, you know, it's really bizarre as well
as the name is.
PS: Actually, the first question I was going to ask you - this
cover, it's kinda different!
JL: Yes.
PS: Was that your idea?
JL: Yes it is. All the art is my idea. The art concept is my idea.
PS: Then I have to ask about the concept about eating someone's
ear.
JL: Well, you see, that's a little bit of a mistake! You see,
that came off looking like exactly how you're describing, and
unfortunately that's not what it's supposed to be. What it was
supposed to be - you see the ear is like flat and it's facing
towards you?
PS: Yeah.
JL: The ear was supposed to be more on, like as if I'm speaking
to you right now and I'm looking straight at you - how do I see
your ear? I don't see it like that, do I?
PS: No.
JL: Ok, I see it more on...like it normally should be! So, the
ear was supposed to be detached from that person's head just slightly,
but it was supposed to be on a normal angle as I would see it
if I was speaking to you head on, but the other guy was supposed
to be where he is, coming into it, and his mouth was supposed
to be a gap, but not in a lunatic-type of gap. And it was supposed
to be as if he was trying to communicate to this person, but it
didn't matter what he said because of the detached ear, which
symbolizes that there is no contact or communication being completely
made, right?
PS: Gotcha.
JL: And the frustration from the other person trying to communicate
his thoughts or feelings but nothing or no one is there to be
heard, you know, no one is there to listen.
PS: Hence the name Mullmuzzler.
JL: Yes, and that what describes Mullmuzzler, which also describes
Keep It To Yourself.
MO: Gotcha.
JL: So it's the frustration of being suppressed, suppressing one's
feelings or thoughts before it can be, you know, expressed, and
so unfortunately...like, in a way, it's cool because it comes
off and it looks fucking really bizarre and it's just like "wow,
man, this is like over the top" but in another way it would have
been cool to do exactly how I had asked, you know, and so there
was a little more subtlety, a little bit more sensitivity, you
know, which this looks like just lunacy is coming into play here
but, it's ok. I can accept it. At first I was really upset! And
then I kinda like was able to come around and look at it from
a different perspective and it seems to be ok at this point.
PS: One of the things I noticed on the album and listening to
it is really how tight the musicianship is. I mean, songs like
His Voice and Statues are just...you wouldn't believe
that these guys never met to do any of the recordings.
JL: Well, yeah, I mean - we were - you're aware that I produced
it as well, right?
PS: Of course!
JL: So, anyway, what I had to do was - thank god for technology
today that you can email people, and obviously you have the phone
where you can talk, which you need to do at some point sooner
or later. But that really helped and the fact that, you know,
I flew out and met these people and I was there when the actual
recording was going down to make sure that it went down all right,
and so all of that really helped. We recorded all the band tracks
on that, most of the band tracks was recorded at my studios, which
you're aware of, right?
PS: Yep.
JL: The big music - what does it stand for again...Musicians Institute, right?
PS: What is this?
JL: Musicians Institute.
PS: Sounds familiar.
JL: Yeah, but anyways - so that helped the fact that I was communicating
with these guys on a constant basis and I was telling them exactly
where I wanted them to go and how I wanted the music to come off
and if there needed to be changes that I wanted musically, like
a lot of arrangements we had to change - things here and there
- so that there was a lot of communication going down, so that,
like, cause Matt [Guillory] recorded all his piano and keyboards
away from me - he did it all separately. Him and I were in constant
contact because I wrote three songs with him - His Voice, Statues
and Lace - so him and I had to be in constant contact,
and the same with the other songs, when I was writing with the
other songs with the other guys, you know it was the same process
for everything, so that if I couldn't be there, you know everything
went down exactly as I wanted it. So, it came off exactly the
way I wanted to and that was one thing that was a major element
that I wanted throughout the whole album is that I wanted the
album to have some kind of groove or rhythm going on throughout,
even though there's progression - progressive elements throughout
it - and it is to me more of a hard rock album, which is what
I defiantly wanted to do. I think most people were probably expecting
me to come out with a more vocal, safe-plade album, you know what
I mean, more like something Steve Perry would do. And that's basically
the furthest thing from I wanted to do. I wanted to come off,
you know, obviously vocals being very important but also I wanted
the music to be really hard and hitting and very groove oriented,
which I think was pulled off.
PS: I think so as well. How involved were you with the writing
of the music?
JL: I was very involved. I wrote lyrics and melodies. Well, the
three songs I did with Matt I wrote the lyrics and the melodies,
and then a couple songs I did with Shadow Gallery guys I wrote
some of the lyrics and melodies, and then the rest they did.
PS: Gotcha.
JL: And then with Trent Gardner, we worked on the melodies and the
music compositions and all that. He wrote the lyrics, actually.
PS: I was going to ask that, speaking of Trent, because Beelzebubba
makes me laugh every time I listen to it because of the whole
Clinton thing.
JL: Yeah, absolutely.
PS: Was that Trent's doing?
JL: Yeah, it was. He sent me stuff and at first I said "You know,
I'm gonna rewrite some of this" and basically and he said "yeah,
man, go for it" and then I started just sitting with the lyrics
a bit longer and looking into it and I basically called him back
and said "You know what? I'm just leaving it. I'm leaving these
lyrics because they're very cool." And I think, you know, for
what I would do to change it and maybe, from another angle, talk
about the same subject from another angle it's unnecessary. I
left it. So, I basically worked with him on the melodies and the
song structuring. But you know Trent's so incredibly talented,
he's a fantastic musician and a great guy. I mean, I can't believe
how nice this guy is. You know, it's just unbelievable. And we've
struck up a really good friendship and a working relationship,
and we've already said to each other that we'd love to do some
things together in the future. And I'll tell you on that note
- Matt, who I think is an incredible player and a writer as well
- I defiantly write with him in the future as well, 'cause I think
he's extremely talented, no doubt about it.
PS: Does that mean there's a chance for a Mullmuzzler 2?
JL: There is at this point, but I don't know. You could talk to
me now and a year, year and a half after we're done the next Dream
Theater tour and all that stuff and I might say at that point
no. I don't know what the future holds. At this point, I'm really
happy and proud of the way the debut Mullmuzzler came out so if
I do it this way then defiantly I would love to jump into another
one.
PS: Speaking of DT and touring, and the DT questions will be later,
be rest assured.
JL: Okay.
PS: Any thoughts of actually bringing Mullmuzzler out and touring
with them?
JL: It's funny, cause even Cazorosi from Burrn! asked that. I
have no plans at this point. I told him basically the only way
I would bring this band out touring was if that something was
offered to me - I'm not talking about money here - I'm talking
if, you know, obviously money to cover the expenses and the overhead
and all that shit - but it would have to be something that was
a gig or a few gigs that was a very special situation, you know,
like let's say, I don't know, defiantly if Japan said "we wanna
bring you over and do 3 or 4 shows over here and the interest
is big time and it makes sense and you're gonna play in front
of two or three thousand people a night" then I might consider
doing it, or if there were even some shows here in the states,
you know, and the people were going "there was big time interest
for you to go out and do a few shows and the promoters are real
high on it and you can do some cool shows at some cool venues"
then I might consider doing something, but I don't think it would
be a full out thing. It would be a few selected dates and that
would be it, 'cause you know I think I'd have a lot of fun playing
with these guys - like Mike Mangini, who's a terrific drummer,
incredible drummer, and Mike Keneally, who's a great guitar player,
and then you've got Bryan Beller, who's a great bass player and
Matt Guillory - it would be a lot of fun to be on stage with these
guys and jam and just really bring it to the people in the live
sense. But, I mean, it's gotta be right.
PS: Speaking of Keneally, I know a little bit of his work.
JL: You probably know his solo stuff.
PS: Yeah, I have a few of his albums. How'd you hook up with him?
JL: Um, I'll tell you how I hooked up with him. It was, I met
Mike Keneally once or twice when we played at the House Of Blues
in LA. Actually, I met him one time before this thing started,
the Mullmuzzler started. And I thought he was a really cool guy
and very intelligent and very well spoken and I had listened to
his Beer...For Dolphins or something?
PS: Yeah, that's his band.
JL: And I thought it was incredible. Very Frank Zappa-ish.
PS: You know he worked with Zappa, right?
JL: Yeah, I know, exactly. Well, shit, it comes out through his
music. No wonder Frank had him fucking working. But I remember
listening to his stuff and going "fuck, this is really intelligent.
This is really cool writing. This guy is really talented" and,
so when it came time to start doing the Mullmuzzler stuff, obviously
I wrote all the stuff with different people, and the only players
that I..the only people that played on it that I wrote with were
Matt and Trent. The other guys being Carl and a couple guys from
Shadow Gallery didn't play on the stuff. Just cause I really...at
that point I knew I wanted players that I really had been digging
for a while to play on it. So what originally happened was I met
Mike Mangini at..we did a big festival in '95 with Extreme and
Page/Plant and all this stuff. So Mike and I hung out backstage,
and I was talking to him and I remember seeing the show with Extreme
and I was hanging out with Gary Charone, who is absolutely a terrific
guy by the way. He really is a nice guy. A lot of people don't
know that but Gary is a nice guy. Anyway, getting back to Mike
Mangini, I was hanging out and I remember seeing him do the show
with Extreme at that festival and this guy's fantastic, I was
blown away by his performance. And so, when it came time to do
Mullmuzzler I just called him up and said "Hey Mike, listen -
this is James LaBrie. I'm doing this thing, would you be into
it?" and he was like "fuck yeah man! I'm there! Let's do it!"
(laughs) and so at that point I said, "Well, listen I'm just gonna
try and nail down a really cool guitar player" and actually the
guy I had in mind at first was Lincoln Brewster. Does that ring
a bell to you?
PS: It doesn't.
JL: Ok. Well, he played on Steve Perry's last solo album.
PS: Okay.
JL: Incredible fucking guitar player. Like Neil Schon, I think,
is a terrific guitar player. This guy was like a young Neil Schon.
You know, very melodic driven leads. A lot of taste, a lot of
feel, a lot of soul. And that's what I wanted here, but also technical
ability. And so I was saying this to Mike Mangini and Mike Mangini
said "Hey, man, fuck - what about Mike Keneally?" And I said "Wow!
I never even thought of him" and Mike says "Yeah, I'm working
with Mike right now on the new Steve Vai album" and I went "Aww,
shit! Ask Mike if he's into it. You're with him, right?" and he
[Mike Mangini] goes "yeah, we hang out almost every day" and I
[JL] said "tell him I'd love him to play on this stuff" so Mike
Keneally gives me a call and says "Hey man, I hear you're looking.
I'm totally into doing this thing with you" and I said "Great!
Let's get together. Let's sit down. Let's go through the material
and I'll tell you what I'm looking for in the guitar thing and
how I want you to approach the sections and then I want you to
put yourself all over it" and he [Keneally] went "yeah" and totally
into it, so that's how that came about. And now Bryan Beller,
Mike played with him in Beer For Dolphins and I remember really
really digging his bass playing, and I'm thinking "this guy's
fucking...he's sweet, the way he plays, you know, he's got a lot
of feel, a lot of maturity in the way he approaches things. he's
not just trying to show you or dazzle you with his 64th notes
or whatever" and that's what really impressed me was that he approached
playing in a very mature sense, cause I'm not not, i mean, granted,
you know, when i was younger, you know, everybody's out there
going "hey mom, hey dad, look what I can do!" (laughs) but when
you get older, you start saying "hey, man, what makes most sense
for the song?" The song's construction or structuring is what
it all boils down to. So, Bryan Beller was defiantly, you know,
great, and I think he did a superb job on the album. I really
did.
PS: I've actually noticed that, when you were mentioning about
doing things in terms of feel rather than shredding, something
I've noticed in DT with Falling Into Infinity were more song-based
and less chops for the sake of doing chops.
JL: Right, yeah. I mean, it just comes with, you know, the more
you're involved and the more you're exposed to all these different,
you know, styles or genres of music and just with maturity and
evolution you come to realize that you become more focused on
the song than you do on the individual playing or the self-indulgent
kind of feel. You know, it's one thing to be totally immersed
in your playing capability and that in trying to bring that out
to show the people but it's another thing to try to be able to
hone in, to zone in on that and make it even speak louder in the
sense of feeling and expression through the instrument, I think
is much more telling of what separates the men from the boys.
PS: I know within the past year, we've had quite a bit of solo
releases from John and Mike and Derek and whathaveyou. Was this
originally your idea or was this Magna Carta coming to you and
saying "hey, would you like to do this solo album?"
JL: Magna Carta approached me when I was doing the Falling Into
Infinity tour. It was actually Mike Varney who first contact me
and said "Hey, James, listen. Pete Mortecelli and myself have
been speaking lately and are you interested in doing a solo project
for us?" and I said "lemme think about it and I'll get back to
you" so I thought about it for a bit and then I did eventually
call Mike back and say "yeah, listen I'm into it but I wanna get
the right players and I wanna get guys writing in this type of
direction so I wanna think about guys that I wanna work with and
write with" and it eventually all fell into place and, I went
for it. You know, as soon as I was done doing the last show of
Falling Into Infinity which was in South America. Then, when I
got home and I started putting all the material together with
these other writers and started piecing it together which was
last October, I guess and then I was finished doing it by...I
finished all the mixes in April.
PS: We had spoken in December and you were just about ready to
put the vocals down.
JL: Yeah, which I actually didn't start until January. You know,
because just things..there's always a delay here or there. Never
a reason, cause of people's schedules and whatever. Yeah, it all
worked out for the best.
PS: As I said, it's a great record. I'm actually loving it quite
a bit.
JL: Thanks! I'm happy with it. I'm very proud of it.
PS: How does this output with the solo album effect the writing
(or your writing) in DT? Because, let's be honest, your writing
credits haven't been too "out there" with DT - it's been more
Mike and John. How does this effect how you come in with material
for...
JL: Well, you see the other thing is, is though a lot of people
will look at things and they'll say "Does James have a lot of
involvement in the writing?" and I do. I actually have a lot of
involvement, especially in the melodic sense - and maybe not necessarily
in the lyrical sense, but that's just the way that things fall
into places. You've gotta take what makes the most sense. So it
might come across that I'm more, you know, off to the side while
these guys are writing the material but that's not the case, and
that's probably one of the biggest misconceptions I think out
there. But anyways, I think that when you're doing a solo album
and all that and you're writing with different people, it just
helps to bring more to the table for your priority project being
Dream Theater because it just keeps you well tuned and really
in there, in sync with the writing sense, so that...you know,
I was just finishing the Mullmuzzler stuff and bang - we're jumping
into the new Dream Theater, getting into that headspace and hearing
the material and coming up with melodies and coming up with lyrical
ideas and all that stuff. I think it just helps in the fact that
these guys were doing this Liquid Tension - I mean, really up
on their chops, I think it's an incredible album. It fucking blew
my mind.
PS: Speaking of DT, and you know I had to get to this eventually,
how does the new album sound?
JL: Well, it sounds amazing..and that's basically all I can divulge
to you.
PS: I'm not going to ask the obvious question...
JL: It sounds...I think people...I think the fans worldwide are
gonna be completely blown away and completely exhilarated by this.
I think it's the epitome of Dream Theater. It's really..you know,
we're all extremely excited about it and I think that it's gonna
solidify our place in the progressive music thing. You know what
I mean?
PS: I do.
JL: When everybody talks about progressive music and all that,
they'll go "Have you heard of Dream Theater?" and you hear of
all these other progressive bands..well you have that magazine
out, what's it called, Progression?
PS: Yep!p>
JL: It's a great, fantastic magazine..and there's so many fuckin'
progressive bands it blows my mind! And it's great, cause all
these bands really keep all this kind of music in people's mind
and brings it to a more accessible kind of area in the sense that
it's in a bigger forum when you see a lot more bands doing it.
There's obviously a lot more people aware of it, and it's really
exciting in that sense. It just helps for bands like us because
when we get out there...there's one thing you have to realize,
and I think a lot of people haven't realized this - and it's not
to come out sounding pompous or pretentious - but of all the progressive
bands in the world today, and there's a lot of them out there
right now - we are the one progressive band out there right now
today that has a signing with a major label, you know? When you
think of it, everyone is on this independent or this label or
that label - and that's not a bad thing. I'm not saying that at
all. I'm just saying that we really realize and appreciate how
fortunate we are to be doing this kind of music and to be on a
major label, cause you hear a lot of these bands that are terrific
and are really great players but they're not able to get this
major signing, which is really a shame, and if through us we can
bring the major labels more insight to this kind of music and
maybe have them give some of these great bands out there even
a chance to get a signing to them then it's great, know what I
mean? It helps to keep everything alive in this genre of music,
the fact that there are so many bands out there like that.
PS: About DT, I'm not going to ask the most obvious questions
because I know you can't answer them.
JL: No, I can't.
PS: Mike would kill me.
JL: No, No. We've all made a pact and it's just something that
we really...it's just a veil of secrecy.
PS: I actually think that's a good thing.p>
JL: It is.
PS: Because with the last album, everyone knew about it...
JL: Fuck it, everybody's downloading sound files...
PS: Of course!
JL: (Laughs) by the time the album came out they were like "Yeah,
man, it's fucking yesterday's news!" I's like "so what?", but..we
just thought this would be really cool and it's even that much
cooler just because of the kind of album that we created here
is even that much better, so...
PS: How does the other band members like the Mullmuzzler disc?
JL: They dig it! They dig it big time. Even Mike came in yesterday
to the studio and was like "Hey man, I just got the actual CD
(you know, with the artwork and all that) and I love the fucking
artwork (laughs) man, it's fucking amazing, I dig it!" And I'm
[JL] like "thanks, thanks a lot" and Mike goes "yeah, it's fucking
cool" so everybody's very cool about it. It's great.
PS: What's in your CD player right now?
JL: In my CD player right now is the new Jamiroquai. I love him.
I've always been into him and I just started listening to it today,
in fact. It's really cool.
PS: They have that one song here that's being played all the time.
JL: Is that Black Capicorn?
PS: I think so.
JL: Yeah, it's really cool. He's got an unique voice and I just
love...once again, you listen to Jamiroquai and he's very groove
oriented, you know what I mean? It's very driven and very rhythmic
and then he's got a very cool sounding voice as well. And the
other stuff I'm listening to is Miles Davis, which is..I think
he's just incredible - been listening to "A Kind Of Blue" CD which
is great. Right now, that's it. I've been listening (laughing)
to a lot of the new Dream Theater right now as well, you know,
cause of the mixes and all that shit going down.
PS: I know that Mike and you guys are doing the mixing now.
JL: Right, yeah, yeah, with David Bottrill.
PS: What's the plan for the tour?
JL: You know we're taking off...we're going to Korea, so we leave
for Korea this Wednesday.
PS: It's just a one-off until the album comes out, right?
JL: Exactly, we play there this coming Saturday. We play in Soeul,
Korea and it's like for 20 - 25,000 people. We'll do one show
and then turn around and fly right back and then I guess we're
gonna chill out, but I mean chilling out really isn't really chilling
out. We'll be doing a lot of press and start getting into the
press thing and, you know, all of that will take some time - which
will probably, eventually bring us right up to the release of
the album and then shortly thereafter I would imagine that we'd
get out there and start the tour.
PS: At the Korea show, you guys gonna play of the new tunes?
JL: No. Absolutely not. No way.
PS: Damn!
JL: (Laughing) I know! Everyone's gonna bootleg it! Fuckin' right,
I know that's happening. We're completely insightful to that but,
no, there's no way. We're gonna do a bit from everything - the
previous albums - and we'll still give them a really good show.
PS: How does Jordan fit into the music now?<
JL: You mean with the new album?
PS: Yeah.
JL: He's fucking amazing! Unbelievable. I mean, people are gonna
just like completely blown away by this guy. He's incredible,
he really is. I mean, you talk about a guy who was like 9 years
old and going into Juliard Music School, you know, he's just a
protege of the keyboard world and he's incredible, he's a really
cool guy, he's very comfortable to be around and talk with and
that really means something to this band cause everyone for the
most part is pretty down-to-earth, pretty laid back - and I don't
mean boring and old man - but I'm just saying that we're not wild
and crazy and flamboyant...
PS: That's actually one of the things I thought Derek brought
to the table was that flamboyance.
JL: (laughing) I don't know if that's a good thing.
PS: I didn't say it was or it wasn't.
JL: (Laughs) Maybe save that for the fucking glam but not for
a band like this. I'm not even going to get into that circus.
PS: Don't even.
JL: It's just not worth it.
PS: I hate to cut that short [James laughs] but we're running
a little late on time. With that in mind, I wanted to thank for
you for "taking the time" to sit and talk to me about
Mullmuzzler. Although it's not due out for release in the US until
mid August, I've got a good feeling about the record.
JL: Thanks, man. I appreciate it.
To learn more about James LaBrie and Mullmuzzler, check out the follwing links:
The official James LaBrie Website
The official Dream Theater Website
Magna Carta: Mullmuzzler's Record Label