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New Biography
By Brandon Boyd
| As
I was being lifted from the heap of twisted steel that was my car, I
asked myself, "Am I dead?"
Then, realizing that I was still very much alive, I looked up at my
heroes--the rest of my band, Incubus--as they lifted me to the curb,
and asked, "What song are you guys mixing?" "Drive,"
they replied, after individual pauses for irony. And the record continued
to be mixed an hour later. Now,
no one likes having a one-ton Mercedes smash into them, and I am no
exception. But thankfully I am not gonna be needing that car anymore!
For we, Incubus--a five-piece musical outfit from Calabasas, California--will
be on tour in support of our new Immortal/Epic album, Make Yourself,
for the remainder of our twenties! And any vehicles that try to collide
will feel the wrath of a 40-foot tour bus, as opposed to a mere Honda
Civic. When
we come home, we will have sold 10 million copies; will have played
500 live shows; will never want to see each other again; will have changed
the musical tastes and philosophical perspectives (for better or worse)
of an entire generation of youngsters; and will have bulging, curvaceous
abdomens from years of truckstop dining and beer-guzzling escapades!
Why
Make Yourself, you ask? Well, even though we finally succumbed to the
forbidden urge to name your album after one of the songs, we did so
because we felt the song (and phrase) "Make Yourself" summed
up the vibe of the album and direction of its lyrical content. "Make
Yourself," meaning don't let yourself be made. Not the "Make
Yourself'" that your dad may have taught you, but more along the
lines of "Fuck-the-man-get-out-from-under-the-iron-fist-of-oppression-
make-yourself!" Know what I mean? This
new record also attests to the fact that as musicians, Incubus has found
happiness and contentment in being a hard rock band that didn't feel
the need to be the hardest, with the most strings tuned down, with the
riffs that made the crowds bounce the highest. All
of that is good and fun but I believe that, upon finishing this record,
Incubus has come to terms with where and what we always wanted to be
as a band: heavy, melodic, diverse, plugged-in yet detached, thought-provoking,
thought-out but spontaneous, observational, silly, and slightly intelligent.
Yes,
I realize that this is about as nebulous a description as a band could
give itself--but I believe that interpretations of things artistic are
best left up to those interpreting from the outside in. A
Brief History Formed
Incubus in a garage in Calabasas in January, 1991. Began playing small
clubs and parties, then graduated to Hollywood gigs opening for ego/hair
bands. Released independent record entitled Fungus-Amongus and began
making waves. Got signed about two years out of high school. Put out
a six-song EP of demos, Enjoy Incubus (Immortal/Epic), and went on tour
with Korn in Europe. First
full-length album, S.C.I.E.N.C.E., released September 1997 (Immortal/Epic).
Toured behind S.C.I.E.N.C.E. for two years with Sugar Ray, Limp Bizkit,
Ozzy Osbourne, Black Sabbath, Korn, 311 and others. Sold 200,000 units
of S.C.I.E.N.C.E. and Enjoy Incubus combined. Came home and wrote new
album for eight weeks. Had collective nervous breakdown. Make Yourself recorded every
day for nine weeks in summer, 1999 at NRG studios. Album co-produced
with Scott Litt (R.E.M., Nirvana, Days Of The New), mixed by Rick Will
and Scott Litt. Going on tour with Primus until 2000 AD (sheesh), beginning
November 6, '99 in Cleveland, Ohio. About You
never know when the inspiration for a song is gonna hit you, so you've
gotta be ready. Drive
Scott [Litt] had a big hand in arranging and producing this track with
us. The lyric is basically about fear, about being driven all your life
by it and making decisions from fear. It's about imagining what life
would be like if you didn't live it that way. Stellar
the lyrics were inspired by my lover, Joan English girl I met in France.
It's about love as a transcendental feeling, like free-floating in outer
space. It's kind of a traditional song in that way. Nowhere
Fast We've been exploring drum-'n'-bass here and there on stage, playing
little improvisational ditties in between real songs from the records.
José would start playing a drum-'n'-bass he'd made up, I'd play my didgeridoo
to it, and songs started forming out of live things like that. That's
how "Nowhere Fast" was written, through improvisational live
jams. Battlestar
Scralatchtica we have two guest turntablists on this one, DJ Cut Chemist
and DJ Nu-Mark. They're from Jurassic 5, a West Coast hiphop group,
very good--amazing, in fact. They're friends of DJ Kilmore and this
track is a three-way DJ battle. I don't know who wins, but we'd love
to recreate it on stage if we ever get the opportunity. In
Conclusion DJ Kilmore is a turntablist, José Pasillas is a drummer,
Dirk Lance plays the bass and golfs with passion, Mike Einziger fondles
six guitar strings like he's in love, my name is Brandon and I sing.
For information on who is on drugs, who's in love, who spit on who,
who'll be running for president in 2012, and or any other inquiries
related herein, please don't hesitate to contact us. Próximamente, la antigua biografía y la traducción al español... |