http://ofyourdeath.livejournal.com/ (
ofyourdeath.livejournal.com) wrote in
tothetune2010-10-27 07:57 pm
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Interview with Ray at Living Scotsman
HAILING from New Jersey, and with a name inspired by Irvine Welsh, My Chemical Romance's brand of alt punk-pop has earned them a massive fanbase.
In the summer of 2006, the band supported the mighty Muse at Meadowbank Stadium, and for a fair few in attendance that night they were the main draw.
Three years ago, Gerard Way's outfit announced they were taking a well-earned break from the lime light following the release of The Black Parade, a highly-theatrical concept album that had them teetering on the edge of world domination.
So it goes without saying that rather a lot is expected of forthcoming new release Danger Days: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys, which fans in the Capital get a first taste of when My Chemical Romance visit the Corn Exchange on Monday.
"We put up a lot of rules about the songs we could write and what the sound was supposed to be for this record," says guitarist Ray Toro. "But (producer] Rob (Cavallo] took all those walls down for us and was like 'You know what? The sky's the limit, just write great music and use your creativity.' He's a master at doing that."
Toro goes on to say that frontman Way's lyrics focus on ideas of "alimentation and escape", and feature a group of "outsider characters" called the Killjoys, a loose interpretation of the band itself.
"The overall theme in the music is finding a sense of freedom and using creativity and art as the weapon, as opposed to worrying about the end result," he says.
Source
In the summer of 2006, the band supported the mighty Muse at Meadowbank Stadium, and for a fair few in attendance that night they were the main draw.
Three years ago, Gerard Way's outfit announced they were taking a well-earned break from the lime light following the release of The Black Parade, a highly-theatrical concept album that had them teetering on the edge of world domination.
So it goes without saying that rather a lot is expected of forthcoming new release Danger Days: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys, which fans in the Capital get a first taste of when My Chemical Romance visit the Corn Exchange on Monday.
"We put up a lot of rules about the songs we could write and what the sound was supposed to be for this record," says guitarist Ray Toro. "But (producer] Rob (Cavallo] took all those walls down for us and was like 'You know what? The sky's the limit, just write great music and use your creativity.' He's a master at doing that."
Toro goes on to say that frontman Way's lyrics focus on ideas of "alimentation and escape", and feature a group of "outsider characters" called the Killjoys, a loose interpretation of the band itself.
"The overall theme in the music is finding a sense of freedom and using creativity and art as the weapon, as opposed to worrying about the end result," he says.
Source

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