Audio: CLUTCH Frontman Interviewed On FULL METAL JACKIE's Radio Show
April 15, 2013Neil Fallon of Maryland rockers CLUTCH was interviewed on the April 5-7 edition of Full Metal Jackie's nationally syndicated radio show. You can now listen to the chat using the audio player below.
To see a full list of stations carrying the program and when it airs, go to FullMetalJackieRadio.com.
Interview (audio):
Full Metal Jackie: People love the new album, "Earth Rocker". In your mind, are you already thinking ahead to the next album because you've already set the bar so high?
Neil: Well, I am thinking about it. We haven't really written anything, but there was a long stretch of time between this and "Strange Cousins", and I think we have a lot of momentum now and it would be good to capitalize on that and certainly not have four years between this one and the next one. I think we got more wind in our sails from this record and it's a good feeling all around.
Full Metal Jackie: Neil, your lyrics are pretty imaginative but do you ever come up with something that makes you think, "That's a little too far out, even for me"?
Neil: Sure, all the time. For example, "Earth Rocker", with the kind of lyrical hook of Screamin' Jay Hawkins. I did that on a lark during practice and I kept doing that and I told the guys, "You know, don't worry about it I won't do that in the final version," and they said, "No, you've gotta do that." Sometimes I second-guess myself and sometimes, even if I don't know exactly what it means, if it just sounds cool, that's all the justification, I think, anyone really needs.
Full Metal Jackie: You've said "Earth Rocker" is largely a result of re-discovering MOTÖRHEAD and THIN LIZZY while on tour with them. What appeals to you most about those bands now compared to what you loved about them when you were a kid?
Neil: I think a lot of it had to do with the fact that we've learned a lot more about rock and roll; we've learned a lot more about the history of rock and roll. I can see now when Lemmy [Kilmister] says Chuck Berry and Little Richard are an influence, I can hear that now; my 16-year-old self couldn't hear that. I think because we've learned more and more about rock and roll. It's just like a vocabulary. We weren't trying to emulate THIN LIZZY or MOTÖRHEAD; it was more of a philosophy of just taking the first generations of rock and just speeding it up and gaining it up. It was a pretty illuminating two tours with those guys.
Full Metal Jackie: Neil, the same four guys have been making music together for so many years. What's kept it fresh for you? What makes you look forward to continuing to make music together?
Neil: I think our mutual love of playing live rock and roll. We never saw music as being a vehicle towards anything; it wasn't a vehicle towards fame or fortune. We've had feast and famine, but live is always what we could go to. In bad times, it helped us get through it and it brought us to places we never thought we would go. This is a band that's never enjoyed a smash radio hit and that's probably a good thing. We built up our fanbase by just doing show after show after show and now we're in a position that this is all we do for a living and that's all I think we really need to ask for. I feel very fortunate that that's the case.
Full Metal Jackie: Just talking a little bit about your fanbase, it's a pretty dedicated group of people that sometimes have to wait long periods of time before they get to see you again but you kind of know when you do it seems like this religious experience for people. How do you feel about those fans that have been there for so many years?
Neil: I feel very fortunate that CLUTCH fans are the way they are; they're very passionate, they're in it for the long haul. There's something in it for everybody, I think we have a pretty diverse crowd. It took a long time to be able to do this like we're doing but I think it lasts longer because it was a word of mouth thing. CLUTCH fans… I mean, we're not anything like RUSH, but I think there's some analogy there because RUSH fans seem like they feel like they own the band, to some regard. I think CLUTCH fans might feel the same way; it's like this is their band and they feel like they could hang out with us, there's not a curtain between us and them. I think they like that, and we like it too, because it makes our jobs easier; we don't have to fake it.
Full Metal Jackie: I'm guessing you guys are going to be doing nothing but touring for the rest of the year?
Neil: Pretty much. We've got four weeks left on this leg and go home for ten days, go back out for another month, go back home for two weeks. Then we go to Europe for four weeks and come home and take a break, but then we'll do another U.S. tour in the fall and then we'll do our Christmas run. I pretty much know exactly what I'm doing from now until next March, which is good. I'd rather be busy than not. It's tough leaving home and the family, but I do love traveling.
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