|
NEW YORK (Billboard) - There hasn't been much heard from
the Limp Bizkit camp in quite some time, but the group's
ex-guitarist, Wes Borland, will soon change that.
On June 5, his new band, Black Light Burns, will release
its debut, "Cruel Melody," which focuses more on Borland's
musical quirks than the heavy rock of Limp Bizkit.
"There are remnants of what I used to do, but there are
also new things that I've explored that I'm expressing now,"
Borland tells Billboard.com. "I would compare my previous work
as 'knuckleheaded and immature,' and basically sort of really
heavy party music. Which is never what I wanted to do. I was
really behind (the debut Bizkit album) 'Three Dollar Bill
Y'all,' and then because of how chaotic it was, was less happy
with the music from there on. This is me 'redirecting'."
Produced by former Nine Inch Nails member Danny Lohner (who
also plays bass), "Cruel Melody" also finds Josh Freese
handling drum duties and Josh Eustis playing keyboards, while
Borland pulls double duty as lead vocalist. On a forthcoming
tour, Borland will be flanked by second guitarist Nick Annis,
bassist Sean Fetterman and drummer Marshall Kilpatric (formerly
of the Esoteric).
While some tracks will please longtime Bizkit fans (namely
"Coward"), many detour off into territory usually occupied by
Nine Inch Nails ("Animal") and Queens Of The Stone Age
("Mesopotamia"). Ex-Concrete Blonde vocalist Johnette
Napolitano also makes an appearance on "I Am Where It Takes
Me."
The album will be the first to be issued via Ross
Robinson's new label, I Am: Wolfpack, and Borland couldn't be
happier about his new home. "There's all these fresh people
involved, and it's literally like I just went to heaven -- it's
so easy to make moves now," he says. "It's literally like three
or four people make a decision together, instead of an endless
amount of paperwork."
The band has also gotten a head start on album number two,
having already penned five new tracks for the projected
release, to be issued next year.
And for those still wondering, what are the chances of
Borland playing beside Fred Durst once more? "You can never
tell what's going to happen, because life is very up-and-down
and interesting -- it throws new things my way all the time,"
he says. "So you can never say 'never' to anything, but I
seriously doubt it. Black Light Burns to me is like going out
with the hottest girl in school. Why would I want to go back to
going out with someone who's not very good looking to me and
restricts me from doing anything? It's like, 'Wow, this is so
awesome and easy.' Why would I want to go back to something so
hard and painful for me?"
Reuters/Billboard
Copyright ©
2007
Reuters.
All rights reserved.
|
|