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Interview with Phil Fasciana
of Malevolent Creation
December 3rd 2007 by Dave Schalek
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* Please note, that although we believe in freedom of speech here at
Live 4 Metal, at the request of certain parties, parts of this
interview have been removed.
Prior to the Death By Decibels show at the House
of Blues in West Hollywood, I had the opportunity to interview Phil
Fasciana of Malevolent Creation
“Doomsday X” was released earlier this year and has been out for
awhile. Overall, are you pleased with the album, and how have you
reacted to the metal community’s response to the album?
Well, we’re completely happy with it, I mean, it took us some time
because it was weird writing songs on our own instead of doing it all
together. We were sending CDs back and forth to each other and we
rehearsed before we went into the studio together. Everything
surprisingly went smoothly. The recording of the album went well, and
we banged it out really fast. We’re totally happy with the result of
the album and from all of the reviews that I’ve read; we really
haven’t had any shitty ones. People are happy, it sounds like a
Malevolent album.
The writing and recording process was different
than from albums in the past?
Yeah, because all five of us don’t live together in the same state.
There are three of us in Florida and a couple of us in New York. Our
singer, Brett, is in New York.
You still have connections to Buffalo?
Yeah, Brett moved back up there, but, we made it happen. It took a
little longer than normal and it was a bit of a headache, but we’ve
been playing together long enough that everyone knew what was right,
and it all worked out.
Have the crowds responded positively to the new
songs?
Oh, yeah. We’ve been playing three songs off the new album, even
opening up with them, and so far, so good. Lots of positive responses.
You guys have been with Nuclear Blast since “The
Will To Kill”. Given that their roster is huge, are you satisfied with
their support?
Yeah, actually, they contacted us when we were in Europe touring for
“Envenomed”. We were able to eventually work out a deal as the German
guys over there are old school death metal fans. We knew that we
weren’t going to be at the top of their priority list as they have
shitloads of commercial bands that sell shitloads of records. As long
as we knew that our records would be in stores, and the distribution
issue was over with and there was some good promotion from magazines
and whatnot. Then, it’s up to us to produce a good record and tour to
support it. It’s worked out fine, especially since Gerardo Martinez
runs the (Nuclear Blast) U.S. office. Without him, a lot of shit
wouldn’t be happening. He is a huge factor of us still being a band.
Has this worked out better than Arctic?
Well, actually, Arctic is us and Arctic actually still owns these
albums. We’re on Nuclear Blast, but the albums are licensed to them.
They take full control over that, but, in reality, we still own these
records.
You retain the rights to your own art.
That’s right, especially after getting screwed over by Pavement. Our
attorney said that we could do this and not get gypped like we did.
Being with Nuclear Blast, however, we knew would work out very well
for Malevolent Creation. |
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How was the Death By Decibels tour
put together and when were you asked to join?
A couple of months ago. Our booking agent, Ash Avildsen
from TKO, who’s put together tours for us in the past, put
this one together and we’ve never had a problem. In the
past, we had problems with various booking agents that
would lie to us, issues with money, this and that. But,
with Avildsen, we’ve never had a problem. He’s put
together some good tours for us. He also did Summer
Slaughter and basically told Nuclear Blast, “This is what
I want to do” and have us with Vader. Of course, we’ve
been touring with Vader since 1995. It’s great to tour
with our friends, but the four other bands, I had never
even heard of them. It turns out, though, that they’re all
killer bands! I guess I’m not in the loop with the new
school stuff, you know, ha ha! I’m not a MySpace fanatic
or anything, but, it’s cool. A lot of these younger bands
with us are really good.
It’s good to see the headliners
giving the support to the younger bands.
Oh, yeah, sure, they’re all really good guys and girls
You guys have been to L.A. twice in
the last few months. Tell us a little bit about your
inclusion on the Gathering of Bestial Legion III show.
Also, no offence to Sadistic Intent/Possessed, but did you
guys feel slighted by playing underneath them?
I love Sadistic Intent and I’m still waiting for that damn
album to ever come out. We didn’t feel undermined or
anything like that. We knew that it was going to be a good
show regardless. Simply, we flew out, we played, and we
flew back. It was great.
Are there any plans to resurrect
Hate Plow?
Yes. I’m finally going to have some free time and we’re
going to put together this third album with Kam Lee as the
vocalist. The drummer is either going to be Derek Roddy,
or maybe the drummer for Abigail Williams. It’s going to
be nothing but speed, everything that we could possibly
do. I’m going to get the best people I know and friends to
make it easy on me. I played guitar and bass on both of
the previous albums, Rob Barrett didn’t even play on the
albums.I don’t recall, but is
Barrett credited on the albums?
Yeah, he’s credited with being in the band, but he never
wrote anything or anything like that. I put all of the
music down and he wasn’t even there. He did the tours and
stuff like that. He wanted to be involved, but he’s a lazy
bastard, ha ha! So, it’s going to me on guitar along with
J.P. Soars, who played in Divine Empire. He’s been out of
the metal loop for a little while, playing in jazz and
blues bands around Florida, but he’s got the itch to
grind. Just before this tour, I was talking to him and I
said, “Do you want to do the Hate Plow?” As far as I know,
Derek’s down for doing it, Kam, me, J.P., and Danny Lilker
on bass. We’ll record our tracks, send them to Danny, and
we’ll make it work. We’re going to try to make the fastest
fucking grind album that we possibly can. That’s what the
whole goal is, you know? It’s a band for fun, but when we
do it, I want to do it full force.
Lastly, do you think that the
overall state of death metal as a genre is good, and what
are you currently listening to?
Well, you know, with death metal there was that dead
period from the mid ‘90s to ’00, ‘01 or so, but, I have to
admit, everything’s gotten a lot better. As far as us
touring and other tour packages and stuff, metal’s
certainly a lot more popular now than it was back then.
There’s a lot of good bands that have put out good
records, so it’s cool. As for what I’m currently listening
to, I would have to say that we’ve been listening to a lot
of Saxon on the bus! We’re getting the old school, real
big time! After playing death metal all night, we don’t go
on the bus and put on more, ha ha! We’ve been listening to
a lot of old metal, lots of classics. The stuff we were
listening to when we were 12 or 13. Saxon, old Priest, and
old Maiden. That’s what I’m currently chilling with, ha
ha!
Phil, thank you very much for
your time.
Thank you, hope you enjoy the show.
Believe me, I will. And I did.
www.malevolent-creation.com
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