Bad Religion
"I-Im just a
voice among the throng who want a brighter destiny/They say with
me/We are the new america." "New America"
For Bad Religion, the story of "THE NEW AMERICA" is
about more than a distant point on the nations horizon.
Instead, its about a creative journey into the heart of the
unrelenting and demonstrably vital crews own punk rock
origins and unflagging thought-provoking purpose. "So many
bands are afraid to change," says singer and chief
songwriter Greg Graffin. "Theyre afraid to step
forward because theyre in a comfortable spot with their
audience and they dont want to mess up a good thing by
offering them a challenge. Bad Religion and punk have always been
about challenge and if we cant do that on this record, then
what good are we anyways."
In addition, the album features Mr. Brett Gurewitzs first
contributions to a Bad Religion album since 1994s RIAA
gold-certified "STRANGER THAN FICTION." Graffin
reunited with the bands former guitarist and a Bad Religion
founding member to write the tellingly-titled "Believe
It" which also includes a guitar solo performance from
Gurewitz. "To me, the song does sound like a long-lost
friend theres an almost indescribable familiarity,"
says Graffin. "Its just silly to deny that there is
something special between us. We are connected and we always will
be." Recording sessions for the groups fifth Atlantic
release found Bad Religion teamed with the famed Todd Rundgren in
the role of producer. For Graffin, Rundgrens participation
in the project effectively brought him together with one of his
true musical heroes and life-long influences. "Todd was kind
of an underground sensation back in 1974," reflects Graffin.
"Heres a guy who was making pop music but in a way
that you wouldnt hear on the radio. So much of my early
musical identity was wrapped up in the way he conducted himself.
At a very young age, it made me sensitive to the concepts of
popularity and underground ideology the idea that you can make
popular music and yet not exploit it to the extent that everyone
has heard of it. It made me feel kind of special knowing that
there was this underground that was growing. And only six years
later, when I was 15, I moved to L.A. and we started Bad
Religion."
Recording sessions for "THE NEW AMERICA" began last
fall with the band traveling to Rundgrens stomping grounds
on the remote Hawaiian island of Kauai from points across North
America: bassist Jay Bentley from Vancouver, guitarist Greg
Hetson from Austin, Texas, guitarist Brian Baker from Washington,
D.C., drummer Bobby Schayer from Seattle, and Graffin from
Ithaca, New York. With Rundgrens involvement with the band
growing out of a correspondence with Greg, all hands communed in
a rented barn-turned-studio located on the grounds of an old
sugar plantation. "The barn had these really wonderful
qualities that made it perfect for a recording space," says
Graffin. "It was quite a rustic experience but the sound
coming out of it was so sweet. It was one of the most
beautiful-sounding rooms Ive been in."
The band quickly set to work shaping Graffins demos into
what would become perhaps the groups most pointed,
energized, and communicative album of their now two decade-long
career complete with the blistering counterpoint of its Hetson
and Baker guitar work and propulsive Bentley/Schayer rhythms.
Guitar overdubs were cut at Rundgrens home studio while
vocal overdubs were recorded across the street in a small project
studio called Treble In Paradise. However, paradise did come with
its more mundane challenges. "There was a renter in the
neighborhood who took a little bit of umbrage to the constant
pounding of the drums," says Todd. "He got his revenge
one day by getting out the driving mower and driving it back and
forth against the side of the barn for about an hour kicking up a
ton of dust that covered everything, including all the recording
equipment. That was the down side of our tropical
recording."
Between recording sessions, Graffin explored the natural beauty
of Kauais rain forest while Bentley took to the surf, Bobby
practiced favorite Badfinger songs on his guitar, and Hetson and
Baker generally soaked up the islands atmosphere. The group
also took the opportunity to stage-test some of the new songs
with a one-off festival gig on the island of Oahu with the
Vandals and Offspring.
Key to the albums tone and direction, however, were Graffins
lengthy discussions with Todd, which took place even before many
of the songs had been written. With Rundgren acting as project
mentor, Graffin rose to new heights of creativity, performance,
passion, and perspective. Even having previously worked with
other such top producers as Andy Wallace and Ric Ocasek, Bad
Religions experience with Rundgren was a wholly new one.
"Todd is more philosophical," says Graffin. "When
it comes down to it, one of the most important things to have is
some internally consistent logic as to why youre making a
record. That was, from the get-go, Todds most important
role in all this to figure out how the songs should be put
together on the album so as to tell an accurate story of where
our heads are at. And if youre commenting on a social
situation, how do they relate to whats happening now. That
was a great education for me. It taught me so much about the
reason to make records and why certain records are great and
other ones fail."
"One thing I encouraged the band to do was to think from a
wiser place admit that you have been through certain experiences
and how those have tempered how you see the world," says
Rundgren, whose lengthy credits include his production of the New
York Dolls debut. "I was encouraging Greg not to be
self-conscious about writing things he really thought. But also,
the band does have an obligation to inspire as well as raise ire.
I think in that sense, the material has a prevailing thread of
optimism that is not necessarily present in most of their other
records."
On dramatic rock tracks ranging from the propulsive "Youve
Got A Chance" to the highly charged "Its A Long
Way To The Promise Land" and "A World Without
Melody," Graffin sings of a welling hopefulness tempered by
stark reality. "I dont want to live in a world without
melody," states Graffin. "But it seems like with
mass-marketing culture, we could easily descend into a world
without melody because individuality is not championed and is not
rewarded." Our turn-of-the-millennium moment is dramatically
surveyed with such lyrically probing numbers as the cyber-sexy
"I Love My Computer" (with keyboards courtesy of
Graffin) and the anti-anthem of the albums soaring title
track. "When I say, We are the New America, we
are a small group of people in America who believe we need a New
America," explains Graffin with a laugh. "And that New
America has got to be based on lessons that weve learned
from the past. And its gotta be sensitive to the mistakes
that weve made." At the same time, such songs as
"Whisper In Time" and "1000 Memories" find
Graffin taking an introspective walk through personal crisis,
powerfully related in embracable, universal tones. "A
Streetkid Named Desire" details his experience as a spiky
young punk overwhelmed by the indifference and hostility that
always seemed so close at hand. "I dont want to be Tom
Brokaw, one of these people whos a reporter who just tells
the facts and doesnt get emotionally involved in
anything," states Graffin. "If the songs are going to
have any impact, if theres gonna be any truth to my
analysis of the way things are, Ive got to show that Im
not only a world citizen but a real person."
Work on the album was completed with a final mix from of one of
rocks true studio legends, Bob Clearmountain. Graffin
explains the pairing of "THE NEW AMERICA" with the man
who mixed "BORN IN THE U.S.A.," saying with a laugh,
"Bob has kids who are big Bad Religion fans."
Musically, "THE NEW AMERICA" reveals the results of new
creative modes with such bold sonic statements as those of
"Youve Got A Chance," "A Streetkid Named
Desire," and "A World Without Melody." As true
evolutionary advancements in the repertoire of Bad Religion, the
tracks are dramatic testimony to the bands commitment to
progress. "Im in a much better state in my life,"
says Greg. "Im more able to see the future clearly,
accept who I am and my own shortcomings, and accept the privilege
of Bad Religion and my commitment to this tradition. I went
through a lot since Stranger Than Fiction, with Brett
quitting the band and my personal life in shambles but eventually
things pass. I think this album is on the cusp of a very
productive time in my life."
With "THE NEW AMERICA," Bad Religion adds fuel to the
fierce, inquisitive spirit and penchant for provocative
examination that took root with their founding in 1980 and
continued to bloom with such influential albums as "HOW
COULD HELL BE ANY WORSE?" (1982), "SUFFER" (87),
"NO CONTROL" (89), "AGAINST THE GRAIN"
(90), "GENERATOR" (92), "RECIPE FOR
HATE" (93), "STRANGER THAN FICTION" (94),
"THE GRAY RACE (96)," and "NO
SUBSTANCE" (98). It was in conjunction with the
release of "NO SUBSTANCE" that the band took the show
on the road as the headlining act on the extreme sports/music
carnival of the 1998 Vans Warped Tour. While traveling across
North America and Europe, the group earned numerous fan kudos for
their self-propelled Warped Tour radio station and wildly popular
outdoor BR BBQ Tent.
Outside the realm of Bad Religion, the five band members apply
their hard work ethic to any number of projects. In 1997,
Atlantic released Graffins more personal but no less potent
"AMERICAN LESION" solo album. 1999 saw the release of
the new self-titled album from D.C.s Lickity Split,
highlighted by guitar contributions from Brian Baker. The
always-on-the-go Hetson continues to play gigs with Punk Rock
Karaoke, which brings together members of NOFX and Social
Distortion, along with such guests as Mike Watt and Devos
Bob Mothersbaugh, to play classic punk and hardcore ditties with
audience members handling vocal duties. "Our credo is we
play, you sing," states Hetson. In addition to their
extensive creative output, the group continues to sponsor its own
Bad Religion Research Fund scholarship program for budding
geniuses in the cultural or physical science fields. The special
scholarship program was launched by the quintet in 1998 as a way
to endorse and support fresh talents in the cultural and natural
science fields. Graffin, who holds a degree in evolutionary
biology from UCLA and is working towards his PhD. at Cornell
University, typically takes charge of the application review
process with final decisions made by the band as a whole. "I
feel a sense of pride in being able to support someones
research endeavors," says Graffin. "The real reward for
the whole band is our being a part of higher education while
perpetuating the idea that Bad Religion has always stood for to
question the prevailing dogma. Its something you can do in
science, the humanities, and in entertainment as well."