Five Finger Death Punchin tulevan albumin vierailijat julki
Yhdysvaltalaisen metallia soittavan Five Finger Death Punchin kitaristi Zoltan Bathory on paljastanut hiljattain antamassaan haastattelussa, että yhtyeen tulevalla ”The Wrong Side Of Heaven And The Righteous Side Of Hell, Volume 1” nimeä kantavalla albumilla tullaan kuulemaan vieraina mm. Rob Halford Judas Priestista, Max Cavalera Soulflysta, Jamey Jasta Hatebreedista, Maria Brink In This Momentista sekä räppäri Tech N9ne. Kyseinen albumi tullaan julkaisemaan heinäkuun 23. päivä. Lue lisää nähdäksesi Zoltanin viesti asiaan liittyen.
“Everybody are good friends with us. It was only Rob we didn’t know personally, obviously. Max have already sung with us before. He came out and sang one of our songs when Soulfly was supporting us on a Canadian tour. During that set we became friends and he came out and sang our song live, so that was kind of obvious to happen and Ivan loves Max.
Ivan‘s a big fan, so we reached out for Max. Jamey Jasta, same thing, good friend of ours for a long time. We have toured together many times. And then Maria from In This Moment. Actually we just needed a female voice for our low piece and we thought “Just get Maria”. She’s a friend and she can do it, but then she came to the studio and we said “Sing these parts too”. She ended up singing more parts than what we actually wanted and it then became a duet instead of the low parts we wanted, because it was so good and we wanted to keep it.
And then the last one was Tech N9ne and today it’s not okay to collaborate with anybody in hiphop. 10-15 years ago that was the norm and then we wouldn’t have done it. Now, when it’s not okay, when it’s taboo, I wanna do it. That’s the point, when you rebel, when you give that middle finger, because today this is a sacrilege. You don’t touch hiphop, but fuck that, we’re gonna and we did it. We had an idea to cover Mama Said Knock You Out.
We thought it was the irony of Five Finger Death Punch, when people said Mama Said Knock You Out, it just kinda went hand in hand. LL Cool J was always somebody who was cool. Even metalheads are okay with him. Everybody’s heard that song and everybody knows that one and people are down with him.
He’s cool, he’s okay, right. He’s an artist that everybody accepts. Then we made the song heavy and when Tech N9ne came it, we thought “Oh yeah, this is happening. Fuck it, Let’s put it on the record”.”