jueves, 25 de marzo de 2010

Gerard Way Meets Iggy Pop


With his wild onstage antics and upcoming "sleazy Detroit rock" album, My Chemical Romance's frontman is a true disciple of The Stooges. "I didn't want the girls to want to f--k me, I wanted the straight guys to want to f--k me," Way says. "I got that from Iggy."

SPIN: Gerard, when did you first hear Iggy's music?

IGGY POP: Oh my God! Somebody saw it!

WAY: Yeah! It had a huge impact on me. It was set in the future and starred [the music of] Iggy, Lou Reed, Debbie Harry, Cheap Trick, and Earth, Wind & Fire.

POP: I remember my song was called "Pain & Suffering." [Sings] "Red wine turns to blood / A cow floats upside down in a river of mud!"

WAY: It scared me, but I was drawn to it. I rediscovered it in middle school, right when [Iggy's pop hit] "Candy" came out. I'd been a metalhead, but then I got into punk and the Ramones, and through that I got into Iggy.

POP: They were good to me that way, the Ramones. I just saw a picture of a night at CBGB's in 1975 when they held a party for me. We all had that same bowl haircut! Five of us with a bowl. Mine was platinum and theirs were dark.

SPIN: The Ramones were from Queens; Iggy, you're from Michigan, and Gerard, you're from Jersey -- three of the most disrespected places in America. Do you feel a connection because of that?

POP: Yeah, real knucklehead places. Allen Ginsberg is from New Jersey, from Paterson, and it's a pretty ugly town as he paints it.

WAY: I'm from Newark, which is pretty much Paterson. Paterson is a fucked-up place.

POP: I always liked Newark because it was so embattled. I like semi-torn-down places where I could get nestled in and get something done without anyone bothering me.

WAY: Definitely. We practiced in this factory there where there had been murders. It's in the deconstructed, destroyed cities where people will leave you alone so you can create yourself.

SPIN: Do you both carry your hometowns with you in the art you make?

POP: I certainly do. If I'm in Paris and the people get very French, I find my drawl thickening, like [adopts heavy Detroit accent] "You know what there, Froggy…"

WAY: I wouldn't have been able to move to L.A. if I felt I was going to lose my identity as a New Jerseyian. My accent has gotten thicker since I've lived here. L.A. people might hate me for saying this, but when [my wife] Lindsey and I moved, we thought, "Everyone here is so polite. If a bunch of people moved out from the East Coast, they could fucking run this place." Like the person I'm getting coffee from, he's definitely motherfucking me and is going to say something when I'm gone. Not like in New York, where they'll just motherfuck you to your face.

POP:"Heyyyy, man, great to see you! You're a beautiful cat!" But seriously, there's some highly capable assassins out there. So hats off to 'em.

SPIN: I wanted to talk to you both about influential concerts in your life. Iggy, you've spoken about seeing Jim Morrison and the Doors in 1967.

POP: It was the homecoming dance at the University of Michigan, and it was an intimate setting, sort of like the prom scene in Carrie. When the dude appeared, Morrison, he lurched onto the stage, and people probably thought he was drunk. But I knew that cat had had three or four hits of acid. His pupils were totally dilated, and he had on a sort of Hedy Lamarr–as-Delilah outfit, and when he opened his mouth, he sang only in falsetto baby talk. There was no applause. No approval. No comprehension. It was a visibly unsuccessful evening, and that's what I loved about it in retrospect. Afterwards, I was vibrating with this feeling that I have no excuse not to get our miserable, good-for-nothin' band out on the stage.

WAY: All of the performances that mattered to me were the shows I couldn't go to because they'd already happened and I was just a kid. In a lot of ways, my band has always been in response to stuff. Seeing bands like Thursday and At the Drive-In, they were plugged into what I like to call "Motor City motherfuckin' rock," channeling the Stooges, channeling the MC5. During this one performance, ATDI were wearing catsuits, crawling under the stage. It was sexy and challenged your sexuality. I guess all I added to that was eyeliner. I wanted to challenge gender, abuse the audience. I didn't want the girls to want to fuck me, I wanted the straight guys to want to fuck me. I think I got that from Iggy.

POP: Maybe you should give John Mayer a call. [Laughs] I think whatever it is you're doing, if you're gonna get up and do it in front of the public, it's going to blow unless you give free rein to your emotional truths. Otherwise you're going to look like you're pandering.

WAY: I've always loved Lust for Life—the whole record for me is perfect. You're not pandering at all. I started to feel on the last [My Chemical Romance] record like I was pandering, and that the money had put me in stasis. It's like a trap: Stasis is death, and I started to make safe decisions. But then on [2007's Projekt Revolution] tour, our last one for [The Black Parade], a journalist told me we were like the fucking Stooges up there. That's what we're trying to get back to on this new record, what we had on that one tour.

POP: A lot of young musicians get the money at the wrong time. They get it for something they don't feel great about, and it'll make you feel so bad it'll destroy you and kill you. Musical types tend to combine the burden of the author with the burden of the actor.

WAY: I never thought about that, being author and actor. We were going to these cities where there were hate crimes directed at the kids listening to us, the kids wearing all black. I retreated and stopped being on the crusade. I didn't want anyone to get hurt. The light at the end of the tunnel was a friend reminding me I didn't wear a Public Image Ltd. pin on my jacket in high school because I wanted to get spit on, I wore it because I wanted to wear it. Our kids are the same way: It's their fucking choice. I can't protect them. I need to give them what they want.

POP: If you give a good performance, something that gets some feeling across to people, that's such a rare gift. It's underestimated at this point in history, when the music biz is inevitably turning into a kind of politics. It's good to withdraw at certain times. A steady diet of it is rough on a person.


URL to video interview with Gerard Way:

http://link.brightcove.com/services/player/bcpid1811456849?bctid=73670137001

miércoles, 24 de marzo de 2010

Give It Up - Midtown

This silence kills the calm
Of the night
I force an anxious patience
Counting every beat and waiting for my turn to die

Give it up, Give it up
Don't fall for the same things
Give it up, Give it up
Don't fall for mistakes that I've made
Don't turn away

I understand your ways
Won't give it up

It's not me you're waiting for
Alright, stop waiting
It's not me you're waiting for
It's time to let go, time to let it go

And when
You become
All you've lost
Wandering the streets and searching for a place to die

Give it up, Give it up
Don't fall for the same things
Give it up, Give it up
Don't fall for mistakes that I've made
Don't turn away

I understand your ways
Won't give it up

It's not me you're waiting for
Alright, stop waiting
It's not me you're waiting for
This is where it ends
It's not me you're waiting for
It's time to let go, time to let it go
This is where it ends
And if you promise to forget
I'll try to find a way to make mistakes
Make mistakes

Give it up, Give it up
Try to find a way
[x4]

It's not me you're waiting for
It's not me you're waiting for
Alright, stop waiting
It's not me you're waiting for
Alright, stop waiting
It's not me you're waiting for

Give it up, Give it up
Don't fall for the same things (Alright, stop waiting)
Give it up, Give it up
Don't fall for mistakes that I've made (Alright, don't give it up)
Don't turn away
Give it up, Give it up
Don't fall for the same things
Give it up, Give it up

Don't turn away


lunes, 22 de marzo de 2010

OF UMBRELLAS AND KILLJOYS

RUSSELL: Of course, there's still some great stuff that comes out of left field every once in a while. "The Umbrella Academy" is a great example of that, I think.

ALLIE: Thanks. I love that book, because there's a quality to it that has nothing to do with the fact that the guy sings in a band, you know? That definitely helped us find an audience for it, but yeah -- that comic really, really works.

RUSSELL: What's the next "Umbrella Academy" miniseries?

ALLIE: "Hotel Oblivion." What's next for Gerard is that we've got to get "Killjoys" written. "Killjoys" is this non-"Umbrella" miniseries that we're doing; Becky Cloonan's the artist. Shaun Simon's the co-writer on it. And we've got to get working on that. Gerard's been very busy with his record -- his day job...

RUSSELL: His rock-star day job....

ALLIE: His hugely successful rock-band day job. Yeah. They're still recording this darn album that's going on and on. It's been a while that they've been focused on that. He had a kid last year. He's just been really busy, and so we haven't made any headway on "Killjoys," and "Killjoys" is in line in front of "Hotel Oblivion" -- "Hotel Oblivion" being "Umbrella Academy" Series 3. I'm going down there at the end of March to kick-start the "Killjoys" process. Hopefully we'll be getting that rolling fast enough that we can get on to "Umbrella."

I spoke to Gabriel Ba the other day. He's super-busy, really overbooked, but always wishing that "Umbrella" would happen faster. Ba's career has exploded since "Umbrella Academy" started -- and he's such a remarkable creative force, he really needs to be doing his own thing. Have you seen "Daytripper"?

RUSSELL: No, I haven't.

ALLIE: It's one of the best comics ever. Gabriel writes it and his brother draws it. One of the best comics in the world. [Scott shows me a copy he has lying around the house. It's gorgeous.] These twins are the most inspiring people to work with. So he really needs to be doing more of his own stuff -- but he really wants to get back to "Umbrella."

RUSSELL: Can you tell me anything about the stories for the new Gerard Way stuff?

ALLIE: "Killjoys" is like a post-punk psychedelic road-trip comic. Reality is the MacGuffin of "Killjoys."

RUSSELL: That sounds sort of in keeping with the "Umbrella Academy" vibe. Nothing in that comic is at it seems. Ever.

ALLIE: That's true -- but in "Killjoys" that's so much more the case, without giving away too much. You can't even compare the two. With "Umbrella," Gerard wanted to do a comic, so he made up a superhero team that just happens to be unlike any other superhero team -- but it's a superhero team through his filter. "Killjoys" is just him through his filter. So rather than taking a genre that's external to him and doing it his way, "Killjoys" is more like the raw, unadulterated Gerard Way. And it might be the comic-book experience his fans would have wanted in the first place, so to speak.... It's got a real plastic feel to it, it's got a bit of a '70s vibe and a '90s-rock vibe, to some degree. But I can't give away too much.

RUSSELL: Is Gerard Way a character in this? Is this the "Hard Day's Night" of comics?

ALLIE: No, no. It's not about a rock band at all. It's about a group of anarchist heroes, in a way. It's personal, not autobiographical. It's a personal story unfiltered by genre.

RUSSELL: Will the next "Umbrella" be in keeping with the all-bets-off vibe of the previous books? Gerard Way seems like he could kill or fatten up anybody in those books at any time.

ALLIE: [laughs] Yeah, man. He'll fatten up anybody. "Umbrella"'s so weird. The next one will reveal a bit more about the secrets that we've been keeping, the backgrounds of the characters. It'll be unraveling characters in the ways we've been unraveling characters thus far -- changing who they are and taking apart preconceptions about them.


------

ACIN interviews Scott Allie, The Umbrella Academy and Killjoys Editor

Oh, My hapiness can't be bigger... ♥

I am proud to announce the addition of two new members to the MCR extended family. Recently, my wife and I found out we will be having twins later on this summer. I cannot express in words how happy this makes us, it seems everything's turning up Milhouse. I just can't wait to meet the little ones, and may God have mercy on the world now that there will be 2 more Ieros wreaking havoc on the earth.



Beware People in the Neighbourhood, the Ieros Will invade us! xD

Teenagers Remix

Part 2

How to warm up with Dan from THE USED

jueves, 18 de marzo de 2010

The True Lives Of The Fabulous KILLJOYS by Gerard Way, Shaun Simon and Becky Cloonan.



Gerard Way announces new comic, remains ‘dark’ … also, water is wet.Published by Search for my chemical romance on Jul 25, 2009 The Dark Horse panel at Comic-Con International featured the announcement of a second comic book series for My Chemical Romance singer Gerard Way, who has already made a name for himself in comics with the Eisner Award-winning "Umbrella Academy." Way's new series, co-written by Shaun Simon and illustrated by Becky Cloonan, will be called "Killjoys" ...

“One of the cool things about 'Umbrella Academy' was it kind of got a fair shot as soon as it came out in that, nobody knew what to expect,” Way said. “I kind of like that, I don't want to give everything away about 'Killjoys,' I want to give it a fair shot.” “What I would like to say is that it's a complete and total departure from anything I've done in 'Umbrella Academy.' It's almost like a strange kind of love letter to the really great comics of the '90s that kind of pushed things,” the writer continued. “If 'Umbrella Academy' is me taking a look at, among many other things, 'Doom Patrol,' 'Killjoys' is me, with my co-writer Shaun Simon, taking a look at when the best stuff was going on in the '90s, things like 'Invisibles' and stuff like that. It's a mature readers title, which is another first. We specifically wanted 'Umbrella Academy' to be an all ages title. This thing is going to deal with much more mature and controversial themes, such as hate crimes and homophobia, the homogenization of American culture and American life. 'Umbrella Academy' is set in its own world, with its own rules; 'Killjoys' is set in modern America. I find that sometimes you can say a lot when you're dealing in our times, with what people can relate with right now. It starts off at the end of the '90s and picks up today. I would say it's more violent, heavily, and deals with much stronger themes.” When many fans discuss '90s comics, the first thing that comes to mind are big shoulder pads, gritted teeth, and gigantic, skewed anatomy. But Way would like to remind readers that there were also some enduring, well-loved projects coming out throughout the decade. He cited the work of Peter Milligan as well as Neil Gaiman's seminal “Sandman” and Michael Allred's “Madman.” “When '90s comics get a lot of flack, it's usually the ones that have the hologram covers. Everybody knows this, but to me what happened in the '90s and why comics suffered for a long time and it made it really difficult for anybody to get a job, was that you had a greater part of America finally taking an interest in comics again, but they were taking interest in it for the wrong reasons, for resale value,” Way said. “So you have these awful, awful comics out there. I knew these guys who had boxes and boxes of the worst shit, polybagged with some kind of fucking sticker, and they were the most horrible comics you've ever read. That's what gets the flack, and I think deservedly so, but I think amidst all that was things like [Grant Morrison's] 'Invisibles,' and basically that whole stable at Vertigo in the '90s. Anything Garth Ennis was doing. Every single issue of 'Preacher' was phenomenal. He's a big influence, too, and he doesn't come up as much because I have a personal relationship with Grant. Garth Ennis not only influenced me with my comics, but with my music writing and lyric writing. Especially on [MCR album] 'Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge,' I was reading a lot of 'Preacher' and Ennis at the time. And obviously Gaiman, too. All those Vertigo guys in the '90s, I thought that was the best stuff.” Joining Way for “Killjoys” is Becky Cloonan, who is a member of Gabriel Ba's studio, along with Ba's twin brother Fabio Moon and Vasilis Lolos. Way said that he gets along well personally and artistically with this group, who he believes are the ones doing “very exciting things in comics right now.” Way continues, “That's not to say there aren't other people doing very exciting things, but I think a lot of those people have chosen to go along the path of drawing mainstream superhero books. Which is totally great for them. But one of the things I find fascinating about guys like Gabriel and Fabio, to Vasilis and Becky, is that, given the opportunity to draw any of those mainstream characters, it would look extremely different,” the writer said. “I don't know when a larger comic audience will be ready for that kind of thing, but I kind of don't care to wait around for that. I think, personally, the X-Men should look like a weird European comic. Until people kind of come around to seeing it that way, it's not going to happen. I'd love to see a Wolverine book drawn by Vasilis. I'd love to see the Avengers drawn by Becky. But there's a specific thing going on. It's fine for mainstream comics, but what excites me is this very specific group of artists who are inspired by, not the bad infusion of manga in American comics, but almost as if an American was in Japan drawing manga. Really getting the spirit of Japanese comics as opposed to just drawing it like a manga book in order to sell more comics. Or people like Fabio and Gabriel who lean toward this very European sense of comics storytelling. That's really what appeals to me. I'd really rather see that, I'd really rather work with people who are doing that. That's what jazzed me up in art school, and it's one of the reasons that, coming out of art school, it was very difficult for me to get work, in that regard. I saw things always like some strange kind of European comic.” “Killjoys” will debut in 2010. So it's a dark comic about a guy who goes on a six issue mission to get his Ramones records back. No one would do that for My Chemical Romance...

lunes, 8 de marzo de 2010

miércoles, 3 de marzo de 2010

I'm A Fake - The Used ♥

Small, simple, safe price.
Rise the wake and carry me with all of my regrets.
This is not a small cut that scabs, and dries, and flakes, and heals.
And I am not afraid to die;
I'm not afraid to bleed and fuck and fight,
I want the pain of payment.
What's left, but a section of pygmy sized cuts.
Much like a slew of a thousand unwanted fucks.
Would you be my little cut?
Would you be my thousand fucks?

And make mark leaving space for the guilt to be liquid.
To fill and spill over and under my thoughts.
My sad, sorry, selfish cry out to the cutter.
I'm cutting trying to picture your black, broken heart.
Love is not like anything,
Especially a fucking knife!



Look at me.
You can tell,
By the way I move and do my hair,
Do you think that it's me?
Or it's not me?
I don't even care.
I'm alive, i don't smell
I'm the cleanest I have ever been.

I feel big, I feel tall, I feel dry.
Dry.
Just look at me, look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake.
Just look at me, look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake.

Do I drink?
Do I date?
I've got perfect placements.
all my ink
Satisfied, in your eyes.
I'm the biggest sin I've got right now.
I made sure I looked how I wanted to look.
The people around me,
The people surround me.

I feel big, I feel tall, I feel dry.
Dry.
Just look at me, look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake.
Just look at me, look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake.


Just look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake.
Just look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake.

My stomach hurts now,
And i'll tie it off in lace.
I pray, beg for anything to hit me in the face.
And this sickness isn't me.
And I pray to fall from grace.
The last thing I see is feeling.

And I'm telling you I'm a fake,
I'm telling you I'm a fake.
I'm telling you I'm a fake.
I'm telling you I'm a fake.
I'm telling you I'm...

Just look at me, look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake.
Just look at me, look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake.

Just look at me, look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake.
Just look at me, look at me now.
I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake, I'm a fake.


Fake!

Fake!

Fake!

Genuine fake!!!



lunes, 1 de marzo de 2010