijo Gerard, que debe estar presente siempre:
«My Chemical Romance terminó. Pero nunca puede morir. Está vivo en mí, en los chicos, y está vivo dentro de todos ustedes. Siempre lo supe, y creo que tú también. Porque no es una banda – se trata de una idea».
LONG LIVE MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE! MCRmyEcuador Proud to be a soldier…
Como ya es conocimiento de todos, el MCRmyEcuador fue el vencedor del MCR Game en la sección de grupos, juego que fue organizado por el equipo de Project Do It Loud y en el cual participaban varios mcrmys y grupos representantes de países latino americanos.
Pero, que fue exactamente lo que hizo el MCRmyEcuador? A continuación lo detallo:
Para este juego se decidió que los protagonistas fueran Quito y Cuenca, ya que Guayaquil ya había tenido su participación en proyectos anteriores con Do It Loud, como «Latin America Wants MCR» 1 y 2.
Sandra, líder en Quito y Malu, líder en Cuenca, demostraron que no es necesario tener un equipo numeroso para destacar y hacer de lo poco lo mejor.
Tarea 1: Hacer dos tarjetas de Navidad grandes, con MCR como tema. esas tarjetas deben contener un mensaje que incluiremos abajo. Filmar un vídeo mientras recolectan la mayor cantidad de firmas posibles en ambas tarjetas para Geoff Meall y Jeff Watson. Mensaje: “The Latin American fans wish you a Merry Christmas. Santa told that maybe you could help us get our xmas gift and here’s my try. Latin America STILL wants MCR” (filmar también el momento en que las envían por correo).
Tarea 4: Recolectar la mayor cantidad de vídeos de personas al azar diciendo, “América Latina quiere a My Chemical Romance”
Tarea 5: Visitar una institución vistiendo camisetas de MCR para hacerle compañía a ancianos o enfermos;
Tarea 8: Producir juguetes para ser donados a través del reciclaje;
Tarea 9:Reunir libros para donar;
Tarea 10: Caracterizarse como una banda mexicana y hacer una serenata para las personas que pasen por algún lugar público. Canción: I Don’t Love You;
Tarea 13: Realizar una batalla de rayguns entre BL/ind y Killjoys utilizando el mismo método que en el vídeo;
Tarea 16:Actuar la historia del álbum “Black Parade”;
Tarea 17: Actuar la historia del álbum “Danger Days”;
Tarea 18:Reproducir un clip de MCR (libre)
Tarea 19:Representar una canción a través de mímica;
Tarea 20:Vestirse de superhéroes y realizar buenas acciones por las calles de su ciudad;
Tarea 21: Actuar una lucha entre un super héroe y un villano en un supermercado;
Tarea 22: Deambular por los corredores de una supermercado llevando a dos participantes vestidos de superhéroes en dos carritos de compra;
Tarea 31:Realizar un musical en público, tema libre
Tarea 32Repartir a personas por la calle globos transparentes con mensajes positivos insertados adentro, o globos de colores con mensajes positivos amarrados a la cuerda -como una galleta de la suerte. Incluso mensajes escritos directamente sobre los globos;
Tarea 33:Realizar un vídeo y grabar una canción acapella con los integrantes del equipo. Música libre
Tarea 34: Sacar una foto reproduciendo alguna de MCR (imitar gestos, poses, etc);
Tarea 36:Recolectar el mayor número de fotos de personas al azar sosteniendo el cartel(es) hecho(s) en tareas anteriores.
Tarea 39: Esperar la señal para cruzar en una calle y, sobre la línea peatonal, en frente de los autos parados, realizar el “Pumpkin Dance”; Tarea 40: Esperar la señal para cruzar en una calle y, sobre la línea peatonal, en frente de los autos parados, bailar Gangnam Style;
Tarea 42: Uno o más integrantes vestidos de vampiros deben “atacar” a personas por la calle. El resto (o uno de ellos) deberá impedirlo con estacas en la mano;
Tarea 46: Bailar un vals en silencio en una biblioteca pública, como en “I’m Not Okay”;
Luego de mas de dos meses de planear y realizar actividades finalmente el MCRmyEcuador es anunciado como ganador:
Con este post quiero agradecerles a todos y cada uno que dió varios minutos de su tiempo para participar en estas actividades, donde el objetivo aparte de querer ganar, era pasar un rato alegre, creo que no me equivoco en decir que el MCRmyEcuador nació como una idea de reunir fans, pero ahora es mucho mas que eso, es la oportunidad de conocer personas que piensan como tu y que no se arrepienten ni se averguenzan de ser como son.
Un three-pack de canciones de My Chemical Romance esta disponible en el Rock Band Music Store desde el 25 de diciembre (primero para Xbox 360, llegará luego a Wii y PS3 en una fecha posterior.)
«My Chemical Romance Pack 1» contiene «Helena», «Teenagers» y «Sing», canción que también esta disponible en Rock Band Blitz.
Es un placer una vez mas anunciarles nueva reunión en las tres ciudades con las que ya contamos, en esta ocasión el motivo de la reunión es para celebrar el aniversario de Danger Days ya que este mes se cumple un año mas de lanzamiento del ultimo disco que nos trajo a los Killjoys.
Es por eso que en esta ocasión hemos pensado que nuestra reunión sera TEMÁTICA, sigan leyendo para mas detalles.
Azogues/Cuenca:
Esta vez la reunión sera en Azogues, el domingo 18 de noviembre, en el parque que queda junto al Terminal (donde esta el avión), si son de Cuenca nos vemos en el Terminal a las 10:10am, lleguen puntuales 🙂
Si son de Azogues nos vemos en el parque a las 10:40am.
Se les pide(opcional): Vayan de acuerdo a como se hagan llamar, es decir, vayan con su propio traje que represente su nombre killjoy.
Quito:
Nos vemos el mismo domingo 18 de noviembre, 11am en el Parque de La Carolina, en la Cruz del Papa.
Se les pide(opcional): Llevar antifaces killjoy… Ah si, lleven para el cevichocho.
Guayaquil:
Para seguir con nuestra costumbre nómada, nos encontraremos en los bajos del barrio Las Peñas, en la subida de las escalinatas, el domingo 18 de noviembre, 3PM, no mas indicaciones, somos muy fáciles de reconocer.
Se les pide(opcional): Que vayan disfrazados como el killjoy que mas los identifique, recuerden tienen para escoger Kobra Kid, Jet Star, Fun Ghoul y Party Poison.
En cada una de las reuniones habrá juegos, premios y los asistentes recibirán indicaciones de su administrador con respecto a dos cositas que están preparándose. Es importante que asistan a esta reunión porque no queremos que nadie se quede fuera de los planes que tenemos.
Esperando que todos asistan, se tomó en consideracion las sugerencias de muchos que decían que sus sábados eran ocupados, esta vez las reuniones serán el domingo 18 y YA NO HAY EXCUSA PARA FALTAR xD
Frank Iero is a huge fan of film director Tim Burton, so you can only imagine how ridiculously stoked the My Chemical Romance guitarist was when he was asked to contribute to the soundtrack-companion album for the remake of Burton’s first film, Frankenweenie. Iero’s track, “This Song Is A Curse,” feels like a collision of film composer maestro Danny Elfman’s aesthetics with Suicidal Tendencies’ bona fide punk classic “Institutionalized.” In June, Iero corralled MCR auxiliary players Jarrod Alexander (drums) and James Dewees (keyboards), producer/engineer Doug McKean and MCR guitarist Ray Toro (as co-producer) to record the song which appears on the iTunes edition of Frankenweenie Unleashed! (Music Inspired By The Motion Picture).
Jason Pettigrew caught up with Iero to discuss the roots of the project, the pursuit of new avenues and the dish on the new MCR album. (Spoiler alert: Iero knows how it will turn out as much as you know exactly what’s going to happen to you on, say, October 17. Is that arbitrary enough for you?) How did you get involved with the soundtrack?
Hmmm… I guess I kinda muscled my way into it. [Laughs.] Disney does these «inspired by» soundtracks and they originally approached My Chem to contribute. They were having a screening over at [their studios] and they said, “If you’re interested in doing something, come out and see the movie and see if you’re inspired to write a song.” Lauren [Valencia, MCR manager] knew I was a big fan of Burton’s, so she asked me if I wanted to go. I said, «I don’t know about the soundtrack thing, but I definitely want to see the movie.» [Laughs.] When I finally saw it, I loved it: I thought it was his best in years. I think it might rival The Nightmare Before Christmas, which is one of my favorites. So I saw it, loved it, but didn’t really think about the soundtrack.
I didn’t think about the soundtrack until… maybe the next day or the day after? I was feeding the girls breakfast one morning and sometimes you make up songs to get your kids to eat. So I was humming a melody, and I thought, «Hmm, that’s kinda cool,» and I started to think about the movie I’d just seen. Later, I approached [MCR], told them I went to see this thing and that I wrote this song if they want to do it. They were like, “Well, we’ll see. We’re doing the record now,» and it kinda went to the back burner. I didn’t approach it again for a few months until the deadline was coming up. I approached the guys again and they said we didn’t have the time to do it. And I was like «Do you mind if I do?» I approached [the soundtrack producers] and asked if I could do the track. They got back to me over the weekend and the following week, I went into the studio and knocked it out.
«This Song Is A Curse» is a mix of widescreen film production with excitable punk angst. Were those elements you distilled from the movie? Yeah, kinda. The approach I took to the song was the sentiment of the original concept of the movie: the kid loses his dog and doesn’t want to let go. I wanted to take a J.D. Salinger approach to the story of Frankenstein: It’s not so much about playing God as much as it is holding onto the past and not being able to let it go. The more you do that, the more you fuck everything up. Other than the line about science, I drew everything else from my own life. I don’t know how you can’t while writing music. I get those Holden Caulfield tendencies where I see things the way they are, then I finally get used to them and then everything changes and it makes me want to kill myself. [Laughs.]
Maybe you and I should start a support group. I’ve always perceived your role in MCR as the one-two-fuck-you punk-rock guy. But I remember you blogging about how you wrote the tuba part for «Dead!» from The Black Parade and wisecracking something like, «That was totally my idea, you got a problem with that?» Do you see «Curse» as some kind of jumping-off point for you to pursue similar kinds of projects outside the realm of MCR? It’s something the members have all talked about. We like being cinematic with our records. We’ve always been fascinated with how music conveys emotions and then how that works within the images in a movie. But really, I just love making music, and I love writing songs. I’m constantly coming up with things, and if there’s an outlet I can be creative in, I’ll take it. Last week, I was in a studio in New Jersey that’s owned by a friend of mine. I just went over to hang out, but we ended up having a couple of beers and doing a song. It was the first time I ever did something where I played everything. I’m going back into the studio to finish the track, maybe record another one. I’m also thinking about putting up a website where I can just put stuff out. It’s an idea that’s still in its infancy, so I still don’t know what it is. I love making music in My Chem, but sometimes our timelines are… very long. [Laughs.] I just want to do something I can put out quickly before I overanalyze it—which is funny, because I’m in a band with four guys who overanalyze everything. [Laughs.]
Hypothetical situation: Somebody throws you a briefcase full of money and tells you, «Make a record. You’re recording in seven hours.» How do you think it would sound? Oh, man… I don’t know. I think it would be very disjointed, as everything I’ve been writing has been all over the place. As a fan, I like working with big production techniques and making recordings that I can add to in my imagination. It’s funny: «This Song Is A Curse» was the first thing we finished at the studio we built to record the next My Chem record, so that’s kinda cool. I’m happy we’re experimenting with things in that space. The new My Chem record isn’t going to sound anything like «Curse,» but it’s actually cool you can make that kind of noise in it. [Laughs.] That was the first time I, by myself, ever did something with someone—Doug McKean—who knew how to record things. I like being forced to work within limitations.
On a side note, does your proto-screamo band Leathermouth belong to history? If we had talked several weeks ago, I would’ve said yes. I was originally brought into that band with the other guys. Then they found religion, then things got messed up between us. Not friendship-wise; they didn’t want to be a part of Leathermouth anymore. I guess they thought I’d taken it too far…
Ahh, the men in black… [Laughs.] So I had to go recruit people to go on this crazy journey with me to play XO [the band’s debut album] live for people. I thought, «Damnit, if I wanted to do something on my own, I would’ve done that. I wanted this to be a band. I guess this is over because it’s not a band anymore.» There’s still part of me that would hate not doing that band again. There’s something brewing, but I don’t know what it is. I really wanted that band to go on longer, but Jesus had other plans. [Laughs.]
I would be remiss if I didn’t ask: What can you tell me about the new MCR record? Ohhhh, man! What can I tell you? There are a lot of songs written. Some of them are recorded decently, but its not near completion by any means. It’s taken a lot of effort for us to wrap our heads around it. I could tell you everything about the record right now, and I guarantee that all of it would change tomorrow. [Extended pause.] Really, all I can say is that it’s elaborate. It’s fucking elaborate.
That should make listeners’ toes curl a little. Yeah. There’s a bit of bleakness to it, I must say.
For a guy who has a wonderful wife, great kids and a tight group of friends, what do you have to be bleak about? Maybe that’s how I stay happy in all these other venues: I don’t bring it home. [Laughs.] You take music away from me, and you’ll be hearing about me on the news! alt
Interviewer: Give them a warm welcome: My Chemical Romance!
[Audience cheers, band members enter the room]
Frank Iero: Thank you!
Interviewer: So I don’t know if you heard me, but we got a section over there, who literally came in from Ar–I thought it was Brazil–they came in from Argentina.
Argentinean audience members: Here!
Gerard: Oh, wow!
Ray: Hi, guys!
Gerard: Hi!
Frank: Right on! Thank you.
Gerard: We haven’t been there in a while.
Interviewer: Well, they’re coming to you now! So anyway, welcome to the- welcome to the Grammy Museum.
Gerard: Thank you for having us.
Ray: Thank you!
Interviewer: Tonight’s gonna be fun, and we really appreciate you being here, and I thought, you know, we’d play that video, which is a great video, agreed?
[Audience cheers]
Interviewer: And I just—, let’s just start off by talking about how much fun that was to do.
Frank: Oh, man… It was a lot of fun.
[Audience and band laugh]
Frank: Yeah, we got to… we got to film it out in the desert with a bunch of friends, with rayguns and fast cars. It wasn’t the hottest day of the year. It was the day after the hottest day of the year.
[Audience laughs]
Frank: That was pretty cool. Um… I mean, did you see it, right? That’s how much fun, like, how much fun you could probably imply it was from watching the video is how much fun it was, but like how much fun times ten.
Ray and Gerard: Yeah.
Frank: It was that cool.
Gerard: You kinda-… you know one of the things about being in a rock band that that’s amazing is you get to have these moments where… I call them like “Bowie moments” where you just get to kind of-… Every fantasy you had as a kid, like kind of come to life, like if you wanted to be in a rock band you have this big kind of “Bowie moment” where you see what was in your head realized, and, you know, for “…Black Parade” it was walking on the set of that video, that Sam Bayer had created this world that I had in my head and walking on in there was the first time I had ever felt that, and I kinda always kinda use that moment as a benchmark when describing what it feels like to see your art created in front of you.
But doing “Na Na…” was even better than that. Like that was stuff… and I guess its because that its not only stuff that was in my head for so long, and while we were making this record together, but its also something that I wasn’t sure was ever gonna come out. I mean that’s the thing about Danger Days that is really important and special about it to me is the fact that, you know, I don’t know that we knew for sure that it was ever going to come out, or we’d ever finish, or if we‘d hit that next level, so… You know…
Interviewer: Why do you say that? What was… why was there doubt?
Frank: It kind of felt like, at times when we were making that, like, you know when the Goonies come into the ship, and they find like One-Eyed Willie and he’s just dead there?
[Audience laugh]
Frank: It’s like… it kind of felt like we were gonna, one day down the line walk into the studio and be like “Whoa! They were trying to make this awesome record, look at all this shit we found!” [All laugh] “Too bad they didn’t make it out!” You know what I mean?
Gerard: That’s the best way that I’ve ever heard it described. I think that’s what we’re gonna use in interviews from now on, that’s actually what it felt like!
Frank: Said first at the Grammies.
[Crowd laugh]
Interview: Well, lets talk about the new record, and talk about it that, in a way that kind of describes how that record was perhaps a little bit more different, a little bit more… progressive, maybe? Or whatever you want to call it, from the other 3.
Gerard: Yeah, well you know one of the things to bring up first, maybe is that, I guess now from doing interviews and all this stuff, like really realizing what Black Parade meant to a lot of people…
I think as a band we were touring so much we had no idea. Like, we knew that we were playing arenas, but it was quite a blur, and two-and-a-half years later you just had bunch of guys that were really fried.
And so I… its literally now, doing interviews or meeting people that were maybe, you know, little kids when Black Parade came out and talking to them about how much this record means to them, I realized that the record actually is important to people, and that was a really nice thing to hear.
But, there was such a creative burn-out after it, that it was hard to figure out what was going to come next, you know? And, you know, by the nature of this band it, whatever we do always has to be so different. It’s hard to find that after a while, and I think Black Parade was like this moment for us where we really honed everything we’d learned and we discovered that now we had to kind of reboot the band, we had to start over. And that’s why it was so hard to make it, and maybe why it sounds so different.
Frank: Yeah… you know, a lot of people ask if, “Is Danger Days… the reaction to The Black Parade?” And I think I’ve come to realize is the reaction to The Black Parade was us taking time off… Like, you know? Like, that was: “All right, we-, we’ve done this and now our reaction to it is to exhale a little bit and to live our lives.” And then the reaction to the time off was Danger Days, basically, you know. So… you have this band, you know, kind of trying to re-imagine what it is to be in this band, what it is to be a rock band. And we went through a lot of growing and, I think, self-realization, like, in the making of the record. And it was fun to experiment, and when you hear the final product of Danger Days… you’re hearing a band that’s just having a good time, being creative again.
Interviewer: Mm hmm… and Mikey?
Mikey: Yeah, I mean there’s things on Danger Days that we’ve been dying to do since the beginning of the band. You know, songs like “Planetary…,” and songs like “SING,” and songs like “S/C/A/R/E/C/R/O/W.” It’s… they were all like, you know, pipe dreams to us and we didn’t think that they were technically, you know, My Chemical Romance songs, and, you know, through making the record, I think we realized that, you know, we kinda get to dictate, you know. That’s the fun part; we get to dictate what a My Chemical Romance song is.
Interviewer: Mm hmm… You know, you say, Gerard that you were, you know, you were burnt out.
Gerard: Mm…
Interviewer: You and the band had been going pretty intense, from… you know, for 5 or 6 years…
Gerard: Right.
Interview: …Pretty hardcore. The last date of that tour, and then it stops, and then you realize there’s nothing planned, there’s nothing going on. When you, when you actually take the time off, you’re an artistic, you’re all artistic guys, and I always consider when you’re that intensely artistic as you are in particular, and the band as a whole, that you-… There’s almost a daily need to create.
Gerard: Yeah.
Interviewer: How do you fill that then?
Gerard: You know, I started – it’s actually funny because that need came much earlier than the end of the tour actually.
Interviewer: Really?
Gerard: Yeah, because, you know, and that’s one of the things that I’m kind of experiencing now to some extent, is that you create this thing, you spend a lot of time on it, you do all this art, and then you put it out, and then you just tour. So every day isn’t kind of like making a new painting. And so I found other ways to kind of fill that up by-… On the road like by writing comics, or doing-
Interviewer: Right, so you’re doing the comics, Mikey, what are you doing?
Mikey: I started… I was doing some comics too, we’re actually [gestures to Gerard], we have something that we’re working on together right now. I’ve been… I usually like read a lot, um… yeah, uh, painting, I do some painting too.
Ray: Yeah, I mean… for me, I was like trying – it was weird, I was trying when, after Black Parade was done, I was like trying to write songs, or just like little pieces, bits and things here and there. I just felt really weird, to not, you know, to not be doing it with the rest of the guys. It was all, you know, I would like, say, write a verse or a chorus, or just parts of a song, and I’m like “Oh, this just doesn’t… it feels, it doesn’t feel right,” and just would shelve it, that was kind of what was going on. There was definitely after that time off from after Black Parade, there was the want to create… I don’t know, it just took a little while to get us there I think.
Interviewer: Well, you, did you guys keep in touch, was it something where you hanging together, or, you were, you know, you all had girlfriends and now wives, and you’re thinking about other things… What’s your daily days like? You sleep in until 1 or 2 in the afternoon, or…
Gerard: Not anymore!
Mikey: Not for a little while.
Frank: Yeah, just slept for like a month at a time… Yeah, lot of sleep.
Gerard: We did call each other pretty quickly after the tour stopped. Um… but then almost, it almost felt like we kind of didn’t know what to do with ourselves.
Frank: Yeah.
Gerard: But we knew we were supposed to take time off…
Ray: Yeah.
Gerard: …but we didn’t-… I had these moments where I’d feel like “Oh, I wanna make an album right now!” And it was like 3 months after we stopped touring, like, stuff like that would happen, you’d get these… but you just didn’t know how to kind of face it again, it was really strange.
Ray: It felt like you were like prescribed time off or something.
Gerard: Yeah!
Ray: It’d feel like you have to take so-and-so many months off before you can start again, or-
Frank: Like The Rogue Detective.
Ray: Yeah!
[All laugh]
Interviewer: So, after the time off was occurring, at what point do you realize, “Okay, now it’s time to get back on the road, its time to back in the recording studio”? Is there, is there an epiphany that any of you have, says its time, or do you simply evolve into it?
Gerard: Well, I think with this record and I think it’s a lot of why the first attempt got scrapped, all it was was this feeling of “You must do an album because you have to because, like, if you don’t what’s gonna happen to the band, and, you know, what’s gonna happen to you guys, and…”
Interviewer: Well, you took four years off…
Gerard: Well…
Frank: That’s not true.
Gerard: Yeah, yeah, it was…
Interviewer: Well, people really-
Gerard: Oh, yeah…
Interviewer: -you were out of the public eye…
Gerard: …from record to record, yeah, I mean, it was, I would say public eye-wise though, even two, 2-and-a-half years in, we’d get to the point where we’d be in like a Barnes and Noble, and still see a photo on a magazine.
Interviewer: Yeah…
Gerard: To the point where we were like, even I was like “Oh my god, like, this is crazy,” you know? But yeah, in terms of just like a completely casual music listener, yeah, a 4-year kinda gap. But it definitely felt more like “I have to do it,” like it almost felt like ‘Well it must be time…”
Interviewer: Yeah
Gerard: “‘cause it’s been enough time, we’ve had enough time off, but…”
Frank: I think doing the “Watchmen” soundtrack too, like that was like the opportunity to get us into the studio to do something that we had wanted to do ever since we were kids, like be a part of that movie. And then, like that felt really good, to just be in the studio and just play really loud.
And I think if we had got, like, if we had gotten into the studio to actually write a record that week, or we had stayed in that studio, we could have came out with a record, you know. I don’t know how good it would’ve been, but like we could’ve come out with a record.
But I think, you know, we had to take the time to kinda get the studios lined up and it was like “Yeah, alright, yeah, its time, like we feel like playing together again,” but I don’t think we-… we were inspired to write a record, you know. Um, we just thought, you know, “We want to get together again.”
Interviewer: So how does the Dylan cover come… Where does the idea come to do “Desolation Row”?
Frank: That was actually from Zack Snyder-
Gerard: Yeah, the director, yeah. He, he’d wanted to bookend the film with, with Dylan songs, but he says “I wanna do…” ‘cause the whole soundtrack is all these classic songs so he says “At the end I wanna, you know, do this thing at the end though, that, that has a modern band doing a take on, on one of these songs,” so…
Interviewer: Did you guys know this song?
Gerard: Yeah, absolutely, yeah. Yeah, absolutely.
Frank: I mean, when he brought it up we were like “That’s a long song.”
Gerard: Yeah!
[All laugh]
Interviewer: That’s right, there’s a lot of lyrics in it, yeah.
Frank: But he was cool, he was like “Yeah, you know, do what you wanna do with it,” and so we took a little bit of, you know, artistic freedom with it. But it, you know, it’s still fun to play live, its one of those songs that just… it rips.
Interviewer: Is it in the live show?
Frank: It has been, yeah.
Gerard: Yeah, we’ve been playing it.
Interviewer: Well, let’s reverse a little bit, and go back in time. Lets go back because again this is for the archives; so, I wanna talk about the roots, and talk about growing up in New Jersey, and what, what that was like, and eventually we’ll get to 2001.
But, what’s it like in, in your household, each of you, what are your earliest musical roots, and how do you basically get into music to say “Ooh, this is something I wanna do”? [Gestures to Ray]
Ray: Well um-
Interviewer: Go right down the line.
Ray: Yeah, I mean for, for me it was my, my older brother Louis, he played guitar. We all, all of us shared – me, I have two older brothers – we all shared a bedroom, probably about the size of these two carpets put together.
[Crowd laughs]
Ray: So you know, we’re all very close to each other, and my oldest brother, you know, he was out of high school and, you know, working at the local ShopRite, and got enough money together to buy like a small amp and buy his first guitar, and so he would, you know, spend all hours playing guitar.
And I shared a room with him, and you know I just looked up to him so much. You know, and then as I got older, around like junior high, I guess around like 15 or 16, I, you know, some friends that I met, you know, were interested in like, you know like Metallica, Pantera, Anthrax, Overkill, you know kinda like metal bands, and, you know, I talked to my brother, and he was like, he had a whole stack of guitar magazines and handed me them and handed me his guitar and, you know, basically showed me how to play in that sense. He just gave me the, he gave me the keys, and you know, um… He’s been, he always been like a great influence, he’s got such a good heart. He’s like my music hero, you know.
Interviewer: Mikey?
Mikey: Yeah, me and Gerard were, we shared a bedroom growing up, so we kinda had the same musical interests, you know, we were all, you know, we were in the same microcosm. We really liked like Queen and Michael Jackson, and Prince and Bruce Springsteen, and then you know as we got older, we went into the, like The Misfits and Metallica and Danzig and The Smiths, you know, and it kind of evolved from there.
Frank: I didn’t share a bedroom with anybody.
[Crowd laughs]
Frank: But my dad and my grandfather are both drummers. So, they would play all the time, they played, you know, at every weekend and, every time we’d all get together or whatever they’d talk about gigs that they were playing, or…
Interviewer: So they were working drummers?
Frank: Oh yeah, yeah. They were working musicians, like all the time. And I would go see them play every weekend. So, that was a dream of mine, to play shows and you know, have a date book, that they would always talk about like “Oh, I can’t make it this day ‘cause I have this gig” and…
[Crowd laughs]
Frank: Like, that was so cool to me. So, I don’t know if I ever really wanted to play music, I just wanted a date book I think. But my dad really wanted me to play an instrument, they started me out on drums. I wanted to kinda be able to write songs, so I think I leaned towards other things. At some point I got a saxophone. I don’t know what happened there…
[Crowd laughs]
Frank: I didn’t really like that, and then he got me a guitar, so like, I really like guitars, and I started my first band when I was 11, and ever since just wanted to be in a band.
Interviewer: Wow, yeah.
Frank: I also like Michael Jackson. He’s cool.
[Crowd laughs]
Gerard: Yeah, um, let’s see, well… I remember really early memories of being in the car with my dad and he’d have like these 8-tracks, and like one of them was Queen, and I remember being in the car—me and Mikey—my mom would take us to the supermarket, and always, she only had pop radio on, they had a very small collection of records. So it was mostly just pop, or just old stuff that was pop anyway. So first, you know, experiences was with pop, and-…
Me and Mikey’s grandma was musical, she had a piano, and she basically… you know, we had no interest in really learning how to play piano, but she taught me how to sing, and she very- she was always pushing us to… to create art.
But music had always seemed like this thing that was unattainable… and it like kinda my secret desire to be a musician even though like it seemed like nobody does that, like nobody, you know in the household it wasn’t like this thing that people could do, you know. And when I discovered punk and rock and roll that was like, it kinda made it even worse, that it was… So, I was obviously very drawn to that, like, to find something that… you could… like finding, I mean, like the Misfits, it was very pop but could aggressively express themselves, you know, and it irritated people, and that was fun too, you know…
[Crowd laughs]
Gerard: I was always drawn to stuff like that.
Interviewer: Growing up in New Jersey, you mentioned Bruce Springsteen, you know he’s… You guys are from New Jersey, I’m from New Jersey; we know that that… he carries a special cachet in New Jersey, almost saint-like.
Band:[general sounds of agreements]
Interview: And, you know, you guys probably can’t be not influenced by him in some way, but then I’m sure there’s a certain time where you have to break from it, and you all obviously do. At what point do you become sophisticated enough –you keep mentioning some of the names that you’re starting to deal with Smiths, you’re dealing with Bowie, et cetera. Is this happening in high school, where your musical sophistication is growing…?
Gerard: Middle school.
Interviewer: Middle school so it’s something…
Gerard: And I had, its ‘cause I had a cool friend. That’s really-
[Crowd laughs]
Gerard: Its always that cool friend, or like that older friend, but like, this dude named Dan [Depasc?], he was my age and he was, he was watching specials on channel 13 about Sonic Youth, like in middle school, he was bringing me like records like Daydream Nation, and we’d go to Pier Platters and Hoboken together and buy really weird records, so, almost already bypassing like, like, even modern rock and like any even like cool punk, this was like even weirder stuff, like Sonic Youth were super weird.
Interviewer: And that’s pretty sophisticated music.
Gerard: Yeah, and in middle school? So yeah, I had a cool friend.
[Crowd laughs]
Interviewer: Where do you grow- what towns are you guys from?
Frank: Belleville.
Mikey and Gerard: Belleville.
Frank: Belleville and Kearny.
Ray: Yeah I’m from Kearny.
Interviewer: Kearny and Belleville, so all around the Newark area.
Band: Yeah.
Interviewer: So, when you mentioned Hoboken, which is, what, 5 or 6 miles due east close to New York City, there’s a great club where I know you guys played, Maxwell’s, right?
Band:[general sounds of agreement]
Interviewer: So, you go from playing—at some point these small clubs—and then all of a sudden you into arenas, but there’s some stories that we wanna tell before that, and one of them is, being from New Jersey, September 11, 2001. A monumental time for America, for everybody on the planet was touched by that. But people in Jersey who actually could see the smoke and what actually was happening, and you guys from Belleville and Newark, I don’t know if you could, but certainly on the shore we could see what was going on there. Describe that and how that impacts the band, if you will.
Frank: That was, that was a surreal day. Um, I remember waking up and, you know, turning on the T.V. and seeing that the first plane had already hit and being like “Oh man, this is… what a weird, you know…”
Ray: Accident…
Frank: Yeah, “what a weird accident,” yeah. And then, you know, you’re watching and then all of a sudden you see the second plane hit. And I remember like it was like a movie, like seeing it on TV and then running outside and looking to see the skyline and just seeing all this smoke, and it was just like… You felt like you’re in that “Independence Day” movie or something, like under attack, and… it was horrible. I mean, I remember my mum just crying, and not understanding really like… “I don’t understand what’s happening right now.” You just felt helpless.
Gerard: Yeah it affected the band in a giant way. I mean, you know… I just remember I was in Hoboken and I was on my way into the city, and a lot of people that are fans of the band know this story, but I remember kind of—… it was like watching a horror movie, and I remember really… I didn’t understand at the time, but what I ended up processing in my head was “This isn’t a game,” like “Life isn’t a game, this isn’t something you can just waste.”
Like, I was doing some thing, like really irrelevant at the time, you know, that I feel was important, and I remember just thinking that to myself that “This is not a waste, I can’t waste this.” It was literally like two weeks later when we had our first rehearsal, you know. And I think – I mean obviously there’s a lot of, you know, by-products of 9/11– I think we’re interesting because we’re one of the most direct byproducts of an incident happening. You know, like so instantly in 2 weeks we’re a ba- kinda started the band? In a weird way.
Interviewer: What are the first rehearsals like? Anybody remember them?
Gerard: I remember them really vividly, there was like, it was me, and Otter, at first, and we’d gotten together and we’d rented rooms, ‘cause it like we’d get money together. And I’d play guitar and I would sing and he’d play the drums and that’s all it was; it was just us. And then I remember that the stuff I was trying to sing was so complicated that I couldn’t – ‘cause I’m not a good guitar player – so I couldn’t do it, you know. I realized that I wanted something more than 3-chord punk or somebody was just singing over it, I didn’t want that sound. So I, you know, I remember seeing Ray in a band that played locally called the Rodneys and I remember feeling like when I saw him play I felt like, “wow, this is like the best guitar player I’ve ever seen.” So, I called him up and he was doing something totally different with his life at the time, you were like a drummer.
Ray: Yeah I think I was playing drums in a, you know, just like a local band with some friends, yeah and you know he had given me a call, I was… you know, we had met I think through a friend of ours, mutual friend [Shaun?] Dylan that he had gone to art school with, and I knew Mikey, and… Yeah he just gave me the call and you know said that they were working on some, some… a new band some songs and would you wanna come over and you know just hang out and play, really.
Gerard: and I remember I had like a good feeling about it? I had like this weird feeling – I think like I even said that, I remember even saying that on the phone to him, like, [makes phone sign with hand] “I think I have a good feeling about this.”
Ray: I definitely remember you, you… yeah, he was right obviously, right?
[Crowd laugh]
Ray: Yeah, whenever Gerard says he’s got a good feeling, go with it.
Um, No, I definitely remember in, I think that’s something for all of us, I think it definitely felt like we were fulfilling some kind of destiny, or like, you know, doing what we were really meant to do, you know?
Frank: When you, when you picked up the guitar for the first time did like air, like wind blow and you get lit up. [makes gesture like an angel with a harp]
Ray: Yeah there was a light from the heavens, come on.
Gerard: It felt like that when we played our first almost full band before, this was before Frank was in the band, when we played our first actual rehearsal with Mikey playing bass, it kinda felt like that.
[Frank makes like a ‘whatever’ hand gesture, crowd laughs]
Ray: Well it felt really special, and we had all… You know, we had all played, you know, Gerard and Mikey had played in bands together, I’d played, but… It never felt like that, there was something really special about just the music, and you know with his voice combined with everything, and yeah, you knew you were playing-
Mikey: Magical.
Ray: Yeah, you knew you were party of something different.
Frank: But then a couple of months later it felt real good.
Ray: It got even better!
[All laugh]
Ray: It really felt complete.
Interviewer: So, the band starts to play around-…
Gerard: Yeah.
Interviewer: You’re playing ‘Jersey, you’re playing New York…
Frank: First show was in Hamilton, New Jersey. Down in Trenton.
Interviewer: By Trenton? Sure. What was that like?
Frank: Awesome.
Gerard: It was [inaudible], right?
Frank: Yeah.
Gerard: The same thing?
Interviewer: Are you playing original stuff, or… what are you playing, are you playing original stuff?
Gerard: Original stuff. We only had like 4 songs. Frank got us the gig. Frank’s band was headlining the show, and-
Frank: I did the merch for them when they played…
Gerard: He did merch, and he watched our first show.
Frank: It was awesome, it was really good.
Gerard: He was, he was definitely, like, the first person to be into us and really believe- and always play-… In the Pencey Prep band, he was always playing our demo. So he was the first person that really appreciated what we did, you know. So when we needed somebody else it was natural that like we turned to the only person we felt really got us, you know?
Frank: That’s funny, ‘cause like when all you guys say “Oh, I’m your biggest fan,” that’s not true.
[Crowd laugh]
Frank: I was actually first, so…
[Crowd applause]
Frank: I know you’re full of shit when you say it.
Ray: Yeah, I mean it definitely… it has to be known like how… you know before you joined the band how integral you were to getting the band going I mean…
Frank: [inaudible]
Ray: Yeah, you know, keep going, keep… no, it’s totally true! This guy, he didn’t even really know us, but he just loved-
Gerard: He didn’t know us at all!
Ray: He liked the music so much he was just like “Hey, you gotta join us, come in our practice space, use our rehearsal room” and… I mean, it was inspiring to watch you know Pencey Prep and just kinda their work ethic and how much they practiced, and-
Gerard: Yeah, they had their stuff together man, they were always practicing!
Ray: And they cared about-… They had their shit together.
Gerard: They rehearsed like 6 hours at a time.
Mikey: That’s kinda where we learned our work ethic.
Interviewer: So, Frank, what do you bring to the band? Other than this great sense of discipline and this ability to practice for hours on end?
Frank: Yeah, I’m like the Splinter for the band. I’m basically, I’m the Mr. Miyagi.
[Crowd laugh]
Frank: Um… I don’t know… what do I bring to the band? I guess, um…
Gerard: I felt… well I remember first seeing–… so this is before, you know, this is when I first saw Pencey Prep – and it was in this bar, and there was something like… I think there was like 3 people there, me, Mikey and Alex from Eyeball were like the 4th or something… There was like nobody there, but I remember watching and basically Pencey Prep played this show like it was full of people. And I remember just feeling like “Wow, this dude is, you know, a great singer, he’s a great guitar player, but he’s a born performer.” Like, this is somebody that is totally meant to be on stage and in front of people, like thrashing around. And it was always something that we felt like we were missing, like we were missing this, you know… Like, everybody brings their own kind of heart to the band, and he brought this kind of reckless kinda passion that I think really expressed our music. Like he was almost kind of like this physical whirling blender, like flipping and destroying everything around the stage that was kind of an extension of exactly what we were trying to do, you know? So, that, and he’s a great guitar player.
Interviewer: And then the process of writing songs and the creative process: Early on how does it work?
Gerard: Early on it was, it was like somebody had something – start working on it. And it was this collaborative thing where everybody’s just kinda spitting out ideas, really free-form back then. Really like, you know, I was still trying to figure out how to sing and all this stuff, like didn’t really understand lyric-writing or any of that yet, I just kinda did… it was all gut instinct for us.
We had thrown out everything we had learned from any band and we’d- everything was gut instinct, like, “Well, you shouldn’t jam these 2 parts together,” but we’re gonna do it anyway. And it was a lot of our sound was based off that.
Frank: I remember being a fly on the wall when they finished “Vampires Will Never Hurt You.” And that was the first song that you guys actually like really recorded. And it was like… you guys were so excited about it, you were like ‘Oh my god, we got… you gotta hear this song!’ and they would play it over and over again and then after they played it they would all high-five each other like ‘That was awesome!’
[Crowd laugh]
Frank: Yeah, it was really cool.
Gerard: We still do that!
Ray: Yeah, that’s true.
Frank: Now, I get it though.
Gerard: Yeah, now he’s high-fiving with us, and we’re… We brought him into that and now he totally gets it, yeah. We’re doing… That stuff happened during Danger Days, still to this day we’re still high-fiving each other like “This is the coolest song ever!”
[Crowd laugh]
Interviewer: Well, the passion is there, and that keeps the band going, there’s no question about that. You lose that; you lose a lot.
Band: [general sounds of agreement]
Interviewer: Okay, so, the band’s staying together, its starting to gel… When does the idea that… “We can do something with this; we’re going to put all of our energy, put all of our creative spirit into this entity, and make a run for this”?
Gerard: Oh it was right away, it was very…
Interviewer: It was?
Frank: All right so, “Vampires Will Never Hurt” You was the first song that was ever actually really really recorded – they did like, three songs in an attic, but like, they went to a studio to record “Vampires…,” and as soon as you guys recorded it, I think it got played on pirate radio, which is like Scene Hall in New Jersey, and then we put it up on the Internet.
And within month after that, there was A&R people from major labels calling the studio. Which was… it was ridiculous, ‘cause like at that point, Thursday had all the heat on them, which is another amazing band from Jersey. Midtown was getting signed, Saves The Day was getting signed. And so, there was this crazy thing going on, and, you know, My Chem was kinda getting pushed into the circle. And there was a lot of attention, and we were playing shows and kids were going off, you know? And, it was immediate that like… in that circle–I wasn’t even in the band at that point–but when you heard that song you knew something amazing was going to happen. I don’t know how to pinpoint it, but like there was something really special. And we’d just start playing shows, you know?
Gerard: Yeah, we immediately didn’t look back at all. We just, we all quit our jobs, we borrowed vans, and then we just kept do- ‘cause it didn’t matter, kind of, what was gonna happen. There’s this thing that’s almost hard to describe, to put into words: the way you felt when this was going on in the beginning, when you’re playing a 5 song set, you’re hardly had a full length album yet, but something kind of magical was happening, there was something new happening, and you-… It was almost like we all like had the keys to it, and nobody else, like we had a secret, like we had a secret formula we were figuring out, and you didn’t… We didn’t hang out with other bands except for Pencey Prep; we didn’t talk to anybody, and we were very standoffish, we were very much like a street gang or something.
[Crowd laugh]
Gerard: And you just kind of blow into these towns and you do your mascara in truck stops and… You know, doing that stuff to even further kind of polarize or irritate or get a reaction out of people ‘cause there was nobody that looked like that at the time. But there was something just so magical at that time that you just got in a van and you didn’t care about what was gonna happen to you. ‘Cause at the time, like–this isn’t in a negative way–you didn’t think about being 30. Like, to me, that didn’t exist, like it was never… I wasn’t ever gonna hit 30; it didn’t matter, like you know?
And that… but that was a lot of initial power of the band, and the engine behind it was this kinda “Live fast, die young.” And it didn’t matter, like; even if you ended up living it didn’t matter.
Interviewer: You know, when going back and just reading about the band, its incredible how many rock genres your name, My Chem, is associated with. Emo, glam certainly, progressive rock, punk, metal… I mean, some of the gambits are pretty wild. It’s a long way from glam to, you know, punk–punk was the antithesis of that, you know, it was just 3 chords, a lotta attitude, and just go. Glam was very theatrical. And you had… This is the thing that I really always thought “wow” how you guys pulled this off – you were able to very carefully balance all of those, and weave all those forms into your music, and at the same–call them roots–but at the same time come up with something completely different. So, you did a hybrid of hybrids, and it became your own. I don’t know whether that was intentional, or you simply let it go and it happened, but I think it’s a fair assessment of what your sound ultimately became.
Ray: Yeah, I mean I think a lot of… I mean really all of that to me has to do with the guys who are in it. Like, we all have, you know we all, you know, love metal. And love, you know, great songs obviously, but we all come from such different backgrounds, musically. You know I think a lot of bands come together its like alright you have a lot of dudes who are into this style who wanna start this kinda band, or country artists wanna-… Dudes who are into country wanna start a country… We just started, really just started a band. And started- you know we picked up instruments and started making noise.
You know for me like yeah, I come a little bit for metal background, so maybe that’s where that stuff comes in, you know. Gerard and Mikey with the Bowie, and The Smiths, The Cure, and, you know, and Frank more from punk, like… We just played how we-… what was in us, you know, and that’s really how the sound was formed. And yeah, you’re right, I think we do have a unique sound and a unique take on music, and that take is “Anything goes,” you know, we just create what feels good.
Interviewer: You know, I’m gonna let you in on a little secret. At the time when you guys were being looked at by Warner, Tom Whalley, who was basically the head of Warner Music Group at the time, who I told you backstage was a real good friend of mine, and he…
At the time, I was living up in Seattle, I’d just moved up to Seattle and he had passed through and he came by. And we went out for dinner, and we were talking, I said “So, you know, what are you listening to?” and he says “I found this band, this band from Jersey,” and right away I think, you know, because we’re from New Jersey I’m thinking “Okay, its in the Bon Jovi mold, its in the Bruce mold.” I hadn’t paid attention, I’d been away from Jersey long enough not to know many of the bands that you just mentioned, I just didn’t keep up. But he said “You gotta hear this, this is the most incredible thing; you’ll never believe it’s from ‘Jersey.”
And he played me, I forget what it was, and he played me… “It’s just really really different. I don’t know how-what to do with them yet, but it’s really really interesting.”
Of course you ultimately would sign, and of course, you know, the rest is history so to speak. But that was my first introduction, just a little clip, played in a Seattle restaurant, and it was really interesting, and here I am, you know, talking to you today.
Frank: Small world.
Interviewer: Yeah, it is a small world. But I think when an A&R guy or a record head says that “I’m really intrigued by them but I’m not sure how it fits or what we do with it,” that’s a good thing–it’s a challenging thing, but its also a good thing, because basically it means that there’s nobody else sounding like you and doing what you’re doing.
Gerard: That’s awesome. Yeah, Tom’s amazing. Like, Tom signed us, he, you know, he was one of the first people to find us, and… Yeah, I think there’s something about us that shouldn’t work.
Interviewer: Yeah, that’s a good point.
Gerard: And I think- that’s kind of what does. And I think what it is is even though we do come from different musical backgrounds we all love and appreciate all of them, ‘cause I have a lot of metal records in my collection as well as punk records, as well as everything.
I think its that genuine love for all of them that, like, Ray was mentioning these guys that would already say ‘Well, I’m gonna start a “this” band. That was where they were making the mistake, where we, like Ray said, just started a band. And I think that’s why we do sound so unique, it’s that genuine love for…
You know, I remember when it was like glam kids hated the punk kids, rockers hated the mods. I hated that, I hated the fact that I would go to like the Pipeline and get shoved ‘cause I looked like a Britpop rock kid, you know? And I would be like “Why can’t I like this? Why can’t I like this, too?” I think that’s kind of what shaped also the personality and identity of the band, was that inclusion of everybody and every type of music.
Interview: Yeah. But, your band is also been very theatrical, I mean just looking at the video, I mean it’s all over that, and of course your shows. The theatricality… the naysayers would say “You know what? That takes away from the music,” you know? And therefore “If you’re gonna play the music, if the songs are good enough let them ride on their own.” You could say, “Yeah but by embellishing them with the theatricality, you bring it to a whole ‘nother level, a whole new aspect of the song that we’re going to interpret for you, right now, on this stage.” Tell me, basically how you deal with the theatrics of the music, and how do you go about creating it?
Gerard: Well to me, one of the things that also irritates naysayers is to say not only are the theatrics important and visuals, to me art is just as important as the music. And that will probably really bother them, but that’s just how I feel, that the art is just as important. Like, there’s just as much thought that goes into that as the music, and they’re both supporting each other, so…
Frank: Absolutely. And that’s the thing, I think… yeah, I mean, we all know our songs are great.
[Crowd laughs]
Frank: So that aside, from anything else, its like, why would you tie your arms behind your back and not go above and beyond and do all these other things, like, where else do you have the opportunity to do that kinda stuff, to dabble, in film, and art, and even down to like designing like merchandise for the band, like, you know, give it 100% to everything, and see what happens, you know?
I think naysayers that you know are like “Oh, its just about this,” its just [lowers voice as if giving away a secret] because they’re not good at anything else. That’s the thing, and you know you have to have, you have to be fearless to at least try, and be like “You know what, maybe I’m not good at this, but I’m gonna try.”
Interviewer: In a recent New York Times, I don’t know if you saw this, I think a Q&A, I think the first line was that ‘My Chem is a cartoony kind of band’ literally I think that’s almost a verbatim quote, “Cartoon-y.” Is that- do you take that as a compliment, or…?
Gerard: I think it might have meant “Comic book-y.”
[Crowd laughs]
Interviewer: Well I was gonna get to that, but she said “Cartoon-y”
Gerard: Yeah, yeah, well cartoon-y’s an easier line to the average casual I guess. I mean yeah, for those purposes cartoony I guess is accurate, but… I don’t know, maybe right now ‘cause of the colors, but I always say it’s artistic.
Interviewer: Yeah, yeah. You use, you in particular, you use the word art in a lot of interviews. I mean I see that word pop up. You take it very seriously, as you just said, and you discuss it and you’re eloquent when you talk about it. At what point, if any, does the art take over from the music, do you have to separate the two, do they compete in your mind.
Gerard: I did before. That’s what was happening during ..Parade, and I think that’s what, you know, what this record really represents to me is kind of not separating it anymore, ‘cause there’s no reason to, you know? If I’m gonna think about something and be passionate about something it should be everything that I do. I shouldn’t try to divide it up.
Interviewer: When you guys are playing, you play clubs and then all of a sudden you’re playing arenas, you know, you’re opening for Green Day, on the …Idiot tour, and that is, that’s huge. What does that mean in terms of your performance? Is it the same as playing Maxwell’s, a club of 300 people? When you’re playing, you know, 18,000 do you have to change the way in which you approach the music and the theatricality?
Frank: You just get more room, you know. There’s a lot more room.
Interviewer: A little bit more room, yeah, a bigger stage.
Frank: I think when we got to those bigger venues, there was a little bit of like, or at least for me, like a lot more stage fright. You know, kinda going up there and being like “Whoa, there’s a lot of you here.” You kinda feel like you’re a little bit-… Its weird, you feel like you’re more under a microscope. It feels like little clubs and with kids like kinda falling on you and stuff like that, it was a security blanket. Like that was… that stuffs not work, that’s not hard, that’s just, that’s… what I feel like we were put here to do. But when you get up on those bigger venues, it’s a little bit more… I don’t know, a little bit more thought is put into it.
Gerard: Yeah, there’s definitely a difference.
Ray: Yeah. I mean you definitely … I mean, one thing I think was a learning curve was, you know, how to, going from like connecting with 200 people in a room to you know 2,000 and then you know 10,000 like … how do you make the person all the way in the bleachers feel part of the gig, you know part of the show, and… You know Gerard’s like amazing at that.
Its funny, though, too, because, you know we do have intimate moments, like when we do Cancer its… I mean for me the only people in that arena are Gerard and Dewees who plays you know piano and keyboards for us, so…
I think that’s another thing with the band, you know, we have songs I think that work on a bigger level and then we can take it down to smaller and make everybody feel like they’re in a club too.
Interviewer: Yeah, yeah. You know, some of the great artists, I think Springsteen, we talked about him, could, you know, concentrate on just one person. You find one face in the crowd early on and you focus on that person with the hope that the rest of the arena picks up the intimacy that you’re creating between you and that person.
Ray: Is it Courtney Cox?
[Band and audience laugh]
Interviewer: In 1984, that’s who it was, you bet! So do you-… I mean how do you approach that? You see a sea of faces out there. What’s the strategy?
Gerard: Well, Jay Jay French from Twisted Sister had come out to a concert of ours in, ah, we played, what’s that arena in Long Island?
Frank: Nassau.
Gerard: Nassau, Nassau Coliseum. You know, we’re doing our own arena tour with Black Parade, its big, pyro, it’s the full production, so we think we got this on lock, you know, and we’re like ‘Alright, we’re really good at this arena thing now’. ‘cause…
Ray: We have stuff with us.
Gerard: Yeah, now we have zeppelins, so now we know what we’re doing. So, we do this meet and greet at the end of the night, right? And Jay Jay French, who’s the guitar player of Twisted Sister, come up to me, he says “Man, you guys are awesome!” And he’d brought his daughters ‘cause they were really into the band, but you could tell that this dude was also really into the band. He’s a really intense guy and he had sunglasses on indoors, and it was like…
[Crowd laughs]
Gerard: And he was really awesome, but then he goes ‘But man I kept saying, “Look at me, look at me; ‘cause, I’m up in the 110s dude. You didn’t look at me once.” And I was like- and I think you were next to me right? [Gestures to Ray] I was like “Wow.” Nobody ever says that to you right? And I was like ‘Wow, I think this guy’s right, I gotta look more in the 110s and the 200s and the-’ So after that show I was acting more mindful to make sure everybody in that arena got… some of this face.
[Audience laugh]
Ray: That’s actually funny, ‘cause that’s where me and my brother were. You know, when we were go see like at [Brendan Byrne] that’s- we were in the 200s, we were in the nosebleeds.
Gerard: Yeah, it was a cool thing [inaudible].
Frank: Did Molly Hatchet ever actually look at the 110s?
Ray: No! [Laughs] Well, I never saw them live.
Interviewer: So what was Green Day like, touring with Green Day?
Gerard: They were awesome.
Frank: Yeah.
Gerard: Yeah, and they pulled major pranks on us at the end, though. They did-… I’m really, I have an aversion to loud bangs. Like if you guys all had balloons right now I wouldn’t be able to do this, ‘cause I’d be nervous about when they’re going to pop. So they would, um, so basically we’re on stage and they’re setting off all these concussions. And I was jumping probably like 8 feet off the ground…
[Audience laugh]
Gerard: It was pretty amazing.
Frank: At some point they dumped popcorn on us, too.
Mikey: They had a stream of popcorn that was raining on me for a couple of songs.
[All laugh]
Ray: They were great to us out there, yeah. [All laugh]. No, they were awesome, they made us feel so welcome on that tour.
Frank: Yeah.
Ray: That was big for us.
Frank: We also got to watch them every night, that was really cool.
Interviewer: Yeah, that’s right. And are you surprised by their success, I mean I hear American Idiot’s on Broadway…
Gerard: No, I think it’s so awesome. They work really hard, they love what they do, you know. They’re definitely a band that, like, a young band looks up to because you’re like “Wow, these guys really care about what they do.” And you actually- sometimes you don’t run into bands like that. Like, they really, they’re very protective of what Green Day is. And I think we’re very protective of what MCR is.
Interviewer: Yeah. I want you each to pick a song, one song, and basically tell me something about it. Just pick a song that you feel is particularly representative of the band, or maybe it’s your personal favorite, or one that didn’t work the way it should have. I don’t care what story, just pick a song and give us something about it.
[Silence]
[Crowd laughs]
Interviewer: Who wants to go first? Oh Mikey, you go…
Mikey: Is it off the new record?
Interviewer: I don’t care. Any record.
[Silence]
[Crowd laughs]
Interviewer: That’s right, would you all do that for me? [Briefly ings “Jeopardy” theme.]
[Crowd laughs and starts going doo-doo-doo-doo]
Interviewer: This isn’t a hard question, I mean come on!
Ray: I mean, you know, for ah… I think off the new record I think “Vampire Money”’s really special. You know it was, what was it, the second song we recorded, or third song we recorded for the record?
Frank: I say 3rd.
Ray: I mean it was awesome, you know, we wrote the song, you know, maybe like an hour-and-a-half before we recorded it. And the whole thing’s tracked live. I think its maybe like the 3rd or 4th take of the song is what you hear on the record.
And it was, I mean, there’s a video somewhere of us tracking that song, and it looks like a gig inside this studio, you know, like where we recorded the record really, again, really small space, like, you know from here [gestures to his left] maybe to the end of that stage, like that’s where we recorded this record. And, you know, just bodies flying all over the place, and, you know, it felt like playing a live show, and that’s, I think that’s why there’s-… that track is so energetic and you can kinda feel that coming off it.
Frank: I remember Gerard like running all over the couch, and… in the studio-
Ray: What was- with the magazines?
Frank: Yeah this was what I… Alright, so everything in the studio, like after like we were done tracking it, was fine, but all the magazines had been destroyed.
[All laugh]
Frank: It was… it was so weird! It was like, nothing else was out of place, but every fucking magazine was just… annihilated! [Sweeps arm out]. So we had nothing to read.
Gerard: I don’t know… ‘cause even if I get really wound-… swept up in something I still have this element of self-control, I don’t know what that is. So, I didn’t grab the vase, I grabbed the magazine.
[All laugh]
Gerard: It wasn’t as important.
[All laugh]
Interviewer: That’s good!
Gerard: I think the more- it happens to me on a subconscious level.
Mikey: On this new record, I’m super proud of the song “Planetary…”
[Crowd cheers and claps]
Mikey: On each of our albums we’d always come a centimeter closer to writing a full-on dance song. Even back to like “Vampire Will Never Hurt You”’s kind of…
Ray: Yeah, it has that vibe for sure.
Mikey: Dance vibe to it. Ah, “…Sharpest Lives,” um, “To The End,” yeah, so I think with Planetary, I think we’ve finally reached that point you know, we wrote a… it just wants to have fun, you know, that song just wants to… dance and have fun.
Frank: Hmm… Umm… I was gonna talk about that song, so…
[Crowd laugh]
Mikey: Sorry.
Frank: It’s alright.
Interviewer: You can add your two cents.
Frank: I’ll talk about “Mama.”
[Crowd cheers and claps]
Ray: That’s a cool song.
Frank: What can I say?
[Crowd laughs]
Frank: There was a… You know, it was a really fun song to do, and to finish it, and then, and know that there was a spot for another vocalist, a duet, if you will. And to be like “Oh, who would go really well here?” And, we were like “Well, you know who would go really good here? Liza Minnelli.” And then there was like a snicker, like “Ahahaha.” And Rob was like “Oh, oh really? ‘cause I think I can call her.” But like…
[Crowd laugh]
Frank: “You… shut up, you can’t call her.” and he called her, and like, what, maybe 2 weeks later we were in the studio, she did it via satellite kinda thing, and… she called us “babies”…
[Crowd laugh]
Frank: Yeah, like [Liza Minnelli voice] “Aw, hey my babies!” like that kinda.
[Audience laugh]
Frank: It was really great, it was awesome, she was so nice, and she killed it!
Ray: The best- the spontaneous crying at the end…
Frank: Oh yeah!
Ray: Like she really got into the role of the mom.
Gerard: It was- everything in there was her. Nobody told her to do anything, it was really cool.
Interviewer: Really?
Gerard: You know, there’s always something about “Vampires Will Never Hurt You” that, it’s a, I know we talked about it, but it’s a really special song to me. We had done 2 songs before that, I think we had done, first was “Skylines…,” then was “Our Lady of Sorrows,” it was…
Ray: Yeah.
Gerard: And maybe “Cubicles” came…
Ray: Mm hmm.
Gerard: And then “Vampires Will Never Hurt You.” To me that is the real, it feels like the first My Chem song that really captured everything in. I remember standing outside this diner, and me and Mikey were hanging out with this kid, and I’d just started to write this song a couple of days before. And I remember, we were talking about some stuff and he’s like “What are you working on?” and I said “Well, I’m working on this song,” he goes “What’s it called?” I said, “It’s called ‘Vampires Will Never Hurt You.’” And he goes, “That’s the dumbest song title I’ve ever heard.”
[Crowd laughs]
Mikey: I totally remember that!
Gerard: You remember that?
Mikey: I totally remember that.
Gerard: I go, yeah, ‘cause I even prompted him, I was like “Yeah, what do you think of that?” and he goes, “I think it’s the dumbest song title I’ve ever heard.”
Mikey: He said it was the dumbest song he’d ever heard.
Gerard: And I was like-
Mikey: That’s when we knew we were on the right track.
Gerard: Yeah, and I was like “Nah, you see,”I was thinking to myself: “There’s something next-level about it, I just think… Nah, ‘cause it’s real long and it doesn’t make any sense.”
And so we went and did that song, and I remember hearing my voice back on the recording, and just… just like… and just hearing the whole recording and feeling how… how terrified at how fucking awesome it was, it was like, “This is so good! This is so good!” And I remember hearing my voice and thinking to myself, I am, you know… I feel like – I have recorded a lot of songs since then, I never… and I’m really proud of the stuff that we’ve done since then – I never felt that way as hearing that first time, I still feel like my favorite performance that I ever did was that one take that I did on that first song.
And I’ll never – it’s like the drug, and the rush that you will never get back no matter how much you chase it. It’s that first recording. And, I still feel that way to this day, I hear “Vampires…” to this day, and it like, I think it’s the best singing I’ve ever done, was on that song. So that’s kinda how I feel about it.
Interviewer: You guys agree?
[Crowd cheers and claps]
Interviewer: Before I turn it over to these guys, ‘cause there are a lot of people here who I’m sure wanna ask a few questions and I don’t wanna run out of time, but did I read correctly where you guys, you know, you’ve booked your tour and then you promptly cancelled the tour in Arizona? Is that true? A gig in Arizona in protest of…
Gerard: Yes we did.
Interviewer: Talk about that, that’s…
[Crowd clap]
Interviewer: Was that deliberate, that you did that and then cancelled?
Gerard: No, no, actually probably… you know what Ray had mentioned that when it happened, or who said like, “I’m actually glad it happened that way because then it brought more attention to it, because people had just forgotten about it,” you know?
For, real quick, and I just feel like, you know, our fanbase that we feel that that affected, we feel is like a really big part of My Chemical Romance, from Arizona to South America to Mexico to everywhere, its like very important to this band. And we’ve always felt that way. And so that’s why we’re – it’s so important for us.
Frank: Yeah, I mean, it’s one of those things where it… it’s unfortunate ‘cause, you know, you don’t want to punish fans by not being able to play for them there and stuff like that, but the “inconvenience” [finger quotes] of not getting to see a show is nothing compared to living in a police state, or living in fear.
And I really, you know, I encourage the fans and the people that live in Arizona to, you know, to express themselves by writing their local congresspeople who represent them. Maybe we can change the laws together as opposed to just kinda being angry on a blog, or anything like that. I think, you know, and I think it’s easy to say, “Oh, you know, I’m young and people don’t listen to me,” but there’s ways to have your voice heard, you know, you don’t have to be 18 to hold a picket sign.
[Crowd claps]
Interviewer: Well, I thought it was a really courageous thing to do and I applaud you as well.
Frank: Thank you.
Interviewer: I thought it was a really great act, and I agree with you. I think fans understand that, I think they would think even more of you for doing it, quite honestly, despite the inconvenience.
Okay, let me turn this a little bit around and let’s go out here [gestures to crowd]. I’ll call on you, raise your hand, stand up, speak loudly so that we can hear you and get you on tape, okay, and ask only one question. [Points out into crowd] You have a nice smile, go ahead, you go first.
Person 1: This is for Gerard. You had mentioned making a comic book of The Killjoys.
Gerard: Oh, right.
Person 1: And are you still gonna go along with that? Will you kinda tune it in to the album, or…?
Gerard: Yeah, I start, I actually, we get to Japan on Saturday and I start writing when I get to Japan, so. It’ll be out this year, I hope [Emily’s Note: Ahahahaha]. So we just, it shares all the same ideas that that record is trying to express, but I’m really excited to actually show everybody how different it is from what you maybe saw in the videos.
Interviewer: Yes, right here.
Person 2: What was the first song you guys felt like My Chemical Romance was like something, that you guys were gonna get somewhere?
Frank: Oh man.
Gerard: That practice.
Mikey: Yeah, the first practice, yeah.
Gerard: You know the first kinda… When we had a lotta components… That’s kinda when I – I mean I has a gut feeling, you know?
Frank: I think, for me, like I think like going on those first tours, and ending up in places like the Dakotas or like Minnesota, and having like five kids there that were like, “Whoa, I love your band, I’m so excited that you guys are here, I’ve been waiting for like, you know, months for you guys, for this show!” and I was like “Really? Like, how do you even know… how do you know who we are?” So, I mean that was, that was huge.
Interviewer: Where are the people from Argentina?
Argentineans: Right here.
Interviewer: Ok, you can ask two questions, you came real far, go ahead.
Argentineans: This is for Ray and Frank. When you guys write the guitar part for a song, do you guys do it together, like isolated from people, or do you guys do it separately and then talk about ideas?
Ray: Different for each song, right?
Frank: Yeah, depends on the song.
Ray: Yeah.
Frank: There’s been a couple of songs where, I remember where even on Black Parade, where we would–… ‘cause we were all in this big house called The Paramour that was supposedly haunted, but that’s, that has nothing to do with it.
[All laugh]
Frank: So, we were sitting and we were writing “…Disappear,” and I remember like alright, well this is the chorus part, and I remember I was like “Oh, I think this part should be here” and I played a melody, and he was like “Oh, that’s cool, I heard this part” and then he played it and we actually just-
Ray: Kinda merged the two, yeah.
Frank: Yeah, took the first half of like mine, and the last half of his and then that was the part.
Ray: Yeah.
Frank: That was really fun.
Ray: Yeah, its cool, you know, like, I guess it’s different, it depends on the song. Sometimes, I like, you know, just on the spot live while we’re, you know, first learning the song, we’re writing our parts individually, but I think at some point in every song we always get together, like I remember “Ghost…,” “Ghost Of You,” like on Revenge, like you know he’d come over to my apartment and we’d just go over stuff, so. Usually it starts out what we hear in our heads first, each other, and then we always kinda get with each other.
Frank: Just to make sure we’re complimenting each other, not fighting, basically.
Interviewer: Competing, yeah. You have a second one, you got one?
Argentineans: Yeah
Interviewer: I thought so
Argentineans: I saw at the performance you did just the other day, and I wanted to know if you guys would ever consider making an acoustic album?
Interviewer: Good question.
Frank: Yeah. We never thought we would ever do anything like that.
Ray: That was a lot of fun.
Frank: We were actually against it for a while. But, yeah, it was really fun. Um… I don’t know…
Mikey: I’d like to do it again though.
Frank: Yeah. You know, I wish they- Do they still do those “Unplugged” things?
Ray: That’s kinda, more-
[Crowd laughs]
Ray: That’s more, like yeah what I would wanna do, like I don’t know if an acoustic album per se-
Frank: Yeah.
Ray: But I guess they release it anyway, but more like a kinda like an intimate performance, like if we were to play here now. Which would be great, man, we should have brought guitars, that would have been nice.
Frank: [to crowd] No, sorry, we don’t have anything.
Ray: I’m sorry, there’s no surprise! Hide from the tomatoes! [Hides face in jacket]. But, no I mean, what was great about it was it you know it allowed us to- a chance to kind of revisit older material and look at it in a different way. Like the last thing we wanted to do was play, you know, say “…Not Okay…,” how you’ve heard it but just playing with acoustic guitars, we really tried hard to change the arrangements and change the instrumentation. And, you know, it’s a lot of fun, it’s yet another challenge, we love challenges.
Interviewer: You have an open invitation, any time you wanna come back, bring the acoustics-
Ray: Aw, that’s nice.
[Crowd claps and cheers]
Interviewer: We’ll call all these people up.
Ray: You guys will be here right?
Gerard: Thank you.
Interviewer: Okay, yes, go ahead, ma’am.
Person 3: Gerard, you talked a lot in your lyrics about rescuing people, rescuing yourself.
Gerard: Okay…
Person 3: Rescuing the whole world. What are you needing rescuing from, or what are you protecting the world from?
Gerard: I don’t know!
[All laugh]
Interviewer: That’s deep, isn’t it?
Gerard: No, I think there was definitely a point in my life, where I felt like I needed to be rescued, and I think any time… any time I was a kid, like, you know, just disappeared into comic books or things like that, there was always somebody rescuing somebody else, and I guess I always thought somebody was gonna rescue me too. And I think any time I was talking about that in a song it was really just kind of a… maybe just this weird angry kind of cry for help. ‘Cause I never thought I was gonna rescue anybody else.
[Crowd laugh]
Gerard: But then, I stopped needing to be rescued. And that was a really cool thing, you know? And I think that that’s why maybe I write about the things I write today.
Person 3: Rescuing people? Like Hold Them Back And Save Yourself?
Gerard: Yeah, yeah that’s one of my favorite song titles that I had written sometime right after Black Parade, or the touring had ended, ‘cause it was kinda like… you know, it wasn’t saying like, “I’m not gonna help you out;” its saying “You got this, I’ll, you know, I’ll go fall on this sword, but go ahead, just get outta here, like, shit’s gonna get ugly.”
[Crowd laugh]
Gerard: It was more like… it’s more like that.
Interviewer: Over here, yes, right there.
Person 4: I have a question for all of you. If My Chemical Romance wasn’t a band, where do you guys think you would be right now? Do you think that you would be comic book writers, or musicians, or something completely different?
Interviewer: Good question.
Ray: I don’t know. I mean, honestly, I don’t know. Like you know we all talk about… you know I mean for me I really feel like the band did save us in a way, you know, like I have actually no idea what I would be doing. I know I’d be miserable!
[Crowd laugh]
Ray: You know, I definitely wouldn’t be as happy as I am today, so… I don’t know what I’d be doing.
Mikey: Probably be trying to start a band, you know.
Ray: Yeah!
Frank: Yeah, I’d definitely be in another band but I probably- I definitely wouldn’t be as happy as I am, you know. This is the best band I’ve ever been in.
Gerard: Yeah. I mean I like to think that I would be doing comics or something, but I don’t know that I would’ve achieved that, you know. I definitely think I’d have some kind of job that I probably didn’t like.
[Crowd laugh]
Gerard: And feeling like something was missing.
Interviewer: Way in the back, yes ma’am.
Person 5: Hi! Okay, so just real quick: You rock the red hair better than Rhianna.
[Crowd laugh]
Gerard: Oh thanks! It’s like a very similar color, though.
Person 5: And my question kinda is similar to the one that was asked before. I would like to know–personally I’m emotionally attached to a lot of your songs. They’ve got me through a lot of really hard times in my personal life. How–and this is for everybody–how, or what songs have been emotionally… I guess therapeutic for you, and like which songs are they if you wanna get [unintelligible]. How do you feel when fans come up to you and say that you saved their lives, ‘cause I’m kinda one of those people, too.
[Crowd claps]
Gerard: I think, well Frank has a really good answer for the second part of that question, but…For the 1st part as to which song, I think for- oddly the most emotional for me is “…Black Parade.” It, and its often kinda- these days I kinda feel a little disconnected from at least playing the song live, because… I don’t know, there’s, that song does something to me, like its definitely talking about my dad and things like that, its just, you know, the inevitability of people getting ill… fulfilling potential… it’s just like about life, that song to me. And it’s about like “What are you gonna be? Are you gonna be something or are you gonna be nothing?” Destiny. Things like that, that stuff really emotionally hits me, like I guess that fear of becoming nothing was so great to me that… that getting to make art with my friends was like a gift, you know? And I think that that’s why that song is so emotional to me.
Frank: Oh man. Yeah. It’s weird, you know, like every song we write has… has a special place in your heart you know. It’s like each one of your kids, kinda thing. And some of them mean something completely different than like, even like with the lyrics mean like ‘cause you know you’re writing your parts and you have your own emotions that you’re drawing upon, you know. And then when you finally hear what the lyrics actually are, it’s like “Oh wow, that’s so cool,” like…
Ray: It’s somehow connected
Frank: Yeah, it’s somehow connects or sometimes it’s like “Oh wow, he’s singing about this and it means that, but at the same time like this.” Like, you know, like “Helena” I’m thinking about, you know, my wife, like when I play those parts it’s like… its really crazy, you know. But the emotions are different, but they’re at the same level.
So, I would have to say like, you know, the creative processes themselves were things that got me through a lot of stuff.
But the second part, you know, as far as like the band being a… you know, saving you or helping you get through some times, I mean… its one of those things where… I can never express the gravity of that statement.
We never thought we would reach as many people as we possibly have reached, or that we’d mean that much to so many people, or even to one person, you know? All we did was we wrote these songs that meant something to us, and put them out there in the world. And, it chokes you up how universal music is and how much that can change everybody’s life.
So, that’s really great, but the way I feel is that, you know, when you guys say that, or when some of you say that, I feel like you’re not giving yourself enough credit. You know, I think that the people that love this band are so strong, and they’re such amazing people. And we were there as a soundtrack, and maybe you know we provided you some comfort, but you’re the ones that have actually saved your own lives. I mean, the applause and all that is for you, like, you guys are the best. So thank you for saying that, but you know, it’s you guys.
[Crowd claps]
Interviewer: I’m going to take one more question, so we can do the meet and greet, so where, you pick ‘em, right there.
Frank: [points into crowd] Right there.
Interviewer: There you go
Frank: Hi, how’re you doing?
[Crowd “aww”s]
Person 6: I’m a survivor of cancer, and I was just wondering where you got your inspiration to write the song “Cancer.”
[Crowd awws a bit more]
Frank: Oh, man.
[Crowd laughs]
Interviewer: It’s getting harder, isn’t it?
Frank: Yeah!
[Crowd laugh]
Frank: You know, um…
Gerard: We had met a lot of kids… One of the things about, you know, you’re in a band, and then like the thing he was just talking about, like you start affecting people. But then you start realizing that your band is gotten to a point where people are now going to organizations like Make-A-Wish to get in touch with your band because their wish is to hang out with you. Like, and that’s a crazy thing, when that starts happening to your band. That started happening right around Revenge, right?
Frank: Yeah
Gerard: And it was a really trippy thing for us, and we really loved it right away, like we… we kinda got good at it. I don’t know, like we just enjoyed it we were like “Wow this is something that actually makes us feel good, we’re getting… this is like, all this person wants to do is hang out with us.” So, but then we realized like we started to meet all these people, and do all these Make A Wish things, and that’s who we’re meeting backstage, you know, and on the road.
And I said “Well, yeah, people have like songs for cancer survivors and they have these kind of ballads or anthems or something, but there’s nothing that talks about maybe how ugly it is.” And it’s never happened to me, but I can only imagine from the kids that I met how horrible or how tough it was to be, you know. And I wanted to make something that was so brutally honest that it became beautiful, like something so totally ugly that it became relatable and pretty. And so that’s the inspiration from me, from, for writing that song.
Frank: We started to realize to, I mean, as, when we do these Make-A-Wish things, like how great it made those kids feel, like… like you were saying, it made us feel, like, 10 times better. Like you know you guys wanted to hang out with us, but we were just psyched that you guys made the time to hang out with us. Like, we got so much more out of it than I think anybody else did. Like, it was just so amazing to… to be in the presence of so much strength. It’s really inspiring, so, um… you know, I hope you liked the song.
Person 6: Yes.
Frank: Thank you.
[Crowd claps]
Interviewer: Well thank you, thank you very much. I have to say, and I mean this, I’m up on stage here I said over eighty times. Tonight’s questions from these guys were some of the best, maybe the best, you have ever- anyone has ever asked any of the artists up here, so congratulations to you.
[Audience clap and cheer, band clap the audience]
Interviewer: Guys, thank you so much for coming, this was terrific. [Shakes Gerard’s hand]. My Chemical Romance!
Conventional Weapons es una serie de 10 canciones nunca escuchadas y que serán lanzadas 2 cada vez durante los próximo cinco meses. Los singlesde doble caraestarán disponibles a nivel mundial, tanto en digital yen formatovinillo de 7″. En vinilo estará disponible enla mayoría de lastiendas de músicaindependientes enpaísesde todo el mundo. Aquí las fechas de lanzamiento y listado de canciones:
Title: Number One A-side: Boy Division B-side: Tomorrow’s Money Release date: October 30, 2012
Title: Number Two A-side: AMBULANCE B-side: Gun. Release date: Black Friday, November 23, 2012
Title: Number Three A-side: The World Is Ugly B-side: The Light Behind Your Eyes Release date: Tuesday, December 18, 2012
Title: Number Four A-side: Kiss The Ring B-side: Make Room!!!! Release date: Tuesday, January 8, 2013
Title: Number Five A-side: Surrender The Night B-side: Burn Bright Release date: Tuesday, February 5, 2013
Ya se puede pedir en pre-orden el «Limited-Edition Vinyl Box Set of CONVENTIONAL WEAPONS» en la pagina del store de MCR
También en el store se ofrece una camiseta por el lanzamiento de «Number One»
Ayer en la tarde la pagina de My Chemical Romance en la sección del store mostraba un articulo a la venta que luego de hora y media desapareció.
Este articulo era un disco de vinillo llamado «Conventional Weapons Number Four» tenia fecha de lanzamiento 8 de Enero de 2013 y tenia un costo de $10.
De esto se especuló mucho, teorías paranoicas surgieron como el hecho de que en alguna ocasión se mencionó que si ellos sacaban las canciones que no vieron la luz durante el proceso de creacion de Danger Days era porque se separarían. Para aclarar nuestros pensamientos y desacelerar nuestros corazones, Frank Iero en la mañana de hoy publicó una «explicación» a esto en el blog de la pagina oficial. Gracias a la traducción de MCR SPAIN les podemos compartir lo que el nos quiere decir:
Queridos amigos,
Permitidme que haga un viaje por la avenida de la memoria por un minuto… En el año 2008 fueron los mejores momentos, fueron los peores momentos… Después de años de trabajo constante y viajes, The Black Parade vino y se fue, y My Chemical Romance como banda había alcanzado casi todos los objetivos que se había propuesto para El (el cd). Se vendieron los discos, las puertas fueron pateadas, y los enemigos fueron hechos y vencidos… Realmente sentí que habíamos marcado la diferencia. Si hubo una vez de poner los créditos (como en el final de una peli), llamarlo un día y retirarse por la cima… fue en ese momento. Pero allí estábamos, aún relativamente jóvenes y con un futuro amplio y abierto que parecía que fuera una bendición y una maldición cuando nos preguntábamos «¿Qué demonios viene después?» Un gran porcentaje de mi estaba convencido de que el grupo estaba terminado en ese punto, y entonces, tal y como hizo, la depresión cayó por sí sola.
He crecido y he pasado muchos de mis primeros años de adulto en este grupo, el pensar que aquel capítulo terminaba era una píldora dura de tragar. Pero aquel noviembre recibí una llamada de Gerard que me sacó de todo eso. Hablamos durante un rato sobre el grupo, sobre lo que nos gustaba y odiábamos de él. Dejamos la conversión con promesas de ponernos en contacto y planear un nuevo disco. Durante los siguientes meses seguíamos en ello. Las ideas empezaron a tomar forma… hubo conversaciones sobre cómo deberían sonar las canciones, mezclar cintas para inspirarnos, y al final reservamos los vuelos para nuestra casa adoptiva enLos Ángeles para la pre-producción.
Volviendo la vista a aquella primera llamada, lo que creo que queríamos decir el uno al otro era «Te echo de menos. Me gusta hacer música contigo, y a pesar de toda esa mierda que viene con ello, lo bueno y lo malo, todavía quiero hacerlo.» Cuando estás en un grupo durante mucho tiempo como hemos estado nosotros y has alcanzado cierto ‘nivel’… a veces todo lo que sabes hacer es grabar. Tiendes a olvidar hacer esas pequeñas cosas. Como conectar con tus amigos y crear música. Sin reglas, sin expectativas. Mirando atrás y siendo 20/20, puede que deberíamos simplemente habernos encerrado cada uno en una habitación y hacer un montón de ruido hasta que estuviéramos inspirados para decir colectivamente algo en una grabación. Y aquello no acabó pasando. En vez de eso planeamos hacer un tipo en concreto de disco, escribimos canciones que se adaptaran a ese plan específico, y al final acabamos azotándonos a nosotros mismos por no sentirlo correcto, orgánico, o completo.
Después de un año machacándonos, terminamos por guardar esas canciones fallidas, y volvimos a conectar con Rob Cavallo y Doug McKean para salvar el grupo y crear lo que se convertiría en Danger Days.
Para no confundir, no creo que esas canciones que escribimos antes de Danger Days son malas canciones de ningún modo. De hecho, creo que algunas de esas canciones son de mis favoritas entre todas las que hemos escrito. Muchas son jodidamente geniales… solo es que fueron creadas en el lugar equivocado, en el momento equivocado, y nosotros siendo sus padres no estábamos listos para lanzarlas al vuelo todavía… así que se sentaron y esperaron.
Se amontonaban en mi iPod y cada pocos meses las volvía a escuchar y pensaba «…mierda». Al principio me daban sentimientos mezclados… Me gustaban las canciones pero no podía evitar asociarlas con los malos momentos en que fueron creadas. Eso me resultaba incómodo. Pero el tiempo pasó y empecé a disfrutar de ellas más y más, y miré en el pasado un poco más a fondo. Estaban en mi lista de reproducción secreta, solo para mi. Como algún grupo desconocido que descubrí y me encantaba, y que muy pocos más en el mundo habían escuchado.
Cuanto más tiempo pasaba más jugaba con la fantasía de publicar esas canciones. ¿Qué pensaría la gente? ¿Les gustarían tanto como me gustan a mi ahora? ¿O fue nuestro primer instinto de alejarlas, de no nunca volverlas a escuchar, el paso correcto?
Recientemente hemos tenido una reunión, hemos acabado hablando sobre el pasado, y juntos hemos escuchado esas canciones que creamos hace casi 4 años. Hablamos sobre la forma en que nos hicieron sentir, como nos llevaron a lo que somos ahora y cual era el destino que debían tener. ¿Cómo podríamos seguir completamente si continuábamos escondiendo nuestro pasado? Juntos hemos decidido que este capítulo de la historia de My Chemical Romance ya no tiene que estar bloqueado por más tiempo.
Así que a principios de Octubre publicaremos 2 canciones al mes durante 5 meses. En total 10 canciones de la sesiones de «Conventional Weapons» que hicimos en el 2009. Esperamos que disfrutéis de estas cápsulas del tiempo, y que pueden arrojar un poco de luz en cómo llegó Danger Days, y puede que incluso en lo que está por venir en el futuro de MCR. Fueron los mejores momentos, fueron los peores momentos… y ahora es el momento de quitarle el velo a Conventional Weapons.
Escuchadlas fuerte y sin prejuicios. Mantened la fe. Frank
**Vuelve la semana que viene para la lista de canciones, la fecha de publicación y los detalles de reserva**