New album, their debut for Atlantic, in stores October
23
U.K. alternative rock act Bush took the states by storm in 1994, infecting
the airwaves with five prosperous singles off their rookie release,
Sixteen
Stone: "Everything Zen", "Little Things", "Machinehead", Comedown",
and
"Glycerine. While Britain responded mildly to its native sons,
Bush soared
in the States; Sixteen sold more than six million copies, and their
1996
follow-up, Razorblade Suitcase, achieved platinum three times.
Bush's massive success is all the more impressive because they acquired
such
status on an independent label, the Interscope-distributed Trauma Records.
Now, Bush--which also changed managers recently--enters the major-label
universe on October 23 with Golden State, their premiere release off
Atlantic. Produced by David Sardy (Marilyn Manson, System of
a Down), the
opus contains 12 new tracks: "Solutions", "Head full of Ghosts", "Speed
Kills", "Superman", "Fugitive", "Hurricane", "Inflatable","Reasons",
"Land
of the Living", "My Engine is with You", "Out of This World" and "Float".
The rock-steady Golden State differs considerably from Bush's previous
two
outings; 1998's Deconstructed invited electronic wizards such as Tricky
and
Goldie to remix Bush essentials, and 1999's The Science of Things was
infused with programming, piano and strings. Lead singer
and guitarist
Gavin Rossdale tells Ice that Bush strove to keep Golden State
"band-centric. There's a tiny bit of programming on "Out of This
World"
(courtesy of Nitzer Ebb's Bon Harris, who also surfaces on 'Head Full
of
Ghosts' and 'Speed Kills'), but ... we wanted to make a band record."
He
adds "We decided to really keep the integrity of the band...it's a
return to
form, a return to the style we did our first two records in."
Rossdale wrote all 12 Golden State cuts in September and October 2000.
The
band devoted the better part of November to rehearsing the songs, then
entered Olympic Studios in London with Sardy in January 2001.
"We tracked
almost two-and-a-half months, so we did a lot of recording," Sardy
explains
to Ice.
Bush headed into the studio well prepared. "Everyone was rarin'
to go,"
Sardy says. "Even before I got involved, they were already rehearsing
like
crazy, a month [ahead of time]." Fifteen tracks were recorded
for Golden
State; the three extras left off the album were "Japanese Freight Train,"
"American Eyes," and "Fireball." Two more songs were abandoned
in the early
writing stages.
The band recorded all the tracks live with Sardy on his vintage 12-channel
Melbourne console, then resorted to Pro Tools afterwards for refurbishing.
Sardy says that while the band devoted a great deal of time to recording,
the process was much different than producing Marilyn Manson's latest
album,
Holy Wood. "It's a whole different thing," he observes.
"Bush are more
about the songs and performances. They're more into [sonics]
on a normal
level and Manson's into it on more of an insane, obsessed level.
The Bush
record is much more rockin' out, live performances."
When recording was complete, Bush and Sardy headed to Los Angeles headed
to
Los Angeles to mix the material. Rossdale sums up his experience
with a
sunny attitude: "We wanted to...be in L.A., get a new experience, drive
to
work...go on the Golden State freeway, through downtown. I like
that sense
of euphoria, of excitement...the Golden State. It's an exalted
state,
positive and open and warm and bright. Welcoming."
Rossdale says that he originally wanted to title the album Speed Kills,
a
phrase he picked up from the D.A. Pennebaker film The War Room, in
which
Clinton and Gore fight George Bush Sr. for the presidency. "They
have this
great slogan on the back of their shirts: 'Speed Killed Bush,"
Rossdale
recalls. "I liked the phrase so much that I started using it
in that song.
But as an album title, it's too aggressive--I didn't want 'kills' in
the
title." Rumors circulated about another album title--Solutions--in
the
early summer, but Rossdale denies that that moniker was ever considered.
As it turns out, the song "Speed Kills" also had an alternate title--"The
Things We Do." Says Rossdale of the album's first single, "Sometimes
the
worst things we do is to treat the people we love the worst."
The track is
followed by "Superman"; not simply a reference to the comic book hero,
Rossdale calls the subject "a mythical figure to elevate you
out of a
situation you couldn't humanly get out of. You need Superman
to come get
you out."
While the majority of the Golden State tunes are of a straightforward
rock
ilk, Rossdale points out variations in theme from one to the next.
He
expands on "Head Full of Ghosts": "Everyone has voices inside
their head
telling them to turn left or right, and sometimes the ghost is a rational
voice in your head. Sometimes you find yourself in a position
you never
thought you'd be." He also touches on "My Engine is with You":
"That's a
really fast love song. I really like the words in it, some of
the best
words I've done."
"Out of This World," Rossdale's favorite cut on the album, features
a guest
spot by Eric Stefani--brother of No Doubt's Gwen--on piano. Sardy
says the
track is "real chilled-out...[Rossdale] had a little guitar part and
a vocal
on it, and had no idea what that was going to be. I don't think
we even
demo'ed that one. He played it for [the band], and everybody
just started
playing it naturally. It was all about getting the right vibe
of the
moment, not necessarily overproducing it."
Both Rossdale and Sardy cite the high quality of the three tracks left
off
the album. "Japanese Freight Train" is "a bit of a grinder,"
according to
Rossdale. "When I listen to it, I'm sad it's not on the record.
But we
really wanted to have a 12-song album. I really hate long records,
no
matter who it is, 'cause they're so fucking boring." Sardy says
that
"Fireball" is "like old Wire meets second-record Buzzcocks. It's
real
simple, real minimal. There's a kick in the chorus..."
Rossdale claims
that "American Eyes" was also a possible album closer, but lost out
to the
fitting "Float": "We wanted to have an uplifting feeling; it
['Float'] made
sense at the end of the record in the same way that 'Solutions' was
the
right song to start with."
Rossdale adds that the Golden State song sequence came off without a
hitch:
"Normally, we'd do it all together. But I did an order, and everyone
was
like, 'Yeah, that's cool.' The greatest most effortless one we'd
ever
done."
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