Harder, Heavier Burning Brides
From the first blistering chords of "Heart Full of Black" to the frenzied
scream at the heart of "King of the Demimonde" to the Nirvana-ish wail of
"Alternative Teenage Suicide," Philadelphia's Burning Brides push the
throttle wide open, making an unholy noise out of guitar, bass and
drums. Their second full-length, Leave No Ashes (V2),
is, if anything, harder and heavier than 2002's Fall of the Plastic
Empire, referencing such '70s metal heavyweights as Zeppelin, AC/DC and
Sabbath, as well as latter-day hard rockers from Nirvana to Queens of the
Stone Age.
Yet listeners who write Burnings Brides off as headbangers are missing half
the picture. The album, structured somewhat like Led Zeppelin's III
according to guitarist/songwriter Dimitri Coats, starts with its hardest,
loudest metallic tracks, cresting in "King of the Demimonde," then makes
room for the band's more melodic, pop-leaning side with "From You," "Last
Man Standing" and "Pleasure in the Pain" in the second half. A couple of
the best tracks "Dance with the Devil" and "Century Songs" seem to split
the difference, raging hard in parts and breaking for blasts of pure
songfulness, very much as the title track from Plastic Empire did.
Coats said his friend Mark Lanegan (Screaming Trees, QOTSA) encouraged him
to go wherever his songwriting process led him, even if the results seemed
not to fit pre-existing expectations for Burning Brides songs. He added
that he believes fans will be able to make the leap, too. "Although we
have a reputation for going out on stage and ripping people's heads off, we
think we can take our fans with us wherever we want to go," Coats said during
a recent phone interview. "The best rock 'n' roll albums Rubber
Soul, Let It Bleed, Village Green Preservation Society
have a wide variety of songs on them. That's what we tried to do with this
record, and that's why every song seems like a curve ball, like where are
they going next?"
Coats recorded Burning Brides' first album, Fall of the Plastic
Empire, in his garage, spending less than $2,000 on it. The album was released by Chicago indie File 13 but, supported by
blistering appearances at SXSW and other venues, it began to gain a buzz. A
bidding war ensued, from which V2 emerged the winner. Burning Brides embarked on a
series of high-profile tours: supporting Queens of the Stone Age, Marilyn
Manson, and Audioslave, and playing Lollapalooza. "It was sort of like winning
the lottery," Coats said. "You don't go into music to make a million
dollars or to become famous. You do it for the love of the music. But
it's always nice when your job becomes what you would have been doing in
your spare time anyway."
That success meant that this time around, with V2's backing, the band had
access to better facilities and equipment, as well as the assistance of
seasoned producer George Drakoulios (Black Crowes, Tom Petty). Coats said
that Leave No Ashes' distinctive sound, both heavier and smoother
than the first album, reflects those extra resources. "The additional
money meant that we could afford to go to a real studio with some of the
better analog equipment and get those sounds that make people like you say,
'Your new record sounds a lot heavier,'" he explained. "That has to do
with money, believe it or not. You can get bigger drum sounds, bigger
guitar sounds."
The larger budget also allowed the band to supplement its three-person
lineup Coats on guitar, his longtime girlfriend Melanie Campbell on
bass and Jordan Kourkounis (Delta 72, Hot Snakes) on drums with Roger
Manning, who plays the searing Farfisa solo in "Vampire Waltz" and piano on
"Dance with the Devil." But perhaps most important, Burning Brides' second
record gave the band the opportunity not just to record its live sound, as
on Plastic Empire, but to completely reimagine itself, not just once,
but track by track.
For example, said Coats, it was clear from the start that "From You" was
more like a pop song than any of the album's tracks. "So, we thought, why
don't we give it a different texture?," he remembered. "Instead of using
the same guitar I always play, why don't we try a janglier kind of Fender
Telecaster sound? And let's try it through this amp, and then how about we
put some organ here? And then I'm kind of hearing a slide guitar part
here, to give it a lift, and of course, we have to have harmonies. So we
just started layering the song with whatever it took to lift it into a
place where it could be fully realized."
Coats spoke to me by phone just before the next-to-last show on a tour
with A Perfect Circle, during which, he said, crowds had ranged from 2,000 to
10,000
people. The drawback, though, was that almost every one of those fans was
there for Perfect Circle and had to be won over. "Let me tell you something,
it's not easy to walk out on stage in front of that many people who have
never heard of your band," he said. "But we're doing a really good job, I
think. By the second or third song, there are pits forming, and
crowd-surfing. We get the crowd going, get everybody in the place to put
their arms in the air and make noise."
Winning over the rocker kids isn't just about fame or money for
Coats. "One of the greatest things about Nirvana," he said, "is that they turned on their fans to bands like the Melvins and Mudhoney and Sonic
Youth."
He added that he saw Burning Brides as a gateway to classic older
bands and more genuine current ones. "A lot of these kids that we're
playing to, they've never heard of The Stooges. Probably none of them have
ever heard the really good Black Sabbath records, and a lot of these kids
are into Tool and Deftones and all that, Marilyn Manson,
whatever. They've probably never heard of Einstürzende Neubauten, Nick
Cave, and a lot of them probably don't even know the best Cure
records.
"Kids shouldn't have their taste in music held against
them,” he continued. “They just need an alternative, and we're more than happy to be that
alternative for them." Jennifer Kelly [Monday, August 2, 2004]
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