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The electrifying new release builds
on the groundwork laid with Obsession, the record Metal Hammer
hailed as “the album of the year.” The Orange County, CA-based
band toured heavily in support of the disc, tearing up stages on
stateside runs with Avenged Sevenfold, Atreyu, HIM and the
Warped Tour, before crossing the Atlantic for a barnstorming
tour of the UK with Lostprophets. They maintained momentum
throughout, particularly with airplay for the “I Let Go” and
“Waiting For The Heavens” videos on both “Headbangers Ball” and
Fuse. But for the band, who have developed a diehard
international following with three explosive indie albums (Until
The Ink Runs Out, Lifeless, Vanity) and a blistering live show,
Obsession turned out to be both an ending and a beginning,
closing out its early days while pointing the way toward its
evolution.
“We listened to the last record
and realized there were a lot of elements that we liked, but
needed to be taken to the next level,” says Hart. “Everything is
intensified here – the hooks, the melodies, that dirty, driving
rock sound. We took an arena rock approach on a lot of the
songs, including old-style gang vocals. The goal was to make
everything sound huge.”
They nailed their target with
EIGHTEEN VISIONS, a blast-furnace mix of searing riffs, sharp
melodies and rich lyrical images. At the heart of the album’s
volcanic sound is Hart—an expressive vocalist who lends
emotional depth to songs that slash and burn. The record offers
endless highlights, including the stunning and hook-ridden lead
single “Tonightless.” “Ken (Floyd, guitarist) wrote that while
we were making Obsession,” says guitarist Keith Barney. “We
didn’t think much about it at the time because we didn’t need
any more songs for that album, but you could hear that it had a
huge hook. He brought it back to the table for this record and
we all agreed that it had to be on there.” “It’s a little psalm
I wrote after getting stood up,” muses Floyd. “I was really hurt
and lonely and defined those feelings as being ‘tonightless.’ I
have trouble communicating my emotions without a guitar and that
night really affected me. James did a great job of playing with
the lyrics and translating the personal to the universal.”
“Musically that song is a bit
different for us,” adds Hart. “But we didn’t want to hold
anything back with this record. Everyone was encouraged to
contribute, whether they brought something that sounded like Goo
Goo Dolls or Cannibal Corpse. No matter what the idea, it would
get listened to and worked on.” The progress evident on
“Tonightless” and several other new songs convinced producer
Machine that he had to work with the group, who, likewise, were
willing to take a chance with him. “We talked to a lot of
producers, and we knew Machine had done some metal and hardcore
records that we liked, but we were going for a big rock album,”
explains Barney. “The other guys we talked with were cool, but
they didn’t have the drive. When we sat down with Machine, his
enthusiasm was just over the top. He understood us and our goal,
and he wanted it way more than anyone else.”
According to Hart, the producer
was key in helping him achieve his personal goal of becoming a
better singer. “I wanted to establish my own style, so it was
really important for me to strengthen my voice and project
different tones and inflections. Machine was a huge help in
getting me there.” Hart’s ambitions are reflected throughout the
entire album, which is easily Eighteen Visions’ most diverse
selection of material to date. The most distinct example of the
group’s desire to push at the boundaries of heavy rock is the
rhapsodic “Brokenhearted,” an intoxicatingly bittersweet song
about lost love. “The title tells it all,” says Barney. “I wrote
it about an ex-girlfriend—a five-year relationship that didn’t
just end badly, it was a life-changing event.”
Hart admits that everyone in the
band was originally “afraid” of the song. “It was almost
scrapped because it was such a departure from anything Eighteen
Visions had ever done, but the more we worked on it, the better
we felt about it.” At the other end of the spectrum is “Victim,”
which incorporates a healthy amount of Eighteen Visions’
precise, relentlessly aggressive metalcore foundation. “We
finished that one a week before Machine came into the picture,”
recalls the vocalist. “It has a vintage rock vibe in the verses
and a big, in-your-face feel in the chorus. That song turned out
to be a monster.” The singer also points to “Last Night” as
another new favorite, calling it Eighteen Visions’ “rock
throwback ballad.” But its subject matter was hardly the stuff
of standard slow tunes. “I was in a very, very dark place when I
wrote that,” says Hart. “There was a death in the family, which
was something I had never dealt with before. It’s a very
important and emotional song for me.”
Having whittled some 30-odd songs
down to 12, Eighteen Visions worked on both coasts to record the
album—from the legendary Ocean Way Studios in Los Angeles to the
producer’s own Machine Shop in New Jersey. And now that the
record is finished, the band is eager to play it live for fans
this spring, summer and beyond. The self-assurance that explodes
out of EIGHTEEN VISIONS has extended into the band’s entire
vision for the project. “I see really big things for this
record,” says Barney. “We’ve been getting a lot of positive
feedback and it feels like the planets have aligned for us.
We’re totally excited about how it came out and can’t wait to
take it on the road. I think it’s gonna be huge.”
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