Beat, 08 February 2006, with Chris Cheney,
Scott Owen & Andy Strachan
Article by: Jesse Shrock
The Living End
For some bands, the first new album after the mandatory Greatest Hits
release (yeah, they called it The Singles, but same diff) can be seen as a
crucial step. Is the band still relevant? Do they retain the signature
brilliance that won them fame in the first place? Or have they taken bold steps
into new musical territory? In the case of The Living End, the answers to all
these questions – including both of the last two – is a resounding ‘yes’.
When I interviewed vocalist/guitarist Chris Cheney on the eve of the release of
The Singles: ’97 - ‘04 in late 2004, he said his intention from that point was
to move forward with a ‘fresh, new sound’. Fifteen months later, sipping mineral
water on the terrace of a Prahran café, I remind him of these intentions…
“Did I really say that?” he chortles. “That’s a bit gay, isn’t it?”
It’s characteristic of the extraordinarily high standards that Chris is
notorious for holding himself to that his ambition will often clash with his
humility in the manner just depicted. But it is thanks to those unyielding high
standards that Chris has earned a temporary respite from his insecurities, and
can claim, along with band mates Scott Owen (Double Bass) and Andy Strachan
(Drums) that he is supremely confident in their latest release, State of
Emergency.
“Now that it’s all said and done, I do feel confident about the album,” Chris
says, “because I just feel completely drained over it. We gave it everything we
could, and we put in all we could, and there’s no regrets. With the last album,
we ended up going ‘Hmmm, maybe there’s a few things we could have done
differently’. With this one I really feel like we’re as happy as we’re ever
going to be, and I think you can hear the results."
“It was a fucking nightmare, putting ourselves through the nitty gritty of it
all…” Andy adds. “All the fine details. We just spent days and weeks and months
deliberating. But it paid off because now we can actually feel comfortable about
it.”
Chris readily agrees that State of Emergency doesn’t so much represent a ‘fresh
new sound’ for the band, but rather a few twists on the old.
“There’s a sound to the band that’s steeped in classic rock and roll that I
think works for us,” he says. “And we’d be crazy to mess with that. But I think
we’re probably making some new kinds of sounds together arrangement-wise, and
the way we’re layering things and stuff like that. We’re wanting to really try
and take it somewhere… rather than just having ideas, following through with
ideas. If we were going to try something really different to what we’ve done
before, to actually pull it off. Do it really, really well. So, that it can be a
strong point of the album. Not just ‘oh, that’s an interesting song’, before the
next single. With this album, I think that the more different songs could be
singles, which is great for us.”
The previous night, I was at a screening for local media writers and presenters
of a documentary, entitled How to Make an Album and Influence People, which
detailed how The Living End’s original vision for their fourth studio album was
warped, compromised and modified in the course of recording and production… and
how the final result is ultimately all the better for it.
At the beginning of the film, the band’s intentions are to go into the studio
with a bunch of well-rehearsed songs and lay ‘em down to tape, retaining all the
sparking edge of their live performances. “I reckon that was us rebelling
against (Modern) Artillery,” Scott says of these initial plans, “because that
was so well-produced, as far as slickness and neatness goes. We were like ‘####,
man. We’ve really got to make a rough and ready-sounding album, because we know
we have that in us, and we didn’t do it on Artillery.’ But it just unfolded to
the point where we knew it wasn’t going to be that album as soon as we started
pre-production.”
As the documentary continues, we see the band re-uniting with Roll On producer
Nick Launay and workshopping their selected songs. Though Nick is renowned for
his love of live to tape recording, we see a mutual recognition between him and
the band that this batch of songs are worthy of something more.
“With the songs that we were choosing as our favourites for the album (we knew)
it wasn’t going to be a raw, straight ahead rock and roll album,” Scott says.
“It was going to be a more complex kind of thing. And it just kept unfolding and
unfolding, to the point where it got horns and kids choir…”
“I think it would be really one-dimensional for us to just go and make an album
full of Second Solutions or something like that,” Chris says. “I think other
bands do that and they do it well – you’ve got the whole ‘New Rock’ scene.
There’s a part of us that does that, but I also think that the reason why songs
like Nothing Lasts Forever and Wake Up end up getting written is just that we do
that well also. We thought it would be a real shame to stifle that, and go ‘We
shouldn’t have songs like that.’ So it was then very easy to say ‘let’s bring in
some horns’ and ‘let’s bring in the kids on that part.’ And I’ve always wanted
to take it a little bit further and show another side to the band.”
But don’t imagine for a moment that these frills amount to anything more than
the equivalent of a few sketches on the solid wall of sound, a racing stripe on
the hotted-up car, a ring on the fist punching the air. Indeed, the entire band
responds enthusiastically to my suggestion that State of Emergency also
represents a return to the anthemic, chant-heavy sound of their earliest work.
“I just like every song to be as powerful as it can be,” Chris says. “Like the
end of No Way Out, when it hits with this big kind of climax at the end of the
song. If it’s going to be that kind of thing, it’s got to be almost terrifying.
I think I just like to have songs which are very visual and larger than life,
perhaps. When we have songs that have that anthemic kind of quality, we tend to
make them really over the top. Perhaps we just have a knack for doing that with
those kinds of songs.”
“That’s just something that we’re really into that kind of works for us – the
whole anthemic thing,” Scott says. “All of our songs have a real melodic kind of
factor to them. And I guess we still like just shouting out those choruses!”
“We did try and approach every song with the idea that we would play ‘em live
for the next two years,” Andy adds.
“I reckon we could go out and play the whole album from start to finish in a
live environment, not even consider playing any other songs, and it would still
work,” Scott boldly declares. “Obviously we wouldn’t forget about all the other
songs, but I would feel 100% confident and happy to do that.”
State of Emergency is out now through EMI. The Living End’s tour will be
announced shortly..