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Mudvayne is a Peoria, Illinois, USA based alternative metal quartet started
in 1996.
The music of Mudvayne has been described as "Math Metal", by their drummer,
Matt McDonough. The term was used to explain the intricate nature of the
music. Though the music is very complex, it does not quite fit officially
under the "Math Metal" label, which is why alternative metal has been used
to more accurately describe the sound. The band often showcases Ryan
Martinie's funky bass playing as well as McDonough's use of alternating
between single and double bass pedal drumming. In addition, the guitar
playing of Greg Tribbett is very layered and unorthodox with its odd-meter
timings, which helps in giving life to Chad Gray's vocals.
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Established in 1996, Mudvayne now consists of Chad Gray (Kud, Chüd) on
vocals, Greg Tribbett (Gurrg, Güüg) on guitar, Ryan Martinie (Ryknow, Rü-D)
on bass, and Matthew McDonough (sPaG, Spüg) on drums.
These are the members of Mudvayne. The band started out in Peoria, Illinois
in 1996. However two years later the original bassist, Shawn Barclay, left
the band to persure different interests. This was when Ryan Martinie joined
up as the new bass player and Mudvayne was created.
When Mudvayne got its start in a Peoria, Illinois basement in 1996. From the
beginning, the band was determined to play by its own rules. "If you're a
band in the Midwest, you play cover songs or you don't make money," says
Chüd. "We refused to play covers because we were more interested in finding
our own voice rather than trying to emulate someone else's."
Their first self-released album was entitled Kill I Oughta, which was a 7
song ep consisting of 3 studio tracks and 4 live songs. Soon after Epic
Records signed them in 1999, they released their sophomore album L.D. 50.
"L.D. 50 is a medical term used by pharmacologists to measure how toxic a
substance is," explains sPaG about the album's title. "It stands for Lethal
Dosage 50, which represents how much of a chemical it takes to kill fifty
out of a hundred test subjects." The album was recorded in Vancouver, B.C.
and Shawn "6" Crahan of Slipknot serves as the executive producer.
Many people believe that Mudvayne is just a copy of Slipknot, but nothing
could be farther from the truth. "Man we're always five f-ing minutes late"
stated vocalist Chad Gray after hearing Slipknots album. The painted faces
the band members sport are nothing more than a part of the show.
"We always wanted to try and bring some visual aspect to what we did, but of
course our budget limited what we could do," says sPaG. "The makeup thing
just came upon us. It doesn't necessarily symbolize anything, and I'd really
hate to see things like that taken too literally," he insists. "I feel the
same way about our music - we try to leave it up to the listener to make
their own opinions about what it is we're really doing."
The band's dedication to realizing its unique musical vision was rewarded in
1999 when Mudvayne signed with Sony's Epic Records. A year later, the
group's debut L.D. 50 was released. While maintaining a brutal touring
schedule, the band gained a reputation for delivering a live show that was
visually outrageous as well as musically compelling. Mudvayne watched the
number of its fans steadily grow as they toured on the Tattoo the Earth
festival and with Disturbed. Mudvayne criss-crossed the country again as it
headlined the second stage of Ozzfest in 2001.
In their biggest album, L.D. 50, "The overall theme of the album reflects
and embodies ideas about the evolution of consciousness, transformation, and
the risks involved in experimenting with things that can change a person's
point of view, internally and externally," says drummer Spag.
After the re-release of Kill I Oughta, now known as The Beginning of All
Things To End,which included its 1997 independent debut Kill I Oughtta along
with additional remixes like metal Techno tracks of "DIG" and interludes
from L.D. 50 including a bonus track called "Fear".
The band members changed their pseudonyms to the ones listed second in the
parentheses (example Kud, Chüd etc)... Since the release of Lost and Found
in April 2005, Mudvayne has discontinued the use of all psuedonyms and now
performs under their real names. They have also completely shed their
trademark makeup, to many fans' approval.
After spending a year and a half on the road, the members of Mudvayne only
took a month off before starting work on the quartet's second album, "The
End of All Things to Come" (Epic Records, out November 19, 2002). Instead of
easing into the album, the band gambled on an ambitious recording schedule
that made the ticking of the clock a constant source of tension. The
self-imposed pressure to create paid off as Mudvayne produced a collection
of songs that offer a window into the band's growth.
The first single "Not Falling" along with "(Per)Version of a Truth" and
"World So Cold" combine a new attention to melody and disciplined
musicianship with Mudvayne's trademark dark lyrical vision, rhythmic
complexity and jagged, sonic brutality. The End of All Things to Come
captures Mudvayne at time when the band has found its voice and is hitting
its stride with confidence.
"I've always said David Lynch could make a film out of anything and it would
still look like a Lynch film," explains drummer Spüg. "At one point while we
were writing this album, I felt like we could do the same thing with music;
we could play anything and it would sound like Mudvayne. Looking back I
realize that what happened was after 18 months on the road we'd finally come
to a realization of who we are as a band."
The making of The End of All Things to Come was an exercise in deadline
management for the band. "We didn't want to take much more than two years
between albums and since we were on the road for such a long time that
really didn't leave us with a whole lot of time to make this record,"
explains Chüd. We wrote and rehearsed for four months and then spent another
four months to record and master the entire album. The pressure made us
focus instead of fold."
"I honestly didn't think we could make the record we wanted to make so
quickly, but we did," continues Chüd. "I'm very proud of this album from
every angle - the music, melody, songwriting and lyrics. It captures who we
are at this moment in time." Although the album meets-and in some cases
exceeds-the band's expectations, it wasn't all smooth sailing. Taking the
first step, admits Spüg, was the hardest. "From the beginning we knew what
textures we wanted on the album and the themes we wanted to explore, but we
didn't know how to start."
Luckily, the band reached a turning point early when "Not Falling"-the first
single-emerged quickly from the writing sessions. "That was the second song
we wrote and once that was under our belt everyone breathed a little
easier," recalls Spüg. "Looking back, I realize how much that song really
pointed the way sonically for the rest of the album." While the aggressive
tone on "Not Falling" is undeniably Mudvayne, the song represents how much
the band's approach to music has matured since the band recorded its debut,
L.D. 50.
"On the first record we all played in our own little boxes, like we were
playing to impress ourselves," says Spüg. "Touring for so long taught us to
listen to each other more and play off each other instead of playing over
each other. Making that adjustment gives the new music a more rock feel and
allows more room for the vocals and melody to shine."
"Not Falling" not only served as the key that unlocked the new album
musically, Chüd says the song's subject of self-realization also opened the
album for him lyrically. "Writing that song was a powerful experience for
me," he says. "The song demanded to be the nucleus, the central figure on
this record. If you want to think about it in solar terms, the song became
the sun for the rest of the album to orbit around."
The momentum from "Not Falling" helped the rest of the album fall quickly
into place. Buoyed by that confidence, Mudvayne began recording The End of
All Things to Come with celebrated producer David Bottrill (King Crimson,
Tool, Peter Gabriel) in Minneapolis, Minnesota at Pachyderm Studios-where
Nirvana recorded In Utero.
In the studio, Bottrill wasted no time getting to work, says Chüd. "David
brought an unbelievable sense of control to the project. He showed up, had
dinner with the band and three hours later he was on his hands and knees in
the studio plugging in his gear."
"He brought out the best in us by forcing the band to question what it was
doing and helping us trim away the gratuitousness of some songs," adds Spüg.
While Bottrill has been typecast as Tool's producer, Mudvayne was pleasantly
surprised to learn that Bottrill had worked with prog-rock cult band King
Crimson, one of the quartet's inspirations. Bottrill's experience helping a
technically gifted band like King Crimson find a way to make music that is
challenging but does not alienate listeners came in handy while recording
Mudvayne.
"One of David's biggest contributions to this album was helping us mellow
the intellectuality of the band without eliminating it," says Spüg. "When we
started going too far over the top he would ask us, 'Are you playing it that
way because you can or because it works for the song?' He really kept us in
line."
Bottrill's attention to structure and the band's experience on the road
combine to create an organic vibe on The End of All Things to Come. Where
L.D. 50 was intentionally sterile and internally focused, new songs like
"Shadow of a Man" and the title track focus more on the group dynamic rather
than individual heroics.
But fans that enjoy the band's use of outrageous time signatures won't be
disappointed with the new songs. "Trapped in the Wake of a Dream," for
example, boasts verses written in 17/8, choruses in 11/8 and a bridge that
mixes both time signatures. Despite the wild syncopation, Spüg says the
song's strength is its flow. "If I hadn't pointed out which song was written
in 17/8 I don't thing most people would have noticed. It's a strange time
signature but it works because it's smooth."
The song, however, presented Chüd with the intense challenge of finding a
way to sing over the song's odd rhythm without sounding like a robot. "It
really was the hardest song for me to record on the whole album," Chüd
explains. "I wanted to make the song groove and find a way to make people
dance in 17/8. The hardest part for me was learning that dance."
Chüd's struggles came to a head while trying to record the song's bridge.
Overwhelmed by too many ideas, Chüd froze in the vocal booth. It was
Bottrill who finally broke the singer's mental logjam. "David looked at me
from the control room and said 'I don't' care what you do, just do
something. Anything. Let's make something happen.' He helped me regain my
focus. I hated that song while I was working on it, but now that it's done,
'Trapped in the Wake of a Dream' is my favorite song on the record."
When the album was finished, Spüg says he realized how much the band grew on
the road and how comfortable they'd become making music together. "We didn't
have any time to absorb and process the chaos of the last couple of years
because we started working on this album almost right away," he explains.
"It wasn't until later-when I was listening to the finished album-that I
realized how much the new songs reveal who we'd become and where we're
going."
Mudvayne's debut, L.D. 50, was certified gold (500,000 sales) by the RIAA.
In September 2001, the band won the first ever MTV2 Video Music Award at
MTV's Video Music Awards For "DIG". In true Mudvayne fashion, the band
accepted the award with a humble speech while wearing blood-spattered white
tuxedos and sporting bloody bullet holes in their foreheads. The band
responded to the award by returning to the road and assuming the coveted
role of opening act on Ozzy Osbourne's Merry Mayhem tour.
To follow-up the band's DVD-single for the song "Dig"-the first-ever DVD
single for Epic Records-Mudvayne released its first full-length DVD, Live in
Peoria. The disc included 90-minutes of live performance, behind the scenes
footage and a bonus director's cut of the video for "Death Blooms."
Mudvayne explores the possibilities of DVD on The End of All Things to Come
offering a special-edition of the album that includes a bonus DVD. The disc
features 30-minutes of in-the-studio footage, photo shoot outtakes, an
interview with Chüd and Spüg along with previously unreleased songs
"Goodbye" and "On the Move." After selling over two million albums
worldwide, Mudvayne’s third album, Lost and Found, continues their
unpredictable and inventive run. It’s an electrifying, vividly-penned rock
record from a band that has broadened its range without compromise. “It’s
definitely the most personal album we’ve ever made,” says Gray. “The songs
deal with the test of the human spirit and the choices we make when faced
with life’s more difficult challenges. Ultimately, it’s about consequences
and being able to take a good long look in the mirror and feel good about
who you are and the decisions that have shaped the person you’ve become.”
Lost and Found has also produced a surprise smash hit in the shape of
Happy?, which has spent the better part of 2005 dominating US rock radio.
This has seen a whole new audience flock to Mudvayne’s shows – no doubt
blowing a few minds right into a brave new world of unequalled musicianship
and heavyweight hooks. “Slick as ever… irresistibly energetic and powerful,
almost violent sometimes. Frontman Chad is crazed with a destructible stage
presence. The chemistry between the band members is apparent for all to see
and the sound is exceptionally clean – the jazzy, thumping bass,
sporadic-like drumming and wavy guitars leave my ears ringing for days.
Heavy, polished, and exciting indeed.” (rockreview.co.uk, March 2005). |
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