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ROLLING STONE INTERVIEW
Posted Feb
09, 2006 5:08 PM
Not
that long ago Blink-182 decided to take a pretty serious break.
Why that decision?
I put the band together when I was sixteen, and
now, you know, I'm thirty years old. I think people just grow
up and grow apart. It's like if you start dating someone as a
teenager and then you find yourself married later in life and
you're going, "Whoa, we're totally different [now]."
I think that was part of the reason.
All three of the band members had different goals
and different ways of running their personal and business lives.
It's hard when you're in a democratic band -- where you do things
based on what the whole band wants. I respect and honor it, but
it was getting to a point where it was a lot more than I wanted
to commit to. I needed to make some changes to be able to function
as a father to my kid to the best of my ability.
Did you immediately come up with the concept
of Angels and Airwaves?
When I decided not to continue with that part of
my life, I still wanted the same things that I wanted when I was
in Blink: I still wanted to be in the biggest band in the world,
and I still wanted to be the best songwriter that I can. And it
took me about three weeks to figure it out. I thought, "I
can create anything I want to create . . . And it's going to be
the most epic and anthemic and heroic music that I've ever made."
And that's where Angels and Airwaves came about.
How did the idea for the album's accompanying
movie come about?
At first it was going to be a documentary of what
I'm trying to do [with Angels and Airwaves], then the album started
getting really, really good. It's exactly where I wish I could
have taken my old band. I was looking at some of the footage about
a month ago, and I just saw someone who was scared to death but
absolutely full of passion and belief that he could pull something
off that's never happened in the history of rock & roll.
But the whole movie is this poetic metaphor about
how humans can create the worst thing in life -- war -- and the
best thing as well, which is love. It's a third CGI, a third documentary
and a third love story. So as you're watching the story and the
making of the record, it will come to life in a love story between
[two actors] and then go into planes arcing through space coming
down into a D-day of missiles exploding in a nebula. It's very
The Wall . . . but futuristic.
How did Angels and Airwaves form? Obviously,
you're coming from a band with a really specific chemistry . .
.
That was hard [because] I loved sharing a stage
with Mark and Travis. But that's not what I was looking for. I
didn't want the best musicians in the world; I didn't want guys
that I thought would add some crazy persona to the stage. With
Blink, people would go, "What's your message?" and we'd
go, "Fuck! We don't have a message!" With Angels and
Airwaves, it's absolute message; it's absolute . . . positivity.
I needed something that was organic. The first [rule]
was respect for the band members and respect for their families.
And the second rule was the ability to grow into a really hard,
predestined friendship.
What albums were you listening to for inspiration?
Anything surprising?
I ended up listening to a lot of Peter Gabriel,
U2, the Police, the Cure -- bands that got to stadium-level size.
I wouldn't listen to any independent rock bands, no cool punk-rock
bands, no arty Radiohead-type bands. None of it was good enough
for me.
I can listen to the Police and always go, "How
did they write a song like 'Every Breath You Take'?" I can
listen to U2 and list at least thirty songs that make me go, "How
the fuck did they do that?" I wanted to learn how music,
as mathematics, can touch an amazing amount of people.
So you've been shooting for something "timeless"
. . .
I want to come out with an album that people will
refer to twenty years from now as the album of this decade. [There
hasn't been] a record like that since Nirvana's [Nevermind] and
I don't think there's ever been a band as good as U2. But I'm
willing to take on that challenge.
Describe the live feeling with Angels.
Super-crazy visuals. Everything with the band, the
photos and the imagery, is very futuristic. It's all about beautiful
architecture, artistic photography and astronomy. I was always
a UFO space-freak, so now I get to have spinning planets in high
resolution behind my body as I play a song. You're going to feel
like you're in one of Stanley Kubrick's movies, or Star Wars.
What can we expect to hear first?
We're releasing a short film with the first song,
"The Adventurer." The whole thing is shot on 8mm black
and white, and it's very sci-fi. It kind of looks like George
Lucas' THX 1138, where it's all beautiful naked women and fast
cars and concrete and glass architecture.
The song was inspired by a friend who whose marriage
was kind of falling apart. It touched me so deeply that I was
up one night crying for him -- I felt so hurt. The chorus goes,
"Hey, yo/Here I am, and here we go/Life is waiting to begin."
It just keeps building and building and building, and says, "I
cannot live and I cannot breathe unless you do this with me."
Imagine you're still in love with someone and that
person doesn't love you back, and there's nothing you can do about
it. I don't wish that upon anybody.
ALEX MAR
Also
see:
See
Plus 44 section on aliens-exist.net.
Song Meanings
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