Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Friday, October 16, 2009
Die Mannequin ~ Kickin’ Ass Canadian Style!
Once again Canada has produced another killer Rock band with a raw, intense and in your face style of music called Die Mannequin. When Andrew from Warner Music emailed me asking if I was interested in speaking with them, I jumped at the opportunity. Being a Marilyn Manson music fan, I was already aware of the fact that this energetic group of artists was in fact the opening act on his Canadian tour this fall.
Lead Singer & Lead Guitarist Care Failure leads her pack with an absolute intense stage show that draws a music fan in so easily. She commands the stage and gives every ounce of her energy to everyone who came to see the show. Taking it as far as she can, Care even jumped into the media pit, straddled the barrier while carrying on with the song, to then later jump off of the stage again & head up the aisle to drop to her knees to rip out her solo for us. Her other band mates are Anthony Bleed (Bass/Back-up Vocals), Stacy Stray (Guitar/Back-Up Vocals), Daz (Drums). United, this group can come back to Calgary anytime – it’s a show worth seeing people.
A few weeks before the show, I managed to catch up with care and talk to her about what was going on in her world and see what is new for Die Mannequin.
TFL: So how do ya like being in a female fronted band?
CF: (Chuckles) I’m a female? Last time I checked I guess I do have a vagina (laughing) I don’t know…my vagina doesn’t give many orders to the guys so….usually I do that with the other lips. I guess it’s OK I guess I forget if I’m a man or a woman on stage – I guess it’s kinda like uh more of an a-sexual feeling. I get treated like a guy.
TFL: Do you find with gigs or working with other bands or even on tours that being a female fronted band that there is a difference in how you’re treated or looked upon or is it pretty equal?
CF: Um…It depends upon the eye of the beholder. It’s really strange like some people don’t take another look & I mean some people they don’t like to shut up and play bass guitar for a woman or when they do my sound check they put my guitar way low cause they think I can’t play it and turn my vocals way up cause they think I’m going to sing really quietly or something. I mean there’s always those obstacles but for the most part you can use it to your advantage – I mean how many other girls can play guitar the way I do and sing in a low way and sing from a guttural place I mean not many so I use it as an advantage too.
TFL: So new album ‘Fino + Bleed’ – you’ve got great vocals girl…like really impressive vocals. I think ‘Bad Medicine’ is my favorite track so far.
CF: Awesome – yeah that song was my favorite from the beginning.
TFL: Now tell me how this fabulous opportunity to open for Marilyn Manson came to your attention.
CF: I guess…we get a lot of tours but a lot of these American bands coming through Canada…I heard that Marilyn Manson had a large part in picking us. It’s kinda weird like we can open up for ‘The Anitchrist’ but we open up for Hedley in places with 8 year old girls. It’s cool that our band can kind of jump genres like that because we’re kind of undefinable genre wise. It’s really cool in that way and way cooler that Marilyn Manson had a large part and he can play with who ever the f*** he wants to play with & that he wants to play with us is really cool. The Antichrist has warmed my heart (chuckles).
TFL: When did you decide that music is what you wanted to do Care?
CF: Ole enough to be able to sit on a piano bench and loved that until I was 10, then I thought it was ‘uncool’. I was stupid to think that because piano is amazing but I started playing an old guitar I found in the basement at my parents house when I was a kid. I don’t know, it’s just in my bones…I don’t even know why I do what I do and I just do it. Music is not the place to make money these days & there’s lots of other industries and it’s not a smart decision but it’s from the heart more.
TFL: So what’s in the future for you guys? What’s on the table for Die Mannequin?
CF: Hopefully some food….um (laughing)
TFL: (laughing) That was GOOD!
CF: (laughing) Sorry about that…I was just teasing. I just go by territory to territory. I mean we go to Germany a lot, we’ve been there 6 times in the last year & they really love us there. Japan is catching on & the States…so I just take it territory by territory, month by month, grease spot by grease spot.
TFL: So if I were to pick up your Ipod or MP3 player, would there be any songs on there that might make me look at you and ask WTF???
CF: Oh for sure!! (laughs) I have everything on there…90210 theme song, a lot of Aretha Franklin, I also like the Four Tops & I like a lot of old Motown. Motown gets me ya know.
TFL: Great music is great music..I always say that. I may focus on Rock and metal but as long as the music is good…it doesn’t matter what genre it is.
CF: Exactly. I mean everyone asks me ‘What kind of music do you like?’ and I tell them I like GOOD music!
TFL: Is there anything you would like your fans to know?
CF: Yeah for sure. I wanted to make this record sound more like our live show - the spirit and the intensity We put this record together for a reason because I think that there used to be records that were worth buying where every song was listenable & shows worth going to where they actually put on a real show.
Let me assure you my friends, Die Mannequin goes above and beyond the call of duty when it comes to putting on a live show. Personally I’ll be a Die Mannequin fan for life. Care’s vocals have such an impact – she has her own way of belting out her songs that cannot be compared to another artist – THAT is what I love so much about this band.
Thanks so much Care for your time & special thanks to Andrew at Warner Music for setting up the interview! A very special thanks to Paul at the concert & Chad from Live Nation for being so courteous.
Welcome Die Mannequin to Backstage Live’s Rock & Roll family!
Tracy Forsyth-Lundy
Backstage Live Magazine
Lead Singer & Lead Guitarist Care Failure leads her pack with an absolute intense stage show that draws a music fan in so easily. She commands the stage and gives every ounce of her energy to everyone who came to see the show. Taking it as far as she can, Care even jumped into the media pit, straddled the barrier while carrying on with the song, to then later jump off of the stage again & head up the aisle to drop to her knees to rip out her solo for us. Her other band mates are Anthony Bleed (Bass/Back-up Vocals), Stacy Stray (Guitar/Back-Up Vocals), Daz (Drums). United, this group can come back to Calgary anytime – it’s a show worth seeing people.
A few weeks before the show, I managed to catch up with care and talk to her about what was going on in her world and see what is new for Die Mannequin.
TFL: So how do ya like being in a female fronted band?
CF: (Chuckles) I’m a female? Last time I checked I guess I do have a vagina (laughing) I don’t know…my vagina doesn’t give many orders to the guys so….usually I do that with the other lips. I guess it’s OK I guess I forget if I’m a man or a woman on stage – I guess it’s kinda like uh more of an a-sexual feeling. I get treated like a guy.
TFL: Do you find with gigs or working with other bands or even on tours that being a female fronted band that there is a difference in how you’re treated or looked upon or is it pretty equal?
CF: Um…It depends upon the eye of the beholder. It’s really strange like some people don’t take another look & I mean some people they don’t like to shut up and play bass guitar for a woman or when they do my sound check they put my guitar way low cause they think I can’t play it and turn my vocals way up cause they think I’m going to sing really quietly or something. I mean there’s always those obstacles but for the most part you can use it to your advantage – I mean how many other girls can play guitar the way I do and sing in a low way and sing from a guttural place I mean not many so I use it as an advantage too.
TFL: So new album ‘Fino + Bleed’ – you’ve got great vocals girl…like really impressive vocals. I think ‘Bad Medicine’ is my favorite track so far.
CF: Awesome – yeah that song was my favorite from the beginning.
TFL: Now tell me how this fabulous opportunity to open for Marilyn Manson came to your attention.
CF: I guess…we get a lot of tours but a lot of these American bands coming through Canada…I heard that Marilyn Manson had a large part in picking us. It’s kinda weird like we can open up for ‘The Anitchrist’ but we open up for Hedley in places with 8 year old girls. It’s cool that our band can kind of jump genres like that because we’re kind of undefinable genre wise. It’s really cool in that way and way cooler that Marilyn Manson had a large part and he can play with who ever the f*** he wants to play with & that he wants to play with us is really cool. The Antichrist has warmed my heart (chuckles).
TFL: When did you decide that music is what you wanted to do Care?
CF: Ole enough to be able to sit on a piano bench and loved that until I was 10, then I thought it was ‘uncool’. I was stupid to think that because piano is amazing but I started playing an old guitar I found in the basement at my parents house when I was a kid. I don’t know, it’s just in my bones…I don’t even know why I do what I do and I just do it. Music is not the place to make money these days & there’s lots of other industries and it’s not a smart decision but it’s from the heart more.
TFL: So what’s in the future for you guys? What’s on the table for Die Mannequin?
CF: Hopefully some food….um (laughing)
TFL: (laughing) That was GOOD!
CF: (laughing) Sorry about that…I was just teasing. I just go by territory to territory. I mean we go to Germany a lot, we’ve been there 6 times in the last year & they really love us there. Japan is catching on & the States…so I just take it territory by territory, month by month, grease spot by grease spot.
TFL: So if I were to pick up your Ipod or MP3 player, would there be any songs on there that might make me look at you and ask WTF???
CF: Oh for sure!! (laughs) I have everything on there…90210 theme song, a lot of Aretha Franklin, I also like the Four Tops & I like a lot of old Motown. Motown gets me ya know.
TFL: Great music is great music..I always say that. I may focus on Rock and metal but as long as the music is good…it doesn’t matter what genre it is.
CF: Exactly. I mean everyone asks me ‘What kind of music do you like?’ and I tell them I like GOOD music!
TFL: Is there anything you would like your fans to know?
CF: Yeah for sure. I wanted to make this record sound more like our live show - the spirit and the intensity We put this record together for a reason because I think that there used to be records that were worth buying where every song was listenable & shows worth going to where they actually put on a real show.
Let me assure you my friends, Die Mannequin goes above and beyond the call of duty when it comes to putting on a live show. Personally I’ll be a Die Mannequin fan for life. Care’s vocals have such an impact – she has her own way of belting out her songs that cannot be compared to another artist – THAT is what I love so much about this band.
Thanks so much Care for your time & special thanks to Andrew at Warner Music for setting up the interview! A very special thanks to Paul at the concert & Chad from Live Nation for being so courteous.
Welcome Die Mannequin to Backstage Live’s Rock & Roll family!
Tracy Forsyth-Lundy
Backstage Live Magazine
Friday, October 9, 2009
Stolen Songs Can't Stop Die Mannequin
A knuckle sandwich to the face is probably the last thing anyone wants after a long day but for Die Mannequin, it's a mere bump in the road to rock stardom.
At only 22 years old, Care Failure (real name Caroline Kawa) has already gone from being dirt poor and playing on the streets in Toronto to signing a record deal and touring with some of her idols, including Guns N' Roses and Marilyn Manson.
As Die Mannequin's fearless leader, Failure has quickly become a poster girl for Canadian rock. She's not afraid of the pressure or challenges that come along with being in a major label band. Hell, stolen demos couldn't even stop her from getting the band's Fino + Bleed debut out on time.
CHARTAttack recently had a chance to talk to Failure about the hard work involved in making Die Mannequin's first full-length LP.
CHARTAttack: Fino + Bleed (pronounced "Fee-No-Plus-Bleed") is both an interesting and unconventional title. Where did it come from?
Care Failure: [Bassist Anthony "Useless"] Bleed is a member of the band and is my partner in crime. We've been together as a band for six years in November. It's an amazing coincidence that I can even remember this. One day we were in this shitty hotel in Washington he found a good spot to write it in the wall. They're sort of pet names we have for each other.
After six years, how does it feel to finally have a proper full-length record out?
There are definitely some good feelings. You know how the music industry is. It's always like "What's next!? What's next!?" and you never have time to slow down and take pictures. It's pretty good to have it out, though.
Are these the heaviest songs you've ever written?
I don't think of it in terms of heavier or lighter. It'd be pretty shitty if I got worse as a songwriter. I'm trying to become more bulletproof and dangerous. The sonic tone is huger than anything I've done. I'll always give you something heavy, but I wanted to show what other songs I could write, too.
Industry pressure aside, what challenges did the band face while making this disc?
There's always so much shit. Anything and everything. Everything I had written and demoed got stolen, like, two weeks before it was due. That alone was huge.
The biggest challenge was getting every drum part and every note right. Going through that process for 20 songs is a lot harder than going through it for four or five. I really wanted the listener to go on a journey with it and listen to the album in full and wanted it to keep their attention.
Matt Hyde produced the album. How awesome was it to work with the guy who produced Slayer?
[laughing] I hate him! No, he's amazing. I can't say a bad word about him. He goes beyond the call of duty. We have this weird connection like we've been at this for years together. He even brought me back in to coach with some of the other bands he was working with.
He goes far and wide beyond what producers need to do, and he does that for everybody. He's addicted to people's talent. It's endless.
Do producers still play an important role in the success of an album?
It's less of the producers these days.
Back when you had Zeppelin and The Beatles, you had six or seven records to get it right. These days, you have one shot to get it right. You're supposed to have it right on your first record. There are a lot of people that don't understand the importance of developing a band in the early stages.
Fino + Bleed was supposed to be out two weeks before it actually hit shelves. Why the delay?
It's actually because we wanted to release it with the DVD of the band (The Rawside Of... Die Mannequin, directed by Bruce McCulloch). It just got nominated for two Gemini Awards, so that was good enough reason for us. I think we might be one of the first bands to put out a full documentary on their first CD.
Now that the record is finally out, what's next for Die Mannequin? A new single? Another video?
I guess those are the things bands do these days. There's a song called "Dead Honey" that might be the next single. There's a lot of talk that goes around and a lot of ideas as well. I have complete creative control and you always want to talk things through. You sign with a label because you want their experience, but it's a team effort. It's also a giant machine.
So would it be fair to say you don't always see eye to eye with the machine?
Yeah, we fight all the time. You can't agree all the time.
That's why the album has two different covers. I made a cover that I love, and sometimes when you make something you love, it scares people. You have to pay your dues until you get more respect. Sometimes I have to put my foot down. It's a funny relationship, but nobody agrees with each other all the time.
Trevor Morelli
CHARTattack
At only 22 years old, Care Failure (real name Caroline Kawa) has already gone from being dirt poor and playing on the streets in Toronto to signing a record deal and touring with some of her idols, including Guns N' Roses and Marilyn Manson.
As Die Mannequin's fearless leader, Failure has quickly become a poster girl for Canadian rock. She's not afraid of the pressure or challenges that come along with being in a major label band. Hell, stolen demos couldn't even stop her from getting the band's Fino + Bleed debut out on time.
CHARTAttack recently had a chance to talk to Failure about the hard work involved in making Die Mannequin's first full-length LP.
CHARTAttack: Fino + Bleed (pronounced "Fee-No-Plus-Bleed") is both an interesting and unconventional title. Where did it come from?
Care Failure: [Bassist Anthony "Useless"] Bleed is a member of the band and is my partner in crime. We've been together as a band for six years in November. It's an amazing coincidence that I can even remember this. One day we were in this shitty hotel in Washington he found a good spot to write it in the wall. They're sort of pet names we have for each other.
After six years, how does it feel to finally have a proper full-length record out?
There are definitely some good feelings. You know how the music industry is. It's always like "What's next!? What's next!?" and you never have time to slow down and take pictures. It's pretty good to have it out, though.
Are these the heaviest songs you've ever written?
I don't think of it in terms of heavier or lighter. It'd be pretty shitty if I got worse as a songwriter. I'm trying to become more bulletproof and dangerous. The sonic tone is huger than anything I've done. I'll always give you something heavy, but I wanted to show what other songs I could write, too.
Industry pressure aside, what challenges did the band face while making this disc?
There's always so much shit. Anything and everything. Everything I had written and demoed got stolen, like, two weeks before it was due. That alone was huge.
The biggest challenge was getting every drum part and every note right. Going through that process for 20 songs is a lot harder than going through it for four or five. I really wanted the listener to go on a journey with it and listen to the album in full and wanted it to keep their attention.
Matt Hyde produced the album. How awesome was it to work with the guy who produced Slayer?
[laughing] I hate him! No, he's amazing. I can't say a bad word about him. He goes beyond the call of duty. We have this weird connection like we've been at this for years together. He even brought me back in to coach with some of the other bands he was working with.
He goes far and wide beyond what producers need to do, and he does that for everybody. He's addicted to people's talent. It's endless.
Do producers still play an important role in the success of an album?
It's less of the producers these days.
Back when you had Zeppelin and The Beatles, you had six or seven records to get it right. These days, you have one shot to get it right. You're supposed to have it right on your first record. There are a lot of people that don't understand the importance of developing a band in the early stages.
Fino + Bleed was supposed to be out two weeks before it actually hit shelves. Why the delay?
It's actually because we wanted to release it with the DVD of the band (The Rawside Of... Die Mannequin, directed by Bruce McCulloch). It just got nominated for two Gemini Awards, so that was good enough reason for us. I think we might be one of the first bands to put out a full documentary on their first CD.
Now that the record is finally out, what's next for Die Mannequin? A new single? Another video?
I guess those are the things bands do these days. There's a song called "Dead Honey" that might be the next single. There's a lot of talk that goes around and a lot of ideas as well. I have complete creative control and you always want to talk things through. You sign with a label because you want their experience, but it's a team effort. It's also a giant machine.
So would it be fair to say you don't always see eye to eye with the machine?
Yeah, we fight all the time. You can't agree all the time.
That's why the album has two different covers. I made a cover that I love, and sometimes when you make something you love, it scares people. You have to pay your dues until you get more respect. Sometimes I have to put my foot down. It's a funny relationship, but nobody agrees with each other all the time.
Trevor Morelli
CHARTattack
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Review: FINO + BLEED
ARTIST: Die Mannequin -Have you ever started following a band, not because you were their biggest fan right away, but, because the group seemed to bear enormous potential that you hoped they would eventually realize? You found yourself following them, hoping they'd get the change to get it right eventually? There's no denying that such a pleasure is very private, (sort of) misplaced and self-absorbed (claiming victory when the band makes it from a comfy, third-person seat?), but it's no less gratifying when everything falls into place and the band in question hits its stride and perfects its sound.
DATE: 09-29-09
REVIEW BY: Bill Adams
ALBUM: FINO + BLEED
LABEL: How To Kill/WEA/Universal International
Such is the feeling those in the know will get when they first hear FINO + BLEED by Die Mannequin.
Last year's full-length from the band, Unicorn Steak, held a hell of a lot of promise as songs like “Do It Or Die” and “Saved By Strangers” broke the band to radio and presented a rough and ready, but not (yet) remarkable singles-oriented band trying to produce an album. It was pretty easy to tell that too because the singles on the record were stellar but the album cuts were just filler. Not so on FINO + BLEED; this time the band comes loaded for bear with great songs and a tighter, stronger sound guaranteed to blow listeners (all of them – previously initiated or not) away.
The secret, this time, lies in the mixture of elements on FINO + BLEED. Now joined by a producer blessed with a better idea of what to do with the band (previous producers included MSTRKRFT and Ian D'Sa of Billy Talent that did the best they could with the knowledge they had,), Matt Hyde's mixes here push a far more confident Care Failure up to the front of the show and, not shy, she rises to the occasion; panting, howling, crooning, sighing and cavorting her way into every heart within earshot and not leaving a dry seat in the house through pristine takes of “Start It Up,” “Suffer,” “Bad Medicine” and “Caroline Mescaline.” Of course, such a gloriously over-the-top performance would fall flat and come across as silly and overdone were the music behind such histrionics not at least on par but, happily, the music compliments Failure's lines. The worry is never that Failure's own guitar, Anthony Bleed's bass or (ex-RHCP) Jack Irons' drums will overshadow Failure's vocal parts, nor is it likely that the singer would overshadow her band's onslaught – rather (and this is very much unlike most other new bands in rock right now), both singer and band work in tandem and feed off of each other to coax and cajole still better performances from each other. On “Locking Elizabeth,” for example, Failure and the band continually try to one-up each other – throwing ever-harder, thicker and more inspired performances back and forth until all parties involved are literally frothing by the climax. Elsewhere (most notably on “Bad Medicine” and “Caroline Mescaline”), the band invokes the Yeah Yeah Yeahs at the height of their powers (read: three albums ago) by turning in performances that are equal parts lusty gasp and swaggering stomp, thus guaranteeing to make anyone within earshot a little weak in the knees. Such a progression is a genuine revelation; while it always seemed possible that Die Mannequin might be capable of this kind of rapturous hypnosis, on FINO + BLEED it is omni-present and wildly infectious.
As “Open Season” (the only carry-over from Unicorn Steak on FINO + BLEED) begins to recede into the last orgasmic gasp of “Whipper Snapper,” both band and audience – sorely shagged out by each other now – collapse into a post-coital heap. There are no secret or hidden tracks in the end and there don't need to be – there's only a short, dark build in the final seconds of FINO + BLEED's run-time which can build perfectly back into “Intruder” and “Miss Americvnt” should listeners feel nimble and verile enough to set the album on repeat. That may indeed happen, or listeners may want to wait until later for another ravishing but, either way, Die Mannequin has made its point hard enough to leave a mark with FINO + BLEED. The band has arrived.
Bill Adams
Ground Control Magazine
Die Mannequin Singer Breaks Foot, Guitarist Gets Punched
Die Mannequin have the worst luck. Or at least they tend to find themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Singer/guitarist Care Failure broke her foot during the band's final show opening for Marilyn Manson in Halifax on Friday night.
Failure is used to jumping around on stage, but she rolled her foot in such a way on Friday that she broke two of its bones, according to a MySpace blog post by bassist Anthony "Useless" Bleed.
Bleed said Failure continued playing the song, despite being in pain, and even finished playing the set.
"tune's done, and all she asks is 'wrap it in duct tape and gimme a valium!'" Bleed wrote.
"well she got the tape, and played that show like any other, and yes, including 2 jumps to the floor/crowd! she's no idiot, she's a rock n roll fuckin trooper....
"AFTER the show is when i took her to the hospital and with the help of a dazzer's local cousin/dr steve feelgood, and got her a nice xray and big honkin cast as a souvenier from halifax! "
Failure's injury unfortunately meant the band could not play the last date of the tour in Moncton, N.B.
Failure updated Die Mannequin fans about her condition on Monday.
"i jusT broke my fooT in two differenT Places in The inTro in The firsT sonG," she wrote in a MySpace blog entry.
"Played The wHole sHow wiTH iT broken in Two differenT Places.. HidinG beHind my Guitar bawlinG beTween sonGs.
"now i Have a full on casT for a monTh on my fuckinG leG.
"fuck."
That sucks enough already, but that wasn't the only bad luck to befall Die Mannequin this month.
Touring rhythm guitarist Stacy Stace got his clock cleaned by a "fat fuck redneck" (bassist Anthony "Useless" Bleed's own words) in Calgary following the band's show with Manson on Sept. 10.
According to Bleed's MySpace blog entry, Stace tried to play pool with a man at a bar after the gig, and was repeatedly brushed off before Stace called him a dick. Bleed says the guy then punched "his face into the elephant man! two left hooks, and suddenly we've got the kid from 'mask' in our band! whaaaaa?!?
"awww, welcome to the rough road stace!" Bleed continued. "our fault, we forgot to tell you bout that black cloud that loves to follow us, hahaha.... swelling's gone, and a descent (sic) story for the books.....and a warning to all: don't try to play pool in calgary with fat fuck redneck babies that don't like to share...."
Die Mannequin released their Fino + Bleed debut album on Sept. 1.
Singer/guitarist Care Failure broke her foot during the band's final show opening for Marilyn Manson in Halifax on Friday night.
Failure is used to jumping around on stage, but she rolled her foot in such a way on Friday that she broke two of its bones, according to a MySpace blog post by bassist Anthony "Useless" Bleed.
Bleed said Failure continued playing the song, despite being in pain, and even finished playing the set.
"tune's done, and all she asks is 'wrap it in duct tape and gimme a valium!'" Bleed wrote.
"well she got the tape, and played that show like any other, and yes, including 2 jumps to the floor/crowd! she's no idiot, she's a rock n roll fuckin trooper....
"AFTER the show is when i took her to the hospital and with the help of a dazzer's local cousin/dr steve feelgood, and got her a nice xray and big honkin cast as a souvenier from halifax! "
Failure's injury unfortunately meant the band could not play the last date of the tour in Moncton, N.B.
Failure updated Die Mannequin fans about her condition on Monday.
"i jusT broke my fooT in two differenT Places in The inTro in The firsT sonG," she wrote in a MySpace blog entry.
"Played The wHole sHow wiTH iT broken in Two differenT Places.. HidinG beHind my Guitar bawlinG beTween sonGs.
"now i Have a full on casT for a monTh on my fuckinG leG.
"fuck."
That sucks enough already, but that wasn't the only bad luck to befall Die Mannequin this month.
Touring rhythm guitarist Stacy Stace got his clock cleaned by a "fat fuck redneck" (bassist Anthony "Useless" Bleed's own words) in Calgary following the band's show with Manson on Sept. 10.
According to Bleed's MySpace blog entry, Stace tried to play pool with a man at a bar after the gig, and was repeatedly brushed off before Stace called him a dick. Bleed says the guy then punched "his face into the elephant man! two left hooks, and suddenly we've got the kid from 'mask' in our band! whaaaaa?!?
"awww, welcome to the rough road stace!" Bleed continued. "our fault, we forgot to tell you bout that black cloud that loves to follow us, hahaha.... swelling's gone, and a descent (sic) story for the books.....and a warning to all: don't try to play pool in calgary with fat fuck redneck babies that don't like to share...."
Die Mannequin released their Fino + Bleed debut album on Sept. 1.
Thursday, September 24, 2009
'Sleaze rock' group from Toronto is promoting their newest record, Fino + Bleed
Toronto "sleaze rock" band Die Mannequin are making a much anticipated return to the Maritimes next week when the group finds themselves with the opening slot on Marilyn Manson's shows in Moncton and Halifax.
The group is promoting their newest record Fino + Bleed, a record that is being marketed as the group's proper debut album as the band's previously issued Unicorn Steak CD was a compilation of two previously released EP's.
To make their new record, the group decamped to Los Angeles to work with producer Matt Hyde. Hyde has worked with other renowned bands such as Monster Magnet, Slayer and Canada's own Pride Tiger.
Die Mannequin vocalist-guitarist Care Failure said the experience of working with Hyde surpassed her greatest expectations of what the results would end up producing.
"Matt and I really clicked more than I thought we would," she admits from her Toronto home. "He goes above and beyond the call of duty in everything he does. He has a genuine penchant for talent and wants to nurture it as well. In fact, after the album had wrapped up, he called me to see if we could work together again in the future which is amazing. It really was an honour to work with him."
One major change in the Die Mannequin operation leading up to their new record was having Failure try her hand at writing with others, an experience she also speaks highly of.
"I think all record labels like to call up the big guys hoping for to score a hit. I ended up writing with Raine Maida and Chantal Kreviazuk and ended up staying to write with them longer than anyone else I collaborated with on this record. I really like them" they are genuinely cool people.
"Making a record is somewhat of a compromise though. You have balance what you want with what the record company is thinking will help sell your product. There are songs that didn't make the record that I love a lot but I found out that you can learn a lot from other writers. Ultimately though, I learned to trust myself and my instincts."
But while some aspects of their new record might have been smooth, an unexpected road block popped up. Just two weeks prior to entering the studio to make the new record, Failure's laptop computer which contained song ideas for Fino + Bleed was unceremoniously stolen from her.
"The whole thing just ended up being so chaotic," Failure admits. "We had been touring so much that I really hadn't had the time to write the new record. And this record was important to us as well as our label so we really wanted to get things right.
"After my laptop disappeared, I had those two weeks to write the entire record which really helped me learn to refine the song writing craft in a big way."
With shows in Europe on their schedule in the near future, Failure is looking forward to the group's dates with the Antichrist Superstar and specifically returning to Moncton.
"We have always had such great shows in that city. Everybody that comes out to the show has such a great time. We really love Moncton and can't wait to get back."
Catch Die Mannequin on the opening slot on Marilyn Manson's show at the Moncton Coliseum on Saturday September 26. Tickets for the show are available online at tickets.moncton.ca and by phone at (506) 857-4100.
Ken Kelley
Here
The group is promoting their newest record Fino + Bleed, a record that is being marketed as the group's proper debut album as the band's previously issued Unicorn Steak CD was a compilation of two previously released EP's.
To make their new record, the group decamped to Los Angeles to work with producer Matt Hyde. Hyde has worked with other renowned bands such as Monster Magnet, Slayer and Canada's own Pride Tiger.
Die Mannequin vocalist-guitarist Care Failure said the experience of working with Hyde surpassed her greatest expectations of what the results would end up producing.
"Matt and I really clicked more than I thought we would," she admits from her Toronto home. "He goes above and beyond the call of duty in everything he does. He has a genuine penchant for talent and wants to nurture it as well. In fact, after the album had wrapped up, he called me to see if we could work together again in the future which is amazing. It really was an honour to work with him."
One major change in the Die Mannequin operation leading up to their new record was having Failure try her hand at writing with others, an experience she also speaks highly of.
"I think all record labels like to call up the big guys hoping for to score a hit. I ended up writing with Raine Maida and Chantal Kreviazuk and ended up staying to write with them longer than anyone else I collaborated with on this record. I really like them" they are genuinely cool people.
"Making a record is somewhat of a compromise though. You have balance what you want with what the record company is thinking will help sell your product. There are songs that didn't make the record that I love a lot but I found out that you can learn a lot from other writers. Ultimately though, I learned to trust myself and my instincts."
But while some aspects of their new record might have been smooth, an unexpected road block popped up. Just two weeks prior to entering the studio to make the new record, Failure's laptop computer which contained song ideas for Fino + Bleed was unceremoniously stolen from her.
"The whole thing just ended up being so chaotic," Failure admits. "We had been touring so much that I really hadn't had the time to write the new record. And this record was important to us as well as our label so we really wanted to get things right.
"After my laptop disappeared, I had those two weeks to write the entire record which really helped me learn to refine the song writing craft in a big way."
With shows in Europe on their schedule in the near future, Failure is looking forward to the group's dates with the Antichrist Superstar and specifically returning to Moncton.
"We have always had such great shows in that city. Everybody that comes out to the show has such a great time. We really love Moncton and can't wait to get back."
Catch Die Mannequin on the opening slot on Marilyn Manson's show at the Moncton Coliseum on Saturday September 26. Tickets for the show are available online at tickets.moncton.ca and by phone at (506) 857-4100.
Ken Kelley
Here
Thursday, September 17, 2009
Claim to fame
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Failure: "I was a big cutter and was bleeding from the arms down." |
At only 22, Failure has the rock scars to back a claim to fame. Plucked off the streets and out of the depths of drug addiction five years ago by Michael McCarty, former president of EMI Publishing Canada, Failure is a self-admitted "mess."
When McCarty and EMI vice-president Barb Sedun first went to see the then-16-year-old play, Failure says she was too fucked up to realize anyone of importance was even in the rehearsal studio, let alone there to scout her.
"I remember the first time Barb and Mike came to a practice of mine," she reflects. "I was a big cutter and was bleeding from the arms down. I don't think I really understood the magnitude of what was going on, I just knew these two characters were coming to watch, and I think I scared them shitless."
Two months later, however, McCarty and Sedun signed Failure. Recognizing the talent that lay under the veil of blood and drugs, the two pulled her from the streets, started paying her rent and, in a move all too rare nowadays, awarded her years to properly age as an artist.
Failure likens the industry infrastructure provided by the team at EMI to that afforded musicians like Bruce Springsteen and R.E.M., thanking her label and the aforementioned players in particular for understanding the value of natural growth.
"It's about finding time to become more bullet-proof and dangerous, as a prisoner, as an artist, as a songwriter. It's vital," she says. "There are few people who understand the importance of development, especially since you don't have that time and grace [to record] these days."
Only now, a half-decade into her career, is Failure promoting her debut LP, Fino+Bleed. The debut attests to the fact that artist development breeds successful albums. A mean mash of grunge, punk and metal, it is primeval in nature, and leaves no question as to why Die Mannequin is touring with Marilyn Manson.
Remi L. Roy
Ottawa XPress
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