Hardcore / Progressive
A long time ago, someone said, âWhat doesnât kill you makes you stronger.â Chances are that dude is dead (actually, it was Nietzche and heâs been dead for years), but those seven little words have not only become a modern philosophical and medical catchphrase, but a signpost to life for The Dillinger Escape Plan. Thatâs because despite a multitude of major incidents and setbacks that would have most other bands either releasing substandard, unfocused material or disbanding and retreating to the comfort of the 9-to-5 world, Dillinger have continually defied the odds and returned more powerful with each and every impediment. With their newest album, Ire Works, theyâve overcome yet another hardship and, almost unsurprisingly, have followed it up with a career-defining recording. You canât kill The Dillinger Escape Plan. And they only get stronger.
A quick look at the untimely hardships that have befallen Dillinger and the results:
- Just weeks after the bandâs first ever North American tour, original bass player Adam Doll became paralyzed from the chest down after a minor car accident. That tragedy was followed by the departure of original guitarist John Fulton. Still, in the months that followed, Dillinger wrote and recorded, Calculating Infinity, the landscape-changing extreme music album.
- At the height of Calculating Infinityâs popularity, shortly after finally shoring up their line-up with bassist Liam Wilson, original vocalist Dimitri Minikakis left the band. Dillinger emerged with Irony is a Dead Scene, a groundbreaking collaboration with Mike Patton and, later, with vocalist Greg Puciato, one of the most talked about and imposing frontmen metal/hardcore has ever seen.
- Despite losing the services of guitarist Brian Benoit due to nerve damage in his left arm/hand â although he has a home in Dillinger if/when heâs ready to resume playing - and guitarist Ben Weinmanâs continual abuse of his body against numerous doctorâs orders, Dillinger still continue to consistently deliver violently energetic and unpredictable live performances around the world.
At the same time there have been contract renegotiations, lawsuits, major labels lurking in the wings and unstoppable multi-month long tours even as gas prices go through the roof. All the while, Dillinger have remained a self-managed, DIY entity, retaining more artistic integrity and independence than any other band racking up six figures sales totals.
And now, another hurdle - one that many have already assumed to be the most insurmountable of them all: the departure of drummer Chris Pennie.
However, the armchair quarterbacks proclaiming the death of the band in light of this latest line-up change should know better: you canât kill The Dillinger Escape Plan and the incendiary Ire Works proves that even if diverging life plans, the limits of the human body or the cosmic forces of the universe try to stop this band, their only response is to not only come out on top, but raise the bar ever higher, push boundaries further and spit battery acid in the face of adversity. The Dillinger Escape Plan will always triumph.
âI am fully excited about the songs we have written, without hesitation or question,â says founding and sole remaining original member, Weinman. âIf someone were to say to me âWow, you have really written an amazing record,â for the first time, Iâd say âYeah, I agree,â and fully believe it. Itâs not that I think that these songs necessarily live up to peopleâs expectations or something. I mean, you can never please everyone and the longer you have been the around the harder that gets. I mean, does sex ever really get better with your wife or girlfriend? No! Even if she all of a sudden starts dressing like Wonder Woman and flies onto your cock after swinging in on a chandelier, itâs still her. We dress up like Wonder Woman and fly in on a chandelier with Ire Works. And while it may not be the first time we have fucked you, we are still fucking you harder then ever!â
The Dillinger Escape Plan story begins eleven years ago in suburban, Northern New Jersey when Weinman, Pennie, Minikakis, Doll and Fulton got together to play the music they wanted to hear. An old cliché, yes, but the sounds racing and raging through the heads of these five was unlike anything metal or hardcore had heard previous and instead of settling for an approximation of what they were hearing internally, DEP pushed themselves to the limit, ensuring they played what they envisioned. First, a self-titled EP; then the Under the Running Board EP, their Relapse debut and quite frankly the most unrestrained and invigorating seven minutes of your life. Calculating Infinity followed, an album that commanded, and still commands, respect and reverence from press and the public. It scored accolades from the moment it was released, obtaining a strong showing in Terrorizer magazineâs top albums of the 90âs, despite its September, 1999 release date and was recently inducted into Decibel magazineâs Hall of Fame. After that, Irony is a Dead Scene, before the bandâs second album, Miss Machine, a diverse offering that tempered their complex sonic mathematics with stream-lined electronic-based compositions.
Ire Works comes on the heels of Pennie leaving to join the ranks of Coheed & Cambria. On the surface, this probably seems like an egregious, soul-ripping blow, one that could understandably be cause for some form of towel to be thrown in. Pennie was a founding member, Weinmanâs right-hand man in the song writing process and achieved respect from both the underground and mainstream drum world. Undaunted, DEP re-grouped with the dynamic Gil Sharone (Stolen Babies) manning the drum throne and have found themselves to be a more efficient machine than ever before. Those whoâve witnessed Sharone perform with Stolen Babies are well aware of his wealth of talent and ability to tackle diverse and complex styles. When Dillinger introduced Gil via a series of YouTube âwebisodesâ early last summer, it became obvious that Sharone would provide incredible stamina, a bricks-and-mortar backbone and be able to push the bandâs rapid fire rhythmic sense to new ridiculous heights.
âThe circumstances that led up to the split were going on directly for about 8 months, and indirectly for a couple of years,â explains Puciato. âIt should have happened sooner, but we were both going down a path where I think we were having a playground stare-off of sorts; seeing who would back down or give in. He didn't wanna leave and we were maybe afraid to lose him because of his talent. I think we had kinda been trapped into thinking that we needed Chris' talent to continue when in actuality, there were a lot of very talented drummers jumping to work with us. Finding Gil and playing and recording with him has made it obvious to me just how fucked up things had been for a long time. The energy, enthusiasm, positivity and sense of unity is higher than it has been in years. Itâs a great feeling.â
âGil is amazing,â adds Ben, âand has made me enjoy playing music again. He is such an amazing musician. He approaches drums similarly to how I try to approach guitar. I mean even the technical and fast stuff has so much feel and swing to it when he plays. He is like a secret weapon.â
âBand morale has really kicked into high spirits,â explains Liam. âThere's a Rocky-ish vibe going around between Greg, Ben and I that was never there before.â
Even when you try and kill The Dillinger Escape Plan, they prevail.
With Ire Works, DEP continue to push the envelope. Where Calculating Infinity was an irascible, combustible technical tour-de-force and Miss Machine juxtaposed the bandâs explosive tech-metal song crafting with dark, mature melodies, Ire Works is all about channeling the collective experience and a lot of, well, ire.
âI would say these songs are just pissed off,â describes Ben. âThey are just fucking angry, man. Even the less aggressive songs are just angry as fuck. This record is all about feel. Even the electronic elements on this record are very emotionally driven.â
âHonestly,â adds Greg, âthis record is the record that I think really takes everything we were doing on Miss Machine and takes it as far as that can go. Itâs âSuper Miss Machineâ: the crazier stuff is not only more insane, but more aggressive, more intense, the song writing is better, the drumming is crazier, guitar, bass, vocals, production, everything is just better in every way.â
âWhen we put out Miss Machine we were hoping to broaden our sound, and sorta separate ourselves from the clones and one-trick-ponies we were being lumped in with,â explains Liam, adding his take. âI think we took a lot of risks with that record, but some of what came out wasn't as fully realized as what we're about to release. I think the aggressive songs on Ire Works are more clever, incising, sinister and snotty than anything we've released before; the more catchy material is more consistent, less of a departure from what I feel Dillinger fans expect - we're better songwriters now for having taken some of the risks we took on Miss Machine.â
Dillinger have never bowed to even the most debilitating of incidents and Ire Works illustrates just how driven they are to create. Even if it looks like theyâve just been taken out at the knees, they find a way to survive what looks to be a certain demise, coming back twice as good and ten times as powerful. For Weinman, Puciato and Wilson, itâs about letting this consume you 100% and giving a 150% in return or getting the fuck out. You not only hear this full-throttle approach in the music, see it in their charged live shows, but you witness it in the individual actions of the bandâs members. For instance, the time Ben drove directly to the airport for a European tour immediately after being told by a MD to go home, get some rest and heal up. More recently, Greg and Liam demonstrated their passion for DEP and belief in the new material by hopping in a car for a non-stop cross-country drive to Los Angeles studios, Sonikwire (where Sharoneâs drums were recorded) and Omen Room, where longtime Dillinger producer Steve Evetts now calls home.
âWell, it all started as a joke, and quickly evolved into a practical solution as to how to ship gear from the East Coast to the West Coast,â explains Wilson. âI think we also did it so we'd have something ridiculous to look back on and to have a more definitive transition between our Clark Kent home-life and the Superman Dillinger recording session we were about to dive head first into. It gave us more time than a flight would have to mentally prepare ourselves and to really talk about what we wanted to accomplish conceptually.â
âThe drive itself was pretty ridiculous,â says Greg. âWe more or less just tried to race out there and not sleep the entire time. We ended up taking about 40 some hours to get there and just got there totally fucked. We were on like 50 hours of no sleep and just totally ruined. It was fun though; when I'm old its gonna be better to be like, âHey, you remember driving out to California to record? That was insane!â We got pulled over three times and got $300 worth of tickets, but whatever. The story and memory is worth more than that.â
And, as Ire Works proves, all attempts to kill The Dillinger Escape Plan end up as fodder for a good story, more fuel for their undying flame and a monumental album. â Kevin Stewart-Panko
www.DillingerEscapePlan.com
www.MySpace.com/DillingerEscapePlan
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Download The DILLINGER ESCAPE PLAN's IM Icons, MySpace avatars, wallpapers, and banners and help spread the word on their new record Ire Works!
If you are in North America download them from here.
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Location: Highland Park, NJ
Members: Ben Weinman: Guitar / Greg Puciato: Vocals / Gil Sharone: Drums / Liam Wilson: Bass / Jeff Tuttle: Guitar
xXCut.2.PiecesXx
you guys are effin awesome
posted Oct 21
.
Thanks for coming to Austin last Apr. Thanks in advance
for playin in SA later this month =] cant wait.
posted Oct 08
LACEDindarkness
one of my favorite bands. i wish sikth was still
together. that would be the best fucking tour ever.
posted Sep 11
pesoj
great guys!!
posted Aug 05
Hi! I'm Ed-ible ----- …
u guys are effing crazy live WOW,,u were great at miami
warped tour!
posted Jul 21
@|3%
you guys are fucking gay. go suck some dick and stop
thinking you're the shit. cuz you arent, you're all a
bunch of stuck up assholes. why dont you make some
decent music while you're at it. huh? doubt it'll
happen anyway
posted Jul 18
Rock & Core on Skateboard
the best band in the fucking world from
Chile!!! http://www.purevolume.com/lasumadetodotumie
do
posted Jun 28
i AM pH
awesomeness personified
posted Apr 10