[kj] KJ for MTV: Before and.....
Alexander Smith
vassifer at earthlink.net
Thu May 4 07:04:57 EDT 2006
Well, folks, here it is.... the edit wasn't *TOO* bad, all things
considered.
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1530113/20060503/index.jhtml?
headlines=true
Do me a fave and hit it repeatedly. Multiple page clicks ensure that
the story "does well".
Cheers,
Alex in NYC
On May 3, 2006, at 5:50 PM, Alex Smith wrote:
> Indulge me for a moment, my siblings....
>
> So, I handed in my Killing Joke piece (which is set to publish on
> MTVNews.Com tomorrow at 6am), and was summarily told to cut it down
> by several hundred words. In any case, I begrudgingly did so and
> have since handed it back in (and the editor will invariably
> CONTINUE to make cuts to it). Not that it really matters, but
> here's my story IN ITS ORIGINAL, UNEDITED GLORY for that elite
> smattering of you tolerant enough to sift through my overwritten
> fluff. When the finished piece goes up, I'll let you know --- and
> ask you to kindly hit it and KEEP hitting it so that it "does
> well." Thanks! - Alex in NYC
>
> Here's what it might have been:
>
> Their music has amassed disciples ranging from Nine Inch Nails and
> Soundgarden through Kate Bush and the LCD Soundsystem. Their songs
> have been covered by everyone from Metallica to Sarah McLachlan,
> and there was even a mash-up of one of their singles with Christina
> Aguilera’s "Make Over" making the rounds not too long ago. Despite
> this, Killing Joke, one of the more notorious bands to have risen
> from the smoldering pyre of late 70’s British Punk, is not a
> household name here in the States. Lead singer Jaz Coleman,
> laughing down the phone from Cologne, Germany, where the band are
> currently touring to promote their latest album, Hosannas from the
> Basements of Hell, isn't bothered. "I get a fucking CD every week
> with a Killing Joke cover song --- and they all go in the bin."
>
> "We don’t have anything to do with fucking fashion! We’re a sound
> and a lifestyle. HAHAHAHA!" Coleman, the self-christened "Black
> Jester," has a disconcerting tendency to punctuate his frequent
> declarations with a robust laugh that suggests a tenuous grasp on
> sanity. For nearly three decades, Coleman, along with guitarist
> Geordie Walker, has been preoccupied with musically defining the
> malaise of the atomic age. Fusing the stealth and aggression of
> punk to the weighty wallop of heavy metal and a relentless tribal
> beat, Killing Joke has managed to elude classification over twelve
> studio albums in their quest to emulate, in the words of original
> drummer, Big Paul Ferguson, "the sound of the earth vomiting."
>
> For Hosannas..., Killing Joke converged in Prague to break things
> down to their rudimentary elements. "This album, for me, is really
> special," explains Jaz, "because we all went collectively to Prague
> and hammered out loads of demons and had a great time with the
> beautiful excesses that a beautiful city like Prague provides. We
> recorded at will in an inferior studio with a wine cellar below it,
> where we actually put the drums down…. I think it was probably one
> of the most honest Killing Joke albums, if you’re looking at the
> band’s collective input. Everyone hammered out their demons. It was
> a huge pressure on everyone. HAHAHAHA!"
>
> The end result is collection of music that finds the band in feral
> form, anchored by Geordie Walker’s signature guitar maelstrom.
> "Killing Joke’s never been better," Jaz enthuses. "Working with
> Geordie Walker – he’s a magic player. He’s one of those guitarists
> who sound like fucking eight guitarists. There’ll never be anyone
> like him. It’s my deepest pleasure to have spent more years with
> him and more time with him than my own blood brother." Coleman’s
> foil throughout all of the band’s incarnations, Geordie provides an
> inimitable style, with an emphasis on chugging riffs and harmonics
> rather than masturbatory soloing. The rhythm section, however, has
> taken on a rate of attrition comparable to vintage Spinal Tap.
> Since afore-mentioned original drummer, Ferguson, left the band in
> 1987, their drum stool has fleetingly played host to Martin Atkins
> ( Public Image Ltd., Ministry , Pigface), Ted Parsons (Swans,
> Prong) and even former Nirvana sticksman, erstwhile Foo Fighter and
> Killing Joke superfan, Dave Grohl. Grohl leant his talents to their
> eponymous 2003 album, putting to rest the simmering hostility
> between Killing Joke and Nirvana following a lawsuit over the
> similarity between Nirvana’s "Come As You Are" to Killing Joke’s
> "Eighties" that was dropped after Kurt Cobain’s death.
>
> Boasting a history fraught with bouts of madness, violent in-
> fighting, flirtations with the occult, multiple changes in line-up
> and flights to the far corners of the earth (Coleman, who currently
> resides on an undisclosed island somewhere in the South Pacific,
> once infamously jumped ship from the band in the early 80’s,
> retreating to Iceland when he became convinced that the world was
> about to end), Killing Joke may not have achieved global dominance,
> but their songs appear on countless punk, goth and industrial
> compilations, and last year, they won popular British heavy metal
> magazine, Kerrang’s "Lifetime Achievement" award. "I was only 45
> when I got it," laughs Coleman. "That’s probably the youngest
> lifetime achievement award you’re going to get. And we never
> expected gongs or shit like that. Everyone knows who we are.
> Everyone knows from Jimmy Page right on through the rest of’em. You
> don’t have to shout out about it."
>
> The latest development in the band’s soap opera, meanwhile, is the
> departure of bassist Paul Raven, who fled the nest just prior to
> the album’s release in April to tour with Ministry. "Paul is always
> part of our family," counters Coleman. "Always, right? To be
> perfectly frank, what we have here is geographical differences.
> Paul has got commitments to his children and his gorgeous lady [in
> the States] and we’re completely at peace with him working with
> "our Al," Al Jourgensen, who I’ve known for years since he was a
> young lad at our early gigs. I’m very happy for them. It’s the
> extended family. The only thing I really regret about it is not
> smoking some cigars with my old mate, Raven, at the moment, but
> that’ll come later. HAHAHAHAHA!"
>
> A study in contradiction, Jaz Coleman thrives on polarity. When not
> onstage with the band, exhorting as a war-painted harbinger of
> doom, he’s an accomplished composer who has worked with some of the
> world’s most revered symphony orchestras, revised the national
> anthem of New Zealand and scored films for Walt Disney. But it’s
> his work with the `Joke that gives him balance. "For me, Killing
> Joke will always be how I deal with my anger," he says gravely, "…
> how I deal with waking up to this world where we’re just basically
> destroying everything. It’s how I deal with my sleep deprivation,
> because I can’t fucking ever seem to sleep without sedatives. It’s
> how I deal with these things. I guess, for me, it has a social
> function. It’s my exorcism, it’s my catharsis and it is a
> tradition, and not just for me. There’s actually quite a lot of
> people out there who love the ceremony of it also."
>
> To celebrate that love of ceremony, Killing Joke embarked on an
> anniversary tour last year, culminating with the release of a live
> album and DVD, XXV Gathering. "Well, actually, this is our 28th
> year," asserts Jaz, "and we actually did three recordings before
> that 25th Anniversary [one], so someone’s cheating me out of
> fucking two years of my life, -- and it I think it was the
> promoter." Fuzzy math notwithstanding, Jaz acknowledges the band’s
> longevity. "Twenty-five years sounds like a marriage, doesn’t it?
> HAHAHAHA! It’s harder than fucking marriage. .HAHAHAHA. And I
> should know. I just got my last divorce last year, and now I’m back
> with her. Do I get my money back? HAHAHAHA!"
>
> With the intent of always looking forward, Coleman is currently
> plotting both a summer tour of the States and another album, but
> looks beyond that as well. "There are so many things I want to do,"
> he gushes. "I’d like to do one year working for the Green party in
> New Zealand, and possibly the experience of a political career.
> Because, I’m a Green. Even Bill Clinton’s a Green these days. Slick
> Willie – ya gotta love him, haven’t ya? HAHAHAHA! We’ve got to do
> something about this fucking planet. My response is to get rid of
> fan clubs and start eco-villages with sustainable resources.
> There’s a Killing Joke movie coming out. We’ve got one scene left
> to shoot on it, and it’s done. It’s taken eight years of my life to
> put it together, but that’s good fun. I’m working on a big
> Hollywood movie soundtrack at the end of the year, and then I’m
> moving to Sydney and working with a great Australian orchestra.
> Life’s colorful, what can I say? Get the barbecue out. Let’s go
> fishing! HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!"
>
> For a man who has made his name predicting the apocalypse, Jaz
> Coleman is incongruously optimistic. "Watching the world go nuts,"
> laughs Jaz, "that's important because it reminds you to eat, drink
> and be merry with the people you love, because sometimes that's the
> only way out of this madness!"
>
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