Mudvayne Frontman Discusses New Album

Band Photo: Mudvayne (?)
MUDVAYNE frontman Chad Gray has told MTV.com that the band won't be done with its fourth studio LP for a while — despite earlier reports that the CD would be finished in time for an early 2008 release.
"We basically have a record done, but I stepped away from it for a while, while doing this HELLYEAH thing," he said, referring to the side project he's touring with through early December that has him and MUDVAYNE guitarist Greg Tribbett teaming up with NOTHINGFACE guitarist Tom Maxwell, DAMAGEPLAN bassist Bob Zilla and PANTERA drummer Vinnie Paul. "I started seeing some themes inside of what we were doing that we could, like, really go for. I kind of pulled off the initial direction and concept for the record, and I started seeing some things I was really into. I need more content, so I can go as far as I can with the concept of the newest record."
"Ultimately, music is art," he added. "If you're creating it for other people, you're missing the whole damn point. It has to mean something to you first. We've always written for ourselves. We never wrote for radio; radio came to us. This record is a really important record — as they all are — and now I've wrapped my head around it and have brought some other outside ideas into the mix. With this new record, I had one thing I was drawing material from, but the more I stood back and stared at it, the more I was like, 'You know what? I can introduce this and this, and I can expose this process of thought.' So this thing, to me now, has become a lot bigger than what it might have been before. It might have been a little more linear. Now it's growing, and I'm really excited about it."
"Music isn't always about being easy. Art's not always easy," Gray continued. "You can look at a Georgia O'Keefe [painting], and it's right there. If you look at a Jackson Pollock or a Barnett Newman, it's a whole different bag of tricks. And to try and really get where the artist is coming from isn't easy. That's what we've tried to do with our music — challenge our listeners a bit. There's enough cattle-call stuff out there, and we like to try and challenge our fans. Because of that, we haven't sold millions of records. You go one way or the other. You can write no-brainer, 'Did it all for the nookie' stuff and sell 8 million records. That appeals to more people because not everybody wants to think or work for entertainment."
Source: Blabbermouth
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10 Comments on "Mudvayne Frontman Discusses New Album"



5. writes:
LD 50 is by far their best album, and always will be. They need to focus on making an album, not a bunch of heavy metal songs. LD 50 was an album. Concepts and sounds flowed throughout the entire record, but the following 2 records seemed like each track was separate from eachother. Hellyeah was pretty much garbage altogether.
6. writes:
I actually thought some of the songs of "The End of All Things To Come" were their best stuff. I've always had a weird liking for Mudvayne, their 'jump da f*** up' nu-metal stuff always put me off but songs like "Trapped In The Wake Of A Dream" to me has some prog brilliance to it. And the bass is pretty much to die for, especially in todays sparse landscape.
However their last album was such garbage I'm not holding any hopes. Happy? Not really with that radio friendly crap.
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7. writes:
i thought mudvayne's last album lost an found was f***in awesum not everyone sees whats really behind the message mudvayne is really giving. its not about how heavy or how soft the album is because bands evole an mature thru a course of focusing more on wat they desire. i know this because ive been into music my whole life an it is not always wat it seems but props to mudvayne an hellyeah i think any type of music should get recognition just close your eyes an open your ears maybe the visual is not always as clear as the sounds.


9. writes:
If a band I like puts out a bad album, why should I feel obligated to like it? Hell Yeah was a bad album. It's pretty sad to see people support their band no matter what kind of music they produce. That's why they continue to put out bad albums, cus you just accept whatever they put out.
10. writes:
I've gotta agree with Cynic on this one - though LD50 was their most 'metal' album, the bands' musicianship peaked with "The End of All Things to Come". It's certainly not as heavy as LD50, but it is a better listen. As for "Lost and Found", I have no kind words to say.
As for a bands' sound evolving, this is true, and does certainly happen, but I don't really call moving towards a radio-friendly, mainstream, typical sound 'evolving'. I call that 'sucking'.
Hellyeah sucked in all ways possible. It had every opportunity to be brilliant, but it sucked.
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1. broken face writes:
radio came to you haha dont make me laugh we all know ur last album was a bit mainstream