LOS ANGELES —
Blink-182 recently spent the night in jail.
No, not as inmates. That was their teenage
years (Tom DeLonge when he was 18, Travis Barker 15, to
be specific). The older, more mature Blink-182 were only
behind bars for the sake of work. The
punk trio shot their latest clip, for the new single "Feeling
This," at the abandoned Lincoln Heights Jail north
of downtown Los Angeles.
"The idea is that it's a very institutionalized
school," singer/bassist Mark Hoppus explained on the
set. "It's kind of a combination of prep school and
reform school, and it's very repressed and kids are being
held down. There is a lot of authority and a lot of strict
regiment, and the kids lash out and take over the school
and destroy the place."
"It's a video about the surreal imagery
of kids being in school, [but it] feeling like a jail,"
singer/guitarist Tom DeLonge added. "When you get in
that mindset for a long period of time, I think you start
to look at your teachers in a different light."
Fans who remember Blink-182 for mocking boy
bands and taking it all off in past videos might be surprised
to see the band simply performing in "Feeling This"
— or providing "the soundtrack to the chaos,"
as Hoppus put it.
"When the making of this video came up
in discussion, there's a couple things that were really
important to us," Hoppus said. "We wanted it to
be looked at like an art piece, because the album that we
just got done making, we looked at it that way and it took
us almost a year to make. Everything from the artwork to
the way the songs worked together to how the songs were
recorded to what the songs were written about are done in
a way to resemble kind of an art project."
To capture their vision, Blink-182 enlisted
David LaChapelle, the artsy photographer who directed Christina
Aguilera's "Dirrty" video, among others.
"He does these crazy, crazy photos of
all different types of things that take you to a different
place, and the videos always resemble his vision,"
Hoppus said of LaChapelle, who once dressed Blink-182 as
garbage men for a photo. "His vision is completely
wacked out and twisted, which is exactly what we love."
LaChapelle's vision for "Feeling This"
ranges from an evil prison warden cracking a whip at marching
school kids to escapees ripping their uniforms and doing
acrobatic moves down the hallways.
"What's weird about the video is there's
these people that can do things with their body in very
little fabric that will amaze you and it's great,"
DeLonge said. "They're called women. No, but there's
these guys doing flips and weird sh--, it's crazy."
"Feeling This" was the first song
Blink-182 recorded for their untitled (not self-titled)
new album, due November 18.
"It's a song about the two sides of sex,"
Hoppus said. "One side being very lustful and passionate
and the other side being very romantic and loving. And so
the verses are Tom screaming about a situation, a very lustful
situation. And the chorus is a lot more romantic and a lot
more, I don't know what to say ... poetic, yeah."
Hoppus, DeLonge and Barker picked "Feeling
This" as the first single because they felt it was
representative of the transition the band has undergone
since Take Off Your Pants and Jacket.
"It definitely lets you discover a few
more things that we've been doing," DeLonge said. "It's
a good introduction to what the record showcases later,
'cause the record is an hour long and much different in
so many ways than what we've done in the past, so I think
this song is a good indicator of different musical directions.
But nothing on the record sounds alike, so I kind of just
contradicted myself."
The song and the video may seem to be unrelated,
but the band insists they tie together.
"The boys and the girls are separated
[throughout] the whole video and they finally get to meet
up and they're touching each other for the first time,"
DeLonge explained. "It's kind of a release of sexual
energy."
"Like an orgasm," Barker added.
The "Feeling This" video will debut
on "Making the Video" later this month.
This report is from MTV News.
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