Tech-Death titans ARCHSPIRE will be live premiering their brand new studio documentary, “Bring Back the Danger,” today, December 22 @ 20:00 CET. The clip gives a behind-the-scenes look at the making of the band’s critically acclaimed new album, “Bleed the Future”. The band will be present in the live chat taking questions from fans. You can set a reminder and watch the trailer here:
ARCHSPIRE comments, “A few years ago, someone in our band had the BRILLIANT idea to bring in a videographer to film the writing and recording process of our most recent album ‘Bleed the Future.’ So after dozens of hours of editing down the footage of us talking about our penises, our videographer Connor Gilkinson managed to scrape together this documentary. It takes place between August 2019 and December 2020, along with some footage of our album release shows November 2021. We hope you enjoy it!“
ARCHSPIRE’s 2017 “Relentless Mutation” was a cavalcade of speed and extremity — blasting, accelerating, and, in partial reference to its title, “mutating” as each song unfolded, all the while rapid-fire, shotgun vocals blurred the lines between a man’s throat and additional instrument. It was, unquestionably, an innovation of sound and technique — ARCHSPIRE had broken the speed barrier while creating songs memorable as they were unabashedly extreme for extreme metal.
Thus, the pressure was already there to top “Relentless Mutation” when the band started to compile new songs in 2018. The global pandemic heightened the situation (read: no touring, expanded free time) and caused ARCHSPIRE to turn inward and apply additional rigor to their songwriting process, albeit painstakingly so. But by the end of the fraught calendar year that was 2020, the band emerged with their fourth studio album, “Bleed the Future”.
According to the members of ARCHSPIRE — vocalist Oli Aleron, guitarists Dean Lamb and Tobi Morelli, bassist Jared Smith, and drummer Spencer Prewett — they originally went into the making of “Bleed the Future” under the idea they would finish the album in between the various tours scheduled for 2020. Of course, none of that happened, prompting the band to do more pre-production than at any time in their career. ARCHSPIRE then subjected the album’s eight songs to near-constant critiquing that ensured they came away with a product, that in their estimation, is their best to date.
“The benefit we had was that Relentless came out in 2017”, says Lamb. “Since then, we toured more than we ever did before. We had the viewpoint of ‘What do crowds like? What parts should we write more of? What parts do people give us good feedback on?’ We wanted to expand and write those parts more consistently — there are more hooks and when we do have hooks, we wanted to repeat those parts so people will know that this is the catchy part of the song.”
“The most important thing was that we had clever songwriting,” adds Prewett. “We wanted the album to be more accessible to more people but still keep it extreme, fast and technical. So, we changed our process this time. We recorded rehearsal every day and listened to what we did afterward. We’d then come back to the jam spot and change riffs and ideas based on what everyone was thinking about during the week. It resulted in an album that everyone was happier with.”
ARCHSPIRE also had the stated goal for “Bleed the Future” that they wanted to get faster. While such a feat may defy reason given their previous output, the band wrote their fastest song to date — the album-closing ‘AUM’, a cut that opens up with an audio recording of a German friend of Prewett’s who, according to the drummer, enjoys ragging on ARCHSPIRE.
Comedic clips aside, ‘AUM’, caps off an album that pushes the boundaries of speed but also is textured — Smith’s ethereal basslines often serve as mid-song interludes, while Lamb and Morelli weave melodic, spiraling guitar lines that annihilate the fretboard during ‘Abandon the Linear’, ‘Bleed the Future’ and ‘Acrid Canon’. Accordingly, the members of ARCHSPIRE were keenly aware of the expectations placed upon them after the success of “Relentless Mutation”.
The online comments regarding whether they could top “Relentless Mutation” were also occasionally on their minds when composing “Bleed the Future” and prompted the band to ensure that all five members were happy with everything — down to the last riff, vocal line, bass run, and drum pattern.
“Audience expectation is really important,” says Lamb. “If we leave the jam spot and everyone is stoked on a song, it’s pretty likely that the audience will be stoked. We have the expectation of the audience, but we also have to be pumped about the music. I feel the proudest of the music. We spent more time on the songs and got better at writing. I feel it’s better music.”
“It’s an extremely tedious writing process,” adds Smith. “If anyone isn’t feeling a riff, we scrap it and have to find something we’re all happy with. It can be super-frustrating at the moment, but in the end, we have something better. We want everything we write to be a step up and I think we achieved that with Bleed the Future.”
The album is accompanied by a concept developed by Aleron that begs the question: What happens when humans start giving birth to non-humans? Born from a weird dream the vocalist had, “Bleed the Future”’s concept does not have finality or a conclusion. It does, however, posit a few ethical dilemmas to tie into ARCHSPIRE’s long-running science fiction themes.
“I thought about what if those things they were giving birth to could actually benefit them in the future so they wouldn’t want to reject them,” says Aleron. “What would happen to the humans that weren’t born? Would they go to a different dimension? I played with that whole idea because I hadn’t seen a horror movie where that was the theme. It worked for all the songs. The only social commentary is that people don’t know what they’re giving birth to — if you put someone on this planet, you don’t know whether they’re going to be good or evil.”
“Bleed the Future” was recorded in October and November 2020 at Flatline Audio in Colorado with producer/engineer Dave Otero. This was the second consecutive album the band worked with Otero. According to Morelli, the recording process was seamless. “Dave was already familiar with what we each can do individually,” he says. “This time, he was more prepared to tackle those elements. How he tracks was more focused on what we were capable of and I think it really shows here.”
As live show activity for 2021 hangs in the balance (ARCHSPIRE currently has dates lined up for November), the pandemic has prompted many bands to re-think their new album release dates as well as how to stay visible in a world currently without touring. But, with a fanbase that has embraced the band’s online presence that includes playthroughs, tutorials, and now, cooking shows (!), ARCHSPIRE heads into the “Bleed the Future” album cycle the benefactors of their commitment to touring and, most of all, position as one of death metal’s most forward-thinking bands.
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Photo: (c) Shimon Karmel
Nicolae Baldovin
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