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From the black ashes of Coal Chamber comes ex-front man
Dez Fafara like a bullet train. The next stop of his musical
journey is DevilDriver, which combines Nu-school brutal
groove with black metal guitar riffs in a way that will
run you over if you don’t hold your ground. If you’re
looking for a band that’s heavy as hell but doesn’t
sound like classic old school metal, these guys are for
you.
We caught up with the humble and down to earth Dez
before their Vancouver show, part of their current tour
that will bring them to the Ogden this Monday, February
2.
Kaffeine Buzz: I’ve read that
you and Evan Pitts (guitarist) got together with him
leaving you a note on a napkin in a diner. So how did
the rest of the band get together?
Dez: It happened pretty organically…a
lot of different people hanging out at my house barbecuing
and drinking tequila. The guys were from different smaller
bands in the area. They crumbled and came and went,
and during all this I was talking to the players trying
to get it all together. You never really know if it’s
the final lineup in a band until you go on the road
for a year; if this is going to be the life for those
people. What I did in the beginning is just make sure
everyone hung out and got along before anything else,
and we did. John Boeklin, the drummer, was originally
going to be our second guitar player until he decided
to get back behind the kit, because the kid is so good
at drumming.
KB: Damn, you’re kidding. He
was originally the second guitar player? That’s
impressive because I really like his drum style. I definitely
think he made the right choice.
Dez: Yea, when he decided to get behind
the kit we had to get another guitarist and found Jeff
Kendrick, who was friends with John Miller, the bass
player. On May 12th, my birthday, I was at this little
bar that I go to a lot. At 10:00am in the morning, listening
to the jukebox, I called Miller down. We did a bunch
of shots of whiskey and I asked him to be in the band
right then.
KB: I’m still surprised about
John B, because like you said, he is such a badass behind
the kit.
Dez: Shit, he’s a badass on
guitar too. I firmly believe that he will be bringing
a lot to the next album guitar-wise. I have a great
bunch of guys behind me now and I really hope this lifestyle
is for them. I hope that 5 years from now we will be
looking at each other on the tour bus going “Everyone
doing alright? Yea? Good, Good.” Everyone’s
loving this life so far. We’ve already been out
on some significant tours, really traveling across America,
and they seem to love it.
KB: So those guys really haven’t
done any major touring with the smaller bands they were
in before?
Dez: They haven’t done any touring
at all. They haven’t even been away from their
homes, you know. So it’s bitchin’ that they’re
taking to it. Plus, I was used to being on two tour
busses and a Mac truck full of equipment. We toured
in an RV with Superjoint Ritual for 3 months straight.
So the fact that they could take that was cool; it made
me view them as pirates.
KB: So tell me a little about the
name DevilDriver. Where did that come from?
Dez: We used to be DeathRide, but
we had to change that, and quick. The album was about
to come out. At points we were in the studio with a
hundred names written on a piece of paper and none of
them would work. My wife was going through one of our
witchcraft books and found it. Italian witches, known
as “Strega”, ring their bells to drive away
evil and call them “Devildrivers”. So this
was just perfect. I was on the phone with Evan when
she told me and he loved it. That was it; it really
explained what we are, trying not to be like anyone
else, in essence, driving away the evil bullshit in
the industry. You can look into it as much as you want,
ya know. Just a cool name we found in a book, or that
perfect name that defines us.
KB: So how do you go about writing
your lyrics? What’s a day in the life of Dez when
he’s writing?
Dez: Well it strikes me in the weirdest
moments. Late at night I’ll just sit and write.
I’ll be in a diner and have to grab a napkin and
a pen. How I write an actual song is listening to a
tape of the music. I have this thing where I can write
really quickly and have the song done easily when I’m
listening to the music. A lot of the time I just sit
and write prose and poetry. Right now I’ve got
probably over 400 “songs” that aren’t
really in song structure right now. So a lot of the
time I’ll go back into those books and pick out
what would be perfect for a song that the band has started.
KB: So with John B being a drummer
and guitarist, do you guys ever switch up to where each
of you will bring in another aspect of a song, like
someone bringing you lyrics to build off of?
Dez: I’ve never been one that
could sing other peoples lyrics. I just can’t.
I suppose if someone brought something in, I would try
but I doubt it would work.
KB: I’m sure it has to come
from within to really put your all into it.
Dez: Yea, but as far as the music,
everyone brings so much to the table. Our bass player
also plays guitar, so there you have four guitar players
in the band basically. (laughs)
KB: (laughing) So I bet there are
a lot of riffs coming in, eh?
Dez: Yea. Evan is up until 5am every
night playing his guitar writing riffs. This next album
we are really going to step it up a great deal. We want
to do 5-7 albums of pure brutality. An album a year,
which not a lot of bands do. The next time we record
an album we are also going to record a few covers of
either heavy songs or crazy classics that we turn into
brutal songs. So say you get an album release on January
whatever, a few months later you’ll get another
EP of 5 or 6 songs you can get into, instead of having
to wait a full year for the next full length. The label
is 100% behind us in anything we do, so we just want
to bring the fucking music, ya know?
KB: Absolutely. That’s what
we want to hear. So out of my own personal curiosity,
what’s the significance of the face tattoo?
Dez: Well first off I have found that
the Maori tribe in New Zealand is really, really cool.
Along with other cultures, I find that it’s just
really beautiful. That as well as the basic “fuck
you” aspect of tattooing your face, it goes along
with other aspects of my life, doing what you want to
do.
KB: So delving into the music itself,
can you tell me a little bit about the track “Swinging
the Dead” and what the hell “Rock and Roll
Haunted” means?
Dez: (laughs) Good one. “Rock
and Roll Haunted” is about a lifetime of touring,
which I’ve feel like I’ve already done.
“Swinging the Dead” for me is two things.
One, its [about] people that are standing in the pit
and being dead, not moving; and two, being on a tour
bus as long as I have. It’s making myself get
up and going, swinging the dead you know, like the words,
“get it up, fuck it up.” It’s telling
myself, come on lets go!!
KB: How about the track “Revelation
Machine”?
Dez: That’s talking about bringing
about a new kind of scene, a revelation. Nobody wants
to be inside one barrier like, “I’m only
black metal” or “I’m only death metal.”
That sucks to be stuck in one little area. It’s
just about bringing something different.
KB: I think lyrically one of my favorite
songs on the album is “I Dreamt I Died”.
I love the line “Greeted by a man Saint someone,
said how’s the ride son? / It’s been alright,
at times a little rough, why am I here? / You did alright,
lived a little dark and that’s alright / ‘Cause
we made the darkside and the lightside, so have no fear.”
I was wondering if you really dreamed that or is it
just a story about a possible dream?
Dez: I actually did. I woke up about
3:30 in the morning and went out into the living room,
lit a bunch of candles and wrote most of it down. I
went back to bed, read it the next day and most of it
was there, so I finished it in the studio.
KB: So you have a wife and kids. Tell
me how it works having a family and being on the road
so much.
Dez: Well my family knows what I do.
I don’t know how it works, it just does. Touring
is in my blood as much as having a family. We just try
to make it work as much we can. I spend as much time
at home as I possibly can when I’m not touring.
Otherwise I make sure I’m in constant contact
with my family when I’m on the road. Nothing is
going to change anytime soon. I’ll be on the road
for the next 10 years straight probably and my family
understands that.
KB: Well, you have to stay on the
road when you have more of an underground metal band,
not having that radio hit to bring in money.
Dez: Yea, and I refuse to make something
just to have a radio hit. I’d rather make something
from my heart. And I love touring man. Half of me can
sit on my floor and play Legos with my 6 year old, and
the other half of me is the pirate that has to be on
the road with a bottle of rum in my hand going nuts
every night. It’s a weird diversity I know, but
I just have to work it out.
KB: Well I caught you guys at the
small show in Ft. Collins at the Starlight with Superjoint
Ritual and I could tell that you were really having
a good time on stage. It was like you finally had the
band together that you wanted after being in the trenches
for the past ten years with Coal Chamber. You really
were enjoying what you’re doing, which you don’t
always see a lot in bands that tour constantly.
Dez: I’m having a great time
up there; my microphone is my psychiatrist (laughs).
And I have found a group of guys to play music and that’s
all I ever want to do. I am a lot happier in this project.
I sacrificed a lot of money and commercial success to
do something that made me happy and is a little more
of where my heart is at. People have been accepting
it and I say thanks to all of them. I’m going
to keep bringing it.
KB: To be more on the underground
side of things, I think you guys have done really well
with your first tour. You’re getting a lot of
good press and are getting the name out really well
so far.
Dez: Thanks. The album has only been
out a little while now and it’s done over 30,000,
which isn’t too bad without radio airplay. People
are buying it and coming to the shows, so it’s
a great thing. I worked hard to make sure I can make
the transition go down properly. In my previous band
I was the heavier element. Now I’m going where
my heart is and I hope the other guys from Coal Chamber
are going where their hearts are, giving those fans
more to listen to as well.
KB: One thing that really interests
me in my reading on Coal Chamber was, you said a Democracy
didn’t work in that band and that DevilDriver
is more of a Monarchy of sorts, with you being the lead.
Why do you think that way?
Dez: Well in Coal Chamber, we were
such different people that I don’t know how we
did anything cohesive in the first place. We were never
in the studio together writing or recording. It was
very strange how that band worked. Even in a band that
is a democracy, someone will have to initiate the right
thing to do. Of course in DevilDriver, I take into consideration
everything of what the others think. At this point in
my life, I’m taking responsibility for the other
people that are responsible for what goes on in my life;
make sense? I can’t have anyone ever dictate to
me again what I should play or sing, what tours we should
do, anything. So I’m the final word on things.
But you know, the band thinks that I am a great leader
and I feel like to be a great leader you have to be
a great listener. These guys are really easy to lead
because they are really easy to listen to. No one has
any big wants; all they want to do is play heavy music,
that’s what we all want so it works.
KB: So you’re not a dictator
to the point where if someone is really against something,
that you would make them do it regardless?
Dez: Well that’s tricky and
it all depends. I do what is good for the band as a
whole, not myself, my ego or anyone else in the band
individually. I come from the most humble place, but
I do have the final say. For example, if no one would
have wanted to do the Superjoint tour, which of course
they did and were all freaked out (laughs), but if they
hadn’t, I would have put my foot down and said
we were going to do it. It would have been the best
decision for the band. It really depends on what the
circumstance is. I run my business extremely level headed
where as in Coal Chamber I don’t think that there
was one level head that prevailed for eight years.
KB: Can you give any advice to bands
that are having personality problems and are in a similar
situation as that?
Dez: If you can’t get along
with someone that stands next to you on stage, just
don’t play music with them, ‘cuz there’s
a million other people out there that play music. Don’t
waste your time. You know when you’ve been dating
a girl for months and you finally come home and realize
that it’s not going to work? Man there’s
a million girls; go get another one. And listen; don’t
sacrifice friendship just to be in a band either. If
you’re friends with people, and when you get in
a band together, you’re not friends, don’t
sacrifice the friendship. Just don’t be in the
band. It’s not worth it, and this is why I say
that every band should have a leader to make decisions,
otherwise decisions won’t get made properly. Everyone
will have their own agenda in front of them instead
of the good of the whole group, and you can’t
have that. You have to think of what’s best of
the whole group, and if you are it should be pretty
easy to make those decisions.
KB: So are all of those personality
differences finally what broke apart Coal Chamber?
Dez: Honestly man, we were just together
for a really long time. I had a good time in the band.
I got to sing and tour with Ozzy, Nikki Six, Black Sabbath,
and Pantera. We toured all over the world playing in
front of 15 to 110,000 people. We had a good run. We
helped start a whole scene, spawning a lot of other
bands. So it is what it is. We had that good run but
now its time to move on. I wanted to do something that
I could listen to when I woke up in the morning, something
more from my own heart and I feel like that’s
DevilDriver. I don’t write anything but the lyrics,
but when they bring the music and I sort of decide what
riffs are used to compliment my singing, especially
making sure this shit is brutal.
KB: So a lot of people wonder if you
guys are still together and DevilDriver is a side project.
Dez: No, Coal Chamber is absolutely
not together. We will probably never speak or play another
show together. It’s done. It had its time in the
sun and was great while it lasted, but its time to go
about my life now, and I don’t mind answering
stuff about Coal Chamber because it was such a huge
part of my musical career, but its time to move on.
KB: Understood, honestly I tried to
put together questions that didn’t mention Coal
Chamber, but man it was impossible. I think we just
needed a little closure.
Dez: No Problem man.
KB: So what are the future plans for
DevilDriver? You guys are such babies in the scene right
now, how do you plan to step up?
Dez: We just want to tour our asses
off and play with some great bands that we love and
get our music out there. We plan on making a second
album within a year, we are looking forward to going
to Europe, and there is talk of some other big tours
coming this summer. We’re on the perfect tour
right now because we are doing six nights in a row with
one night off, so that’s the kinda shit we are
looking for. We’ve got 40 days on, and five days
off and we love it. We’ve all got it in our blood.
That’s what we established early on, making sure
everyone is all about touring. I love the road and I’m
addicted to people every night. I’ve got to have
a microphone in my hand, you know how it is when you
get three or four shows in a row and you get in the
groove, I love that feeling.
KB: Well do what you want to do because
a lot of people out there are digging it. Any closing
thoughts?
Dez: Yea if anyone is in Denver the
night before we play, Hank Williams III will be performing
at the Ogden, so definitely come check that out. He
first does this set where he is like his grandfather,
but I think it’s better because he’s such
an outlaw. Then he goes into this set called “Assjack,”
which is this heavy metal shit and it is impressive,
to say the least.
KB: Right on, well have a great show
in Vancouver. We’ll see you in February at the
Ogden.
DevilDriver will be at the Ogden Theatre on Colfax on
Monday Feb 2nd with Opeth and Moonspell. For more info
check out www.devildriver.com
or www.roadrunnerrecords.com/devildriver/,
where you can also view their debut video, “I
Could Care Less”.
Drew Wright, January 29, 2004
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