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March 23, 2008

just a poem i wrote !


                               " FALLEN ANGEL"                     Weep little Angel weep....your lost soul is fast asleep...nor heaven or hell can help you now,but all you can do is slowly drown...the darkness has finally overcome, no sign of light will ever come...I've never encountered such a lost broken soul, so tormented and lost,the story never to be told...awaken little broken angel,awake from your slumber...A cry for redemption a bekoned plea, come with me now,no need to be on bended knee...follow me , follow me,the final time has come,  to face the darkness, from no love from above.It  is all over now, just one more plea, I'll take care of you now, this you will finally see.    written by, none other than me ."Embracethefire."                                                                                  


Posted on 03/23/2008 8:10 PM Comments (1)

February 22, 2008

In addition to the HIM : The average sixth graders music ...

Just a little more info on this subject, and a interesting video to follow...here's the link to the page  i found this from..                   http://www.foxcarolina.com/news/15353196/detail.html ..... i'm a huge HIM fan and i think this  is a bunch of shit ..just my personal opinion...and i will defend ville.. the band and their wonderful music!!!!!
Posted on 02/22/2008 1:03 PM Comments (5)

November 23, 2007

interview with ville and mige

Intervew with Ville Valo and Mige Paananen
Since October 18, 2007, HIM have been on tour supporting their latest release of Venus Doom. It is now October 26 and the band is in St. Louis to perform at the Pageant. On this cold and rainy night, lead singer Ville Valo and bassist Mikko (Mige) Paananen offer Judakris a bit of shelter inside their tourbus for an exclusive interview.
As my friend A and I enter the bus, we are immediately impressed with the amount of Halloween decorations that take up every inch of the place. Ville and Mige stand up to greet us and offer us refreshments: coffee, water, or beer. As we get situated in the lounge area A makes an observation about the amount of yellow crime tape. As it turns out, the tape is real and not exactly a planned acquisition. According to Ville, after their recent performance in Washington D.C. someone got shot about 6 feet away causing their bus to become part of the crime scene. The band was not allowed to leave until the investigation was over. Once it was, they drove away with the tape and decided to put it to good use.
We were allotted ten minutes for the interview, and it seemed a shame to have to get serious. I don't even take my sweater jacket off because I am worried about running out of time. But, when it is all said and done, the interview stretches into just over an hour, 15-20 minutes before the band is scheduled to appear onstage. And, it honestly doesn't feel like an interview as much as it does a casual conversation. Ville is intense but both he and Mige are extremely warm and personable and very good listeners. There is not a hint of bravado during the entire conversation. They take pity on an interviewer who is not just a writer, but a fan as well. Looking back, it all could have gone so terribly wrong. It could have, but it didn't.
I have the latest issue of Blender on me, in which a letter to the editor references Ville's comment on marketing HIM dildos (with realistic casting) and states that she would be most interested in Linde's because "he must be packin!" That's where we begin, but during the course of the interview we hit a number of topics including where Ville stands with writing the next James Bond theme song, the things they miss most about home, lessons learned, and of course, Venus Doom.

But, let's cut to the chase.

K: Will we be seeing HIM dildos?
V: No we're not doing that.
K: I'm actually really glad to hear that!
M: You're not curious?
[Laughter]
K: Me? No!
A: She's only saying she's not curious.
V: [Laughter]
K: I could be, though. But, moving right along. One of the latest rumors on the web was that you had been approached by the producers of the James Bond movies to co-write or to write the next theme song for the Casino Royale sequel. Can you confirm this?
V: It's a very flattering idea. Of course it would be great. We grew up with Bond, but I've never even met those people. It's just a rumor. It's good to do little projects like that rather than the same old same old.

K: Like Synkkien Laulujen Maa? [I murder this pronunciation and am quickly corrected by Ville] I have this cd and it is beautiful. Forgive me for not knowing a lot about Finnish folk music, but is this a good example of that?
V: All the time people are asking, well, wtf is Scandinavian melancholy. To Mige: When I sung that [begins to sing] "kun mina kotoani läksin"... that explains a lot about Finnish folk music. It's not necessarily pathetic, but it's really, really sad. That song is about you leaving your home and the world is treating you really cruelly and you're falling in love and you can't get the girl you want. It's a classic, folklore type of thing. That's the stuff we grew up with as well as Kiss and Black Sabbath. So that's probably where love metal itself came from.
K: On the latest album Venus Doom, the track Song or Suicide, is that in the same vein as what you're talking about with the folksy style? It's acoustic and it reads like a poem. It doesn't have the standard song structure.
V: That was the idea, yeah. It was more like an "intimate". That's because we had a long track (Sleepwalking Past Hope) that precedes it. Like in the 70s they had a lot of that shit happening.
K: Lots of prog.
V: Yeah, well like Led Zeppelin. Or if you listen to Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, the tracks will be straightforward Black Sabbath, and then all of a sudden the third track is an acoustic intimate that lasts for five minutes. And not a lot of bands do that nowadays. It was nice to play around and not limit ourselves too much.
K: I feel like as we go farther into the future that everything has to be fast and immediate. Easy and fast pop seems to sell a lot and it's a challenge when you put something with more of an album feel, more complex, longer, etc.
V: True, but there's people that like David Lynch and there are people who love reading romantic poetry and there are people who love Stephen King. [laughs] There's nothing wrong with Stephen King.

M: No, absolutely.
V: But actually if you think of the world of literature, I guess that fiction is going in a good direction with stuff like Kite Runner. Literature seems to be becoming more proggy. The romantic novel structure is fucking dead.
M: Yeah, perhaps music goes in phases as well. People get sick of hearing the same thing. They have iPods with one song from every artist. Maybe our album was a reaction to that.
V: But there is a cool thing about iTunes. Just a couple of months back I set up my own account for the first time. It's strange, you know, if I'm all of a sudden, "what was that great song from A-Ha…The Sun Always Shines on T.V. I WISH I could hear it now." And then just you just 'click' and bring it down. I love that. It's great.
K: [Looking at A] We're obsessed with our iPods.
V: It's good.
K: Growing up in the 80s, I feel like it was all about the single. Same with the 50s or 60s.
V: Well, same with the 40s. The iTunes generation is nothing new. The medium is different, but albums started happening in the 60s. You didn't have long players before the 60s. So, this is nothing new. People want the best, which is their right, rather than spending 20 bucks on an album with only one great song. So, that's reasonable I guess. That's the thing that record labels figured out. Take Paul Anka, who got, like, 2 big hits, and they last four minutes altogether and you could put them on the A and B side of the single that costs 3 bucks. Why won't you sell an album that costs 13 bucks that has filler? Because you make more money out of it - obvious reason. Bands like the Beatles and Led Zeppelin, they changed the format. So, an album can be a conceptual piece. As musicians, we are fans as well and we keep downloading one-song wonders [correcting himself to say one-hit wonders], it's obvious that that's going to affect the way we start writing our songs. We get bored of that. So that's the reason probably Venus Doom as a whole is more like an album with more of an album flow. Some songs are longer and there is more mood in the songs, more than we've had before. That's our reaction to the iTunes 'thing,' which we still do embrace.

K: Do you have a problem with filesharing? Bootlegging?
V: Well, bootlegging is a different thing. That's always a sign of a great band: the more bootlegs you have the better, obviously.
K: Besides that you once said that when gay rumors start that that was a sign that you had made it.
V: [Taking a drag] Mmm-hmmm. When it comes to the fact that people are downloading albums for free...the making of Venus Doom took me about two years to write. I gotta live off of something. I can't tour and write at the same time. I can't have a normal day job. To Mige: What was the budget for VD? It cost like 250 K to finish the whole album, with mastering, the cover art work, everything. Where the fuck do we get the money to pay for that if we don't get people to buy the album? But then, let's say there's a reggae artist called -----, who I'm a big fan of, but that stuff was never released on cd. I found a site where I could download the album where someone recorded it from vinyl digitally. I was like "yes!" I'm definitely going to buy the album whenever it comes out on cd, definitely. That's my rule. I don't want to piss on my own leg, you know, not on purpose anyway.
K: Ha, although we've all been there. [Laughter]
V: Haha. I guess my point is that especially with young musicians who download a lot of shit for free - what they're doing there is taking money off from the record label that one day might be signing them. But the label is lacking the money so they sign the band who downloaded the stuff for free.
K: It's a vicious cycle.
V: It can be vicious and at the same time challenging. And it's great that there is through Myspace and whatever there's a possibility for bands from little tiny countries such as Finland to be heard internationally. Wherever. Whenever. That's great. I've been downloading documentaries [on this tour]. You know, watching documentaries on Alistair Crowley that were aired on BBC4 back in '92. It's never been released on dvd or anything like that. In that sense you can get a lot of material that was impossible before. Back in the day you had to write letters to people who had copied VHS to get some rare material not available anywhere else. Like bootlegs. To Mige: Like old Bad Brains gigs from fucking Munich from the year '83. Actually, Berlin, '84.

M: It's just another moral dilemma, I suppose. People actually probably don't realize that this is really a moral dilemma. It's just something that everybody does and everybody thinks is ok. [Joking] Later on you find that musicians have been dying of hunger.
K: You think about kids from working class families who don't have the money to spend on albums. They aren't thinking about that for sure.
V: But, I was the same, man. My dad was a taxi driver as a kid and my mother worked for the city of Helsinki. They didn't have shitloads of money. I had to save for a long time just to get my first, like, Kiss album. It was exactly the same thing. What we did back in the day was people would record a couple of tracks for you and if you liked Twisted Sister more than W.A.S.P. I would go into the shop and buy the TS album. They were like demos or promotional tools that allowed you to listen to some of the stuff when you didn't have the money to buy everything.
K: When I was in high school, I can remember listening to that very kind of thing. On one side it was Faster Pussycat and on the other it was Guns N Roses. GNR won. Mige, going back to your comment about musical phases or cycles, there are always bands out there who critics hail as having saved rock n roll. Is that overused?
V: I guess the whole thing means that somebody uses old parts in an innovative way.
K: Like a revival.
V: It's kind of like a reminder of why the whole thing started in the first place. At the end of the day, nowadays it seems like the savior of rock n roll is Iggy Pop and the Stooges. You see him live and you think "oh my god, that's what it's all about." Fucking sweat and blood, etc. It doesn't necessarily have to be a new band doing it.
M: It is just something that brings attention to the start of rock n roll.

V: I don't know who's really big at this moment. Nobody's like, super big that may be new. Something that happened to me musically was to fall in love with a band called Interpol. I didn't know that they are not selling a lot of copies.
K: In middle America, no. But on the coast, especially the east, they are more popular.
V: It's all about media. A lot of media is based on the east and west coast, so that's what we get in Europe. Also, acts like Marilyn Manson, he is or actually he used to be hugely popular. Or an act like Eminem. He makes a big budget video and comes to Hamburg and plays to 2,500 people. It's kind of weird to have an illusion that the media creates. But you think that somebody is bigger than life and they aren't necessarily.
M: It's a hype thing, you know.
K: [My ten minutes have come and gone] Is it time?
V: No, no, we've got plenty of time.
K: [Continues] Recently I finished reading Clapton: The Autobiography and in it he says that fly-fishing is the hobby that takes him away from the chaos. What do you guys do to retreat.
V: For me, I have actually been thinking about things I would like to do. I guess, for example, now I'd like to be back home playing acoustic guitar and writing some new songs. That's always a new step for me. You kind of like find yourself with a character you don't know. All the information you've been collecting into your subconscious comes out. In my case it comes through music and I find new aspects and new ways of looking at things, looking at yourself, and your friends through music. So, I consider being on tour, I'm like a sponge in a way. You see so many cities, meet so many people, uh, watch a lot of movies maybe, read a lot of books and get that information and then when you go back home you kind of decompress. All the information starts flowing around, hopefully the good information through the acoustic guitar. That's kind of like what I'm looking for now so I guess my big hobby is writing music.

K: Mige, what about you?
M: I have been wondering actually.
K: Well, you have a family at home which I'm sure takes up all of your free time anyway!
M: Yeah, I guess hobby would not be a good word for that, though to some people I suppose it would be! I don't have a hobby and it's something that is worrying me.
V: He's a thinker, he thinks a lot. He's like a problem solver. [Likening to life] Like mathematical problems with varying results. There's a lot of things in life where A you don't wanna and don't have to and B you can't solve.
M: But you must underline that you try.
V: You also want to do a lot of things but you don't get the chance. [Like a mom talking about a son] He loves gardening.
M: Yeah, I like gardening.
K: I heard you were a gardener in a past life.
M: Yes. In a sense I'm half the man I used to be.
K: Oh now we're quoting Stone Temple Pilots.
M: Actually, it's not that I miss having a hobby. But I keep hearing that people need hobbies.
V: But everyone does have a hobby in one way.
M: Well, I have millions of ways to spend my time.
K: Hobbies develop naturally.
V: Watching T.V. is a hobby! On tour you never get the time to concentrate on a movie or whatever. You're on tour for months and months. So you go back home to do nothing. Um, fart, cook - for yourself, obviously! haha But, finally just getting to watch a movie. That's one way of decompressing. Mine is for now, I stopped drinking so I'm not hanging in bars so what I'm doing is put my house in order. I'm still unpacking my boxes and I moved there like, a year and a half ago. So, basically my hobby is setting my place up to be the perfect place for me to play my acoustic guitar!
K: Speaking of your house... in the VD cd liner notes
V: Booklet.
K: ...booklet, there is a picture of an owl in a window.
V: That's my window sill.
K: A little menacing isn't it?
V: A little? haha We started recording VD and I had a really bad time, nearly a nervous breakdown, I woke up one morning hearing the voice of an owl. I had never seen a live owl before. Well, in the zoo, but never like this. I woke up hearing it and I said "what the fuck is that? Am I hearing voices now?" because I live in the city and we have, like, four owls. And ornithologists know EXACTLY where THEY are at, you know. That particular owl came back twice after that. I borrowed a digital camera from my producer Tim Palmer and left it on the window sill in case I had the chance to see it. We were still partying one morning at 7 AM and he came back and I shot the picture. And he has never been back. This was strange because he wasn't scared of anything, like people moving in the halls or knocking on the window or anything.
K: Ok, switching gears. What's the hardest thing about touring in America?
V: [Thinks] The carpeting. And, uh, all the pillows are filled with feathers.
K: [Laughs and looks knowingly at A.]
A: You know, I have this thing I travel a lot with my job, and it's like, every time you have to ask for the synthetic kind. Good to see someone else has the same issue!
V: That comes from living in a bus, there's not a lot of carpeting because a lot of us guys we smoke and then we have the air conditioning on all the time. That's basically the only thing that makes it hard for me as a singer. Otherwise it's fine. If I was in the rodeo or a drunkard I wouldn't have to worry about it, but I gotta sing every night so...
K: Gotta focus on the job.
V: Hoh, it's not a job- it's a hobby that became a...
K: A labor of love.
V: Yes, a labor of love!
K: What do you miss the most about home?
V: Solitude.
M: No 'me' time.
V: The road is really social, which is great as well. You get to meet a lot of people and play hopefully to a lot of people. It's just when they're a lot of people in a small container like a bus you never have 'me' time. That's the reason we stay in hotels a lot when we're on tour. Would rather stay in a shitty hotel room for a couple of hours in a day just to have your own room, you know, to center yourself, or whatever you call it. That's what I miss.

K: When you are home, do you have a lot of fans stalking you or hanging outside your window?
V: No. Finland is pretty easy. I don't have a doorbell that works so it's pretty hard to get into my fortress. You gotta have my cell phone number or be a friend to get in.
M: Finnish people are more reserved.
K: Not here so much. Stalking is a full on hobby for some!
V: [The Finns] have a respect for privacy. I've had some situations where fans have come up to the door, but normally I don't open up the door you know. It's my home. It's my own private place.
K: Where you're not on the clock.
V: Yep. So, I've been thinking about building a gate. Just imagine if you've got fans that start knocking on the door at 9:00 AM and I've just come off tour and I've got jetlag... even though their intentions might be the best, but you know, I can't be in the mood all the time. It's hard to put a smile on.
M: It is unacceptable.
V: That's the only place in the world I have my own peace. Surrounded by my books and just talk to my mom and my dad and play the acoustic guitar and read books and watch films and bake. That's what I do there.
K: That sounds almost lovely.
V: I may do that two months out of the year. The rest we're working on something so don't [you] think so. If you think about it, an average Joe works and is home five nights in the week. If the family is cool and the wife is a good cook, you know, it's fine to come home and stay in the same spot and then you have your weekends off and maybe have a holiday once a year where you go somewhere else. But we travel all the fucking time. We don't get to see any of our families. At all. And then there's the time difference. I only get maybe two months or a month and a half. Though, I keep on working when I'm home anyway, so... [being home] there's a lot of shit to sort out anyways.
K: How is it when you get home? Hard to decompress?
M: Well, it takes days. I'm not sure that you ever actually decompress. You can always get the most stuff out, but there's the knowledge that there are already future days booked. Because of that I'm not sure if you're able to totally decompress.
V: It's like a normal job when you take that vacation and you know that in a couple of months you have to go back to it.
K: Yes, we are account managers for a software company and we know the feeling when you take vacation.
V: It's not that different. We get things out of this job that you don't if you're staying in one place or whatever. Sometimes you feel that it would be nice to have a job like that rather than have to travel. For example, I'm single, I don't have a relationship, I don't 'need' to go back. You know, I've got my parents, who I care for, and my little bro- that's basically what I like when going back home. So I don't 'mind' touring and the travel. I travel a lot for promotional stuff, but it's been fine.
M: It's an attitude.
V: It's becoming easier now that I'm not hanging out in bars all the time. You really test the limits of your physicality by getting fucked up every night and touring and acting like a brat for months and months on end. Then it's harder to decompress. Even if you have just two weeks off, when you're actually sober you have a lot more time to yourself. The sleep is better. I've spent the last ten years in bars so it's almost like a new drug to be back home watching films I never had time to watch rather than puking in the toilet or waiting to get drunk again.
K: Did you find that changing your lifestyle made some 'friends' disappear?
V: Uh, nah. I can still hang in bars, I just drink coffee instead of beer. It's also been a luxury...the first time you're looking at yourself in the mirror and you're sober, your brain works and you have a lot more energy. I haven't taken that 'me' time for the past 15 years. I've been very social on and off the road. In that sense, the friends haven't gone anywhere, but I decided to not hang out with a lot of people. I've got a lot of friends who are fucking alcoholics. I don't have any problems with that. It's maybe more me making decisions than people running away from me.
K: Switching gears again. Helldone? Is it still on this year?
V: Yes, tickets go on sale next week. It's going to be three days. New Years is on a Monday, so it will be Saturday, Sunday and Monday. On the first day it's going to be, well, we're trying to sort out good A-class Finnish bands so that people can come and see a bit of what's going on in the hard rock music scene. It will be eight bands on the first night so people can get a good vibe of what we have. On the second day we have an international act there, and then a headliner and then we do New Year's Eve.

K: How long have you been doing this?
V: For about 10 or 11 years. We're trying to expand it a bit. Originally it was just a regular gig and then all of sudden we had a lot of people outside of Finland and then northern parts of Finland traveling to Helsinki just to hang with the band. We thought "let's just expand it" over a couple of nights to make it more worthwhile. A lot of people fly in and it's an interesting way to meet people who are outside of your ordinary realm. For example, South America, America, and Japan, even. It's rediculously interesting to see people hooking up with each other and making friends out of it. So, that was the idea of making it a three-day meeting point, kind of festival thing happening. We're still trying to expand it next year to make it bigger, but we're still looking for the right venues. This year it's going to happen in the same club it's always been in, Tavastia.
K: Will Hanoi Rocks be performing?
V: No. They're friends, but I had heard they will be playing a big gig with Motorhead in December and then they will do something right before Helldone in the same venue. You don't want a band who's played the same club the week before. I think that they've booked the gigs already. And, they may be a bit different from what an average HIM fan would like to see. But they are really good live.
K: Not to diminish their popularity, but Hanoi Rocks is most known for the loss of Razzle in the car crash with Vince Neil.
V: They were highly influential, but never sold a lot of records. They are a big cult band, like New York Dolls. They never sold a lot of records and still haven't, but everyone knows them, knows their story, and have fucking Johnny Thunders on their t-shirt.
K: I know all about the New York Dolls, but I could not name one song of theirs.
V: Sam Yaffa from Hanoi Rocks played bass for The New York Dolls.
M: Ah, there you go!
V: Like The Ramones. People know "Hey Ho, Let's Go" and they know the logo.
K: The seal.
V: Yeah. There are a lot of bands like that that changed the scene and were influential for other bands that actually became big.
K: [Since this is past our time, I say] I feel like I've taken up a lot of your time.
V: We can wrap it up or you can stay. We still have plenty of time.
K: Ok. Favorite venue?
M: There are so many. The one I really like is the amphitheater in Athens, Greece. It looks out over the mountains. The venue is nothing special, but the location is wonderful.
V: There are couple of festivals in Switzerland where the mountains are beautiful. When it comes to venues, in America it's great because you have a lot of old theaters.
K: Or old churches like The Tabernacle where you will be playing in November.
V: Yeah, that's a fun place as well.
K: I saw the Go-Gos there once. [Laughter from everyone]. You know, they had their time. We're kids of 80s. Also, when you have gay friends, it may be some unspoken rule that you have to see them at least once.
Tom, Tour Manager: Hey, they had the beat.
V: [Chuckles]
M: We have a lot of gay friends, too.
V: [Sarcastically] No, no. We don't have a clue about that.
V: But, you don't get cool venues like that in Europe. It's mostly old wherehouses or bars, so they're not visually that exciting. It's not like playing the Wilshire in LA or the State Theater in Detroit or yesterday we played the Congress Theatre in Chicago. Ornamentally and the paintings, it's like being in a movie. Sound-wise they are not always the best, but that's something we don't get in Europe.
K: With your music anyway, the ambience really completes the experience.
V: But we play anywhere.
K: I saw you guys twice on Projekt Revolution. And it was fantastic, but…
V: But it lacks the mood.
K: Yes. I prefer being at a HIM show, where it's you headlining. The music, the fans, the lighting, everything. It's great.
V: And obviously it's more rewarding for us as well.
K: How was PR for you?
V: It was a test of patience. When we started out, we always said to our booking agents that we'd rather play lead in a place that holds 25 rather than support someone somewhere bigger. So, we've never been doing the support thing at all. Which I'm really proud of. For example, in England where the record company didn't do shit for us in the beginning, but we still went there and it was great to see it grow in front of your eyes [over time]. So in that sense it was the first time we did tour and weren't the headliner. Also, playing in the sunlight, which I HATE. [Laughter]. Well, not that I hate the sun, but it lacks the mood, like what you were saying. And, we're not like an emo/punk band that can fit 10-15 songs in 40 minutes. We only had time to play 9 tracks. Obviously, we were able to play to lot of people who never heard us before and in that sense it was really good.
K: American fans will gladly take what they can get since you aren't always on tour over here. You performed a lot of the new material at PR. By now, do you have a favorite song(s) off VD to perform?
V: Sleepwalking Past Hope. It's challenging for us, but it's funny because there are so many instrumental parts that I can smoke fucking 3 cigarettes before the song is over. [Laughter] It's good playing Passion's Killing Floor, Dead Lover's Lane, Bleed Well.
K: I'm fond of Bleed Well.
V: That's going to be our next single. Hopefully the radio will start playing it. We'll see what happens. Now the set is taking shape. We'll start changing the set around later, but not now. Now we're fine tuning the new material live. Also, we're going to be shooting a dvd in LA during our gig. We'll see how it will turn out. It may be good, it may be a really fun night. Or it could really suck and we'll hide it somewhere in our archives. Or we'll just burn it [kidding]. But it's good, so now we're just focusing on fine-tuning the material. Trying to get a balance between the old songs and the new songs. We're trying to get the sense of drama when we're doing the set.
K: Do you ever play In Joy and Sorrow anymore?
M: Actually I was just thinking about that song.
V: Not for a long time.
M: It's a fine song. I really like that song.
V: We're trying to do 16 songs in an hour and a half. That's the max of what we can do. U2 are playing big stadiums where you can have fucking mirrorball lemons that you walk out of...
K: or that you can't walk out of!
V: So, really an hour and a half is good. There are a lot of songs like Gone with the Sin, In Joy and Sorrow, Heartache Every Moment- that's a nice track.
K: Fortress of Tears...
V: Fortress of Tears, Sweet Pandemonium- you know there are a lot of tracks that we can't fit in the set. Now we're trying to do a more 'in your face' set, more than ballady. I like it, we used to have so many slow songs in our set, and it was really moody, it was nice, but it is also nice for us to do something different. It's more challenging. Sleepwalking Past Hope is THE moody piece.
K: Join Me in Death has made a lot of my non-rock fan friends take notice. In 2000, this song made you famous in Europe. It's a wonderful song and timeless.
V: Yeah, I'm proud of the song. Hopefully we can write a song as good as that!
K: Oh come on.
V: No, we were lucky with it. It's funny, back in the day when that came out and all the radios loved it so they played it to death which meant that a lot of people who normally would never know us bought the record. Obviously that affected record sales. So, it's not even about it being a good song we just had a lot of luck. Somebody fell in love with the track and then just played it to death.
K: Your Sweet 666 is considered a seminal HIM song.
V: Oh! Playing the new material, you start to see the old stuff in a different light. We've been doing 3-4 tracks from each album, but we're not playing anything off of Deep Shadows and Brilliant Highlights.
K: Why is that?
V: It just doesn't blend that well. It was one of the albums that was so over-produced and a lot of people don't know the album that well. We used to play Lose You Tonight, Pretending, and Heartache Every Moment. I love Salt in Our Wounds and I love Please Don't Let it Go. Those were two songs I wrote on the acoustic guitar and they worked a lot better on the acoustic.
K: Last year I started playing the acoustic and chords from DSBH songs were what I used to practice. Definitely acoustic-friendly. What about You Are the One? Was that a b-side, or?
V: That was an extra track for Deep Shadows in the digi-pak edition.
K: Also a great song.
V: It's good, but it could be better. With that album we ended up in a situation where we started out recording demos and they started sounding very Queens of the Stone Age. And we LOVED it. But then things got over-worked. We ended up between tours working on the album and overproduced the whole thing. We should have stopped and rerecorded everything.
M: We had many producers coming in.
V: We had like five people mixing the album and it was just a big hassle. But it was a great learning experience, and it was something we don't want to do again. I love the songs. They just could have been better. It's also what happens, you know, we had a great successful tour supporting Razorblade Romance. A lot of bands, well, I think it happened to me, really, you know, we found out that we were successful and then when you pick up the guitar again you think it will be very easy thing to write a song. So, I could have worked harder on the songs. I love the melodies on the album, though. [Ville retires to the rest room]
M: They're not as refined as well because we ran out of time and we ran out of patience. We had been working on the same things for a long time. We were going all over trying to compete with producers and in the end we really didn't know where we were standing. But there's so much good stuff there.
K: That album stands out to me. To some degree, as a listener, perhaps as a female listener, I don't see the problems you point out, because it's full of haunting melodies and romance. But, I can understand that as the owning artist you have a totally different perspective. But there are so many people who love that album.
M: There are certainly a lot of good ideas on the album.
V: [Returns from the restroom] What?
K: We're still on DSBH.
V: Oh, it's fucked up. That was the time when we kicked out the keyboardist and we were touring and we got Burton and at the same time the expectations were really high obviously for the record company to have another "hit" album. We had to have a lot of bullshit meetings about what to do and what not to do and obviously we did what we wanted to do, but that's all the hassle you can come flying to your own work. If you've been working on one song for a fucking year you always get more and more ideas to rework and rework. To Mige: We should have just stopped, had a break, and then went into the studio and rerecorded everything. Anyway, it's a bit more wimpy to a certain extent, a bit more emotional. The vibe is more mellow.
K: Probably why I as a woman love that album! [Laughter]
V: It's a moody album and it doesn't demand too much concentration to get into the mood. You know, I'm really proud of it- just should have been more moody, more acoustic, and more melancholy. After that we did Love Metal, which was faster, then Dark Light was a bit mellow, and they all kind of reflect upon each other to have us do something different the next time around. Greatest Lovesongs, Love Metal, and Venus Doom are from one band, while Razorblade Romance, Deep Shadows and Dark Light are from another. There are two sides: one more feminine and the other more masculine.
K: The yin/yang thing.
V: Right.

And with that it is time for the band to prepare for their show. A and I thank the boys for their time, take a couple of pics, and exit the bus. Tom leaves me with this: "K, don't lose the braces!"

We head into the venue with our little photopasses, rush up to the front, and take some live shots. A review of the show with pictures will follow soon. -K
  •  

Posted on 11/23/2007 8:06 PM Comments (0)

October 21, 2007

HIM frontman to record new JAMES BOND theme song?


According to the Daily Star, James Bond producers have tapped HIM frontman Ville Valo to record the theme for 2008’s “Casino Royale” follow-up flick.

Ville, 30, was approached by the Bond team at the BMI Awards dinner at London’s Dorchester Hotel, where he scooped a gong for his hit “Wings of a Butterfly”.

A Daily Star source stated: “[Longtime 007 soundtrack writers David Arnold, 45, and Don Black, 69] were in deep conversation with Ville on the night.

“They love the song that won him an award. They think he has just the right ear to write a classic Bond hit with them.” After their discussion, Ville even pulled a few suave 007 poses at his dinner table, aiming an imaginary finger gun at pals.

Former AUDIOSLAVE/SOUNDGARDEN frontman Chris Cornell was the first man since Paul McCartney to sing a James Bond theme song when he recorded his throaty, epic ode to 007, “You Know My Name”, for Daniel Craig’s debut turn as Bond in “Casino Royale”.

“They wanted a voice that fit well with his persona,” Cornell said last year. “They were looking for a singer who was unapologetically male, someone with introspection in his voice but not afraid to be masculine.”

Cornell cited two of his predecessors as inspirations: McCartney, who wrote and performed the theme to “Live and Let Die” (1973), and Tom Jones, who sang the theme to “Thunderball” (1965).

“I decided that I was going to sing it like Tom Jones, in that crooning style. I wanted people to hear my voice,” Cornell said. “And ‘Live and Let Die’ is a fantastic song. Paul McCartney wouldn’t have written it if not for that movie. I [also] wanted to write a song in its own universe. I knew I’d never have it again — a big orchestra — so I wanted to have fun with it.”



Posted on 10/21/2007 11:19 AM Comments (0)

August 10, 2007

HIM on trig.com

Add the official HIM Trig profile today!! Just click the banner or go to www.trig.com/heartagram!


Posted on 08/10/2007 12:40 PM Comments (0)

June 28, 2007

interview with Gas Lipstick " about the new album release " venus doom"

Mika “Gas” Karppinen could not be any happier with HIM’s sixth studio-album. ‘Venus Doom’ is fullblooded band-album,which was borned besides inside Ville Valo’s head,but also when guitarist Mikko “Linde” Lindström injured his arm back in winter 2006.

-”Back then,3 of us who were still standing,went jamming and Ville was playing guitar instead of Linde.Those tapes from that session,we later found a lot of material for the new songs.From that point of view,that Linde’s thing was like a disaster turned in to a fortune.”,drummer says.
HIM’s heaviest and roughest album echoes the spirit of Black Sabbath.Though,the song that has been planned to be an opening track of the album,title song Venus Doom,attacks on to your face like Pantera or Slipknot on their earlier years.Gas’ personal favourites,besides that titletrack,are slightly over 10 minute-piece Sleepwalking Past Hope,and a ballad Cyanide Sun.To the song mentioned last,he also has a personal ‘relationship’,same way that Ville does.

-”Ville has had some hard times on the couple of past years,so our stuff is now darker.You can hear this especially from the lyrics of Cyanide Sun.That track became personal thing to myself,too.My good friend died in a car accident the day before my drumming sessions for the album were about to begin.I decided,that this isn’t the right time to grief and i just started working like a maniac.The last song we recorded was Cyanide Sun,and i played that with tears in my eyes.”
One thing that makes Karppinen happy is,that alongside with many guitarsolos there’s also a little show-off’s from the bassist Mikko “Mige” Paananen and from himself on the album.

-”Ville gave me one direction before the drum recordings started..’Get dirty!’”



Posted on 06/28/2007 6:04 AM Comments (3)

June 27, 2007

the haunted palace by,edgar allan poe , i love this poem


The Haunted Palace by E. A. Poe

THE HAUNTED PALACE


by Edgar Allan Poe
(1839)


In the greenest of our valleys
   By good angels tenanted,
Once a fair and stately palace-
   Radiant palace- reared its head.
In the monarch Thought's dominion-
   It stood there!
Never seraph spread a pinion
   Over fabric half so fair!

Banners yellow, glorious, golden,
   On its roof did float and flow,
(This- all this- was in the olden
   Time long ago,)
And every gentle air that dallied,
   In that sweet day,
Along the ramparts plumed and pallid,
   A winged odor went away.

Wanderers in that happy valley,
   Through two luminous windows, saw
Spirits moving musically,
   To a lute's well-tuned law,
Round about a throne where, sitting
   (Porphyrogene!)
In state his glory well-befitting,
   The ruler of the realm was seen.

And all with pearl and ruby glowing
   Was the fair palace door,
Through which came flowing, flowing, flowing,
   And sparkling evermore,
A troop of Echoes, whose sweet duty
   Was but to sing,
In voices of surpassing beauty,
   The wit and wisdom of their king.

But evil things, in robes of sorrow,
   Assailed the monarch's high estate.
(Ah, let us mourn!- for never morrow
   Shall dawn upon him desolate!)
And round about his home the glory
   That blushed and bloomed,
Is but a dim-remembered story
   Of the old time entombed.

And travellers, now, within that valley,
   Through the red-litten windows see
Vast forms, that move fantastically
   To a discordant melody,
While, like a ghastly rapid river,
   Through the pale door
A hideous throng rush out forever
   And laugh- but smile no more.

 


Posted on 06/27/2007 8:55 PM Comments (0)

June 21, 2007

HIM new video coming !

holymotherofchristaz.jpg

Finnish goth metallers HIM will film a new video on Thursday, June 21 and/or Saturday, June 23 in the Los Angeles area. Directing the clip will be Meiert Avis, who has previously worked with U2, AVRIL LAVIGNE, JENNIFER LOPEZ and BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, in addition to helming HIM’s “Wings of a Butterfly” video. The production team put out a casting call for the clip this week and will hold auditions on Tuesday (June 19), looking for “a beautiful girl (model type) to perform in the lead role of the video.”

As previously reported, a brand new HIM track, entitled “Passion’s Killing Floor”, will be included on the soundtrack album to Michael Bay’s “Transformers”, due on July 3 via Warner Bros. The disc will feature a total of 12 tracks, nine of which are brand new and exclusive to the soundtrack. [Azure’s note: Is this the special sneak peek that heartagram speaks of? We wonder…]

“Passion’s Killing Floor” comes off HIM’s forthcoming album, “Venus Doom”, due in North America on September 18. The band’s sixth studio CD, which will arrive one day earlier internationally, was recorded at the Finnvox facility in Helsinki with producer Tim Palmer and was mixed in California. Other song titles set to appear on the CD include “Dead Lovers Lane”, “The Kiss of Dawn” and “Love in Cold Blood”.


Posted on 06/21/2007 10:35 AM Comments (1)

June 12, 2007

HIM and the transformers soundtrack july 3

HIM & Transformers?

Transformers Soundtrack Hits July 3rd
Album for Michael Bay’s summer blockbuster chock full of rock blasts and exclusive tracks.
by IGN Music

June 7, 2007 - On July 3rd, 2007, Warner Bros. will release the soundtrack album to Michael Bay’s Transformers

The album will feature a total of 12 tracks, nine of which are brand new and exclusive to the soundtrack.

Artists included on the album range from Linkin Park to Smashing Pumpkins, Disturbed, The Used, HIM, Taking Back Sunday, and more.

The first single from the album will be “Before It’s Too Late (Sam and Mikaela’s Theme)” by the Goo Goo Dolls.

Transformers - Music From The Motion Picture Track Listing

1. Linkin Park “What I’ve Done”
2. Smashing Pumpkins “Doomsday Clock”
3. Disturbed “This Moment”
4. Goo Goo Dolls “Before It’s Too Late (Sam and Mikaela’s Theme)”
5. The Used “Pretty Handsome Awkward”
6. HIM “Passion’s Killing Floor”
7. Taking Back Sunday “What It Feels Like To Be A Ghost?”
8. Styles Of Beyond “Second To None”
9. Armor For Sleep “End Of The World”
10. Idiot Pilot “Retina and the Sky”
11. Julien-K “Technical Difficulties”
12. Mutemath “Transformers Theme”



Posted on 06/12/2007 8:57 AM Comments (0)

venus doom new release dates ! hopefully....

Venus Doom -Coming September 17/18

20dd_1.jpg

Venus Doom - The new album from HIM - is coming on September 17th internationally, and September 18th in the U.S. Stay tuned for a special way that you can hear the first single.


Posted on 06/12/2007 8:53 AM Comments (0)

HIM artical of venus doom delay

 
 


Article From:

Metal Hammer News ~ HIM postpone album

HIM postpone album
added: 16/05/2007

Heaviest HIM album delayed

According to HIM’s Finnish record label Helsinki Music Company (HMC), the projected release date of the group’s new album, tentatively titled “Venus Doom”, has been pushed back to September from the previously announced July 10. The band’s sixth studio CD was recorded at the Finnvox facility in Helsinki with producer Tim Palmer and is scheduled to be mixed this month in California, followed by a video shoot.

HIM’s frontman Ville Valo recently told MTV.com that “Venus Doom” is “going to be a lot heavier than anything we’ve done before — that’s the whole idea. It’s like we’re mixing MY BLOODY VALENTINE’s ‘Loveless’ with METALLICA’s ‘Master of Puppets’. … There won’t be as much ear candy on this one. There are a lot of riffs, and it’s more guitar-oriented than keyboard-driven. Really, we just wanted to rock our own socks off.

“We wanted to make a really rockin’ album — one that would explode your speakers,” he added. “But we also wanted to maintain the melancholy aspects of love and loss in the lyrics and then have the really sweet vocals amidst this storm of guitars.

“Lyrically, it’s about me losing a relationship and then actually regaining it, and losing my sanity and regaining it,” Valo continued. “As you grow up, life gets more and more complex, even though when you’re a kid you think things are going to get easier. It’s like a f—ing puzzle that just keeps on having more and more pieces to it. It’s very personal, this album. It’s like me getting rid of my demons and putting the pain in the music. It’s cathartic, and it’s about cleansing yourself and trying to have the courage to take that one step further.”

Song titles set to appear on the CD include “Dead Lovers Lane”, “The Kiss of Dawn”, “Love in Cold Blood” and “Passion’s Killing Floor”.

 


Posted on 06/12/2007 8:48 AM Comments (0)

June 2, 2007

a poem ive written in all its infinant gloom

AS  I STAND HERE PAINTING A PORTRAIT OF MY DARKEND SOUL...I WEEP FOR YOUR LONGED KISS TO BRING ME BACK HOME FROM THIS LONLINESS AND TORMENT... I HAVE WAITED ENDLESSLY FOR YOU TOO FIND ME MY DARK LOVE...I DESPERATLY SEEK....I LONG TO BE HELD CLOSE AND SAFE ONCE AGAIN...AND MY SOUL AND WOUNDED HEART BURN LIKE THE BLAZES OF HELL...MY LOST SOUL IS LIKE AN OPEN BOOK OF THE SADEST POEMS EVER WRITTEN...FOREVER LOST IN A HORRIFIC DREAM OF AN INFINITY OF LONLINESS FOREVER TRAPPED...HURRY MY LOVE AND FIND A WAY TO ME ..I FEEL LIKE IM FADING FAST MY LOVE ...ONLY YOU DARK ONE CAN SAVE MY BLACKEND SOUL...AND BRING IT BACK TOO LIFE..IM CLOSING MY EYES NOW TO SEE YOUR FACE AND DREAM ONLY OF YOU...MY DARK ANGEL...SO ILL WAIT ON MY THRONE OF SADNESS..AND MY EYES BLEEDING BLOOD RED...AND LISTEN TO THE LOVE SICKEND TUNE MY HEART BEATS...WAITING FOR YOU ...             WRITTEN BY, ME


Posted on 06/02/2007 12:50 PM Comments (3)

January 18, 2007

another poem written by me ... i dont know if it makes sense..but i tried!


                LISTENING TO THE SKY SING.......MELLOW WHISPERS FROM THE STARS......TEARS OF SORROW FROM THE WOMB...THE CADAVEROUS BODY TRAPPED TO ROT... GIFT BROKEN BY ITS INFINITE CREATOR....SUPPOSED TO LOVE BUT SENDS ME GLOOM...AGONY COMES IN FORMS OF SPASMS...LOST IN MYSELF INFLICTED DOOM...HEARTBREAK FLOWS DOWN MY CHEEKS....I CRADLE MEMORIES I'LL NEVER COMPLETE....STARRING DOWN INTO MY LOST LOVE ....WISHING I COULD HAVE HEARD A SCREAM...FELT THE SOFT SKIN ON MY FINGERS....HELD TIGHTLY AFTER A FRIGHTINING DREAM....THE CENTER OF ALL MY DELUSIONS.... BECOMES THE NIGHTMARES THAT HAUNT MY SLEEP.....OUR EYES THAT NEVER GOT TO TWINKLE ....OUR HEART THAT JUST COULDN'T BEAT.....I'LL ROCK YOU SLOWLY IN MY MIND LOVE ....THAT'S WHERE WE CAN ALWAYS MEET...*                                                      WRTTEN  BY, (  * ME* )
Posted on 01/18/2007 5:20 PM Comments (2)

October 27, 2006

To my very special and dear friend ..this is for you.." HAPPY BIRTHDAY SWEETIE" !


We are both just alike you and I .Im so glad i met you..the nice poem you wrote for me still makes me cry...I hope I do just the same for your heart...I love you dearly I hope as friends we never part...We both live in dark tormented worlds ...I hope that someday..we will find our way...So until then my dark best friend ..I will hold youre hand till the bitter end ..that some day our  mercifull angel will show us the way....                   written by.me  this is for you my dear friend.... HAPPY BIRTHDAY ! I LOVE You!
Posted on 10/27/2006 2:02 PM Comments (5)

October 14, 2006

just another poem!

 

 


                        My darkend soul bleeds in a lonely grave of sadness.... Im drowning in this pit of tormented lies...longing for a day of happiness...but the thought of blood running down a razor cut wrist makes me feel better...I dont know why I like this darkness ive put myself  in....im so use to the taste of dreadfullness ..its hard to dream of the light i do so much desire..I want to get out of this dark world i live in ..i dont know if i ever will... I guess for now my darkend soul will sing a tormented tune until then....               Written By,   ME


Posted on 10/14/2006 10:58 AM Comments (5)

September 27, 2006

TOO ALL YOU( HIM )FANS IN THE STATES YOU NEED TO READ THIS!!!!

No Halloween This Year Posted by: Shane (9.26.06)

In news that will be ruining a lot of peoples Halloween plans, HIM has unexpectedly cancelled the No Sleep 'Till Halloween Tour. The message delivered on Heartagram.com and to the street team just seems fishy. I don't buy the explanation. Here is the message:

HIM CANCELS TOUR DATES TO RECORD NEW ALBUM
Finnish rock quintet HIM-Ville Valo, Mige, Linde, Burton, and Gas-have announced the cancellation of their fall tour. The band will not be playing scheduled U.S. shows in favor of entering the recording studio (see canceled dates below).

HIM hope fans will not be let down, but rather will look forward to seeing them back on the road with new songs to share. The band have been steadily writing material for their forthcoming album and are eager to start preliminary rehearsal of very early tracks. HIM have not been able to test any new material due to their busy touring and promotion schedule. This fall will be the first opportunity for the band members to talk and work out new HIM material for a 2007 release!

Singer Ville Valo explains the band's decision: "Our dearest fellowship of the Heartagram, you haven't seen the last of us yet. We just want to keep it fresh for you and stump you with new material. I didn't feel that I could do that without rehearsing some of this stuff that's stuck in my heart. We're happy to have new fans come aboard the ship, but I feel we've got to keep it exciting and new. We've started writing and I can't wait for you guys to hear what we're working on."

The band have spent the last year touring non-stop behind Dark Light. Most recently completing a successful spring U.S. headlining tour with stops at Jimmy Kimmel Live and Last Call With Carson Daly along the way.

To ticket holders: please contact or visit the point of purchase for information on ticket refunds.

Cancelled HIM tour dates:
WED 10/18 Lowell, MA Tsongas Arena
THU 10/19 NY, NY Hammerstein Ballroom
FRI 10/20 NY, NY Hammerstein Ballroom
SAT 10/21 Camden, NJ Tweeter Center at the Waterfront
MON 10/23 Rochester, NY ESL Sportcenter
TUE 10/24 Toronto, ONT Ricoh Coliseum
WED 10/25 Chicago, IL Aragon Ballroom
THU 10/26 Des Moines, IA Val Air Ballroom
SUN 10/29 San Jose, CA Event Center at San Jose University
MON 10/30 San Diego, CA SDSU
TUE 10/31 Universal City, CA Gibson Amphitheatre

I really do not understand why this would happen. I've never heard of a band cancelling a tour to record an album. Especially not a just a few weeks before it kicks off. I hope we get more information on it, and I also hope that everyone in the band is okay. If anybody has any information, let us know.

Rumor Update: There has been some recent speculation that the tour was cancelled due to lack of ticket sales. Unfortunately, the numbers on ticket sales are not currently available so we cannot confirm/deny that rumor. It is what it is, a rumor. This was poised to be perhaps their biggest tour yet in the US, with established names Papa Roach and Lost Prophets along for the ride, so it's hard to imagine that tickets were selling at a lesser rate that previous tours. We'll keep you updated.

 


Posted on 09/27/2006 3:38 PM Comments (3)

September 18, 2006

AFI on ROCKLINE ....monday september 18 ,2006..dont miss it!

Monday - September 18, 2006
AFI

AFILet's remember that AFI stands for A Fire Inside, a concept that embraces all facets of life. The pain we feel, the pleasure we derive, the moments of ennui, the sense of community so essential to us all is driven by the fire inside. When the flame struggles to survive, or disappears altogether, we are diminished collectively and as individuals. This group then is as much an attitude, a statement and a credo as they are a musical assemblage. They're also one hell of a Rock and Roll band. With "decemberunderground" debuting at number one, their first album ever to attain that historic position, their cult status remains intact but has been augmented by a much larger following. It is also easily arguable that "Miss Murder", the first single to drop, was THE song of summer 2006. All of this is on the heels of one of the greatest albums ever recorded, "Sing the Sorrow" from 2003. Hailed as Album of the Year by many prestigious forums, it also set the standard higher than ever for the Northern California band. We'll let them bask in the afterglow of this new standard known as "decemberunderground" before we remind them that they keep expanding their own expectations. Should you not have their website easily at hand here is the link. A Fire Inside.

Steadily, AFI has grown not only in the number of fans, but in artistic merit as well. Placing a staggering eighty songs under scrutiny for the new album was simply the first stage for the sessions that led to the dozen that finally made the cut. What will be the follow up single to "Miss Murder"? Throwing the clichéd dart at the other eleven songs will lead to the same result, another anthem, but this time for autumnal bliss. Regardless of singles and such, AFI was recently named one of the twenty-five greatest live bands currently performing by a well respected periodical. Upon hearing this, ROCKLINE host Bob Coburn offered a story. "I was able to see one of the most revered artists in the history of Rock while on a trip to the East Coast in 2004. Standing in the midst of about 70,000 fans at Giants Stadium, I was consumed by the knowledge that I was witnessing one of the greatest shows and performers ever to grace a stage. Upon returning to Southern California two weeks later I saw AFI for the first time. Given the chance to see either band another time, I would have gone to see AFI without hesitation". 'Nuff said.

 


Posted on 09/18/2006 7:19 PM Comments (0)

August 30, 2006

Just another poem or whatever....


 As darkness falls upon my broken soul....My heart weaps for the light of happiness ..but the razor has cut too deep.... I drown everyday in this lonely dark world i live in ..I walk among the living dead as if it were a graveyard... passing by dark souls just as  I walk thru darkend clouds of sadness and hate. .. Why cant I pull myself out of this pit of greif im in ...I have secrets of shame ..and its sad too looose your own way.. but the path im riding is sad in its own way... im not affraid of this darkness anymore anyway.. i guess my soul likes it this way ..living in a  souless world with ugliness in its way ... but the point i put across is that we are all LOST!        wrtten by other than ME....                                                                                                                       

Posted on 08/30/2006 1:18 PM Comments (6)

August 14, 2006

~ just another poem~


                         Im  walking down a darkend tunnel longing for the light at the end ....wishing for a heavenly love I cannot grasp..my heart is bleeding a red colored sickness...and my heart beats a faint love sick tune ..and i dont know if anyone can save me from this torment im drowning in ..im becoming more affraid as i near the heavenly light ...a bittersweet melody flows from a dark angels lips..that my bleeding heart is near a glorious torment..and soon i wont cry blood stained tears ..but my darkend soul dont want to let go of this sweet torment that love brings ..as i near the end of the darkend tunnel..a dark angel said ive been waiting for you .. but i still felt the painful misery i endure as he spoke so blissfully with such words of torment..as i lay on the ground next to him and my soul still plays dead ...as dark angels circle me singing a blistful tune of sadness ..i still havent made it through the darkness that love has trapted me in..          written by, ME
Posted on 08/14/2006 7:51 PM Comments (4)

August 11, 2006

~ HIM ~ ville .interview i found ,,


Interview: Ville Valo

Interview: Ville Valo
Larger Than Life

Years of hard work have launched Finland’s HIM
from a band with a modest cult following in the
United States into the mainstream. With some
help perhaps from their “Heartagram” logo, HIM
has become a household name among hard rock
and metal fans. At the band’s stop at the 2006
HFStival in Columbia, Md., frontman Ville Valo
spoke to Jason Price of Live-Metal.net about the
band's song writing process, the status of the
band's next album, the struggles of touring in the
United States and more. In the end, Valo squashes
the solo career rumors and discovers that all roads
lead to Black Sabbath.


Live-Metal: What is the biggest misconception about HIM?

Ville Valo: That we are miserable bastards. A lot of people think that we play really melancholy music, people think that we are really miserable. Actually, you know, I think that it is a very cathartic thing. You get your shit into the music and you can be a happy person outside of it, and eat ice cream and listen to the birds sing! [laughs] And watch Jim Carrey movies.

Are you a big fan of Jim Carrey?

No, I hate him. No, I hate comedies. [laughs]

How do you feel that you have evolved as a band through the years?

It is hard to say how we have evolved because I have known the bass player and the guitar player since I was nine years old. So we have grown up together and we were playing in different bands. When we started out we were kids and now we are getting into our mid-life, our mid-life crisis type of thing happening [laughs]. You know the more you do, the better you get, hopefully!

How did the “Heartagram” logo, so heavily associated with the band, come to be?

Let's see. I am turning 30, so it was like, about nine years and seven months ago when I turned twenty. I always draw things, so I was drawing and waiting for the rest of the guys to come to my apartment with kegs of beer and getting ready to start celebrating me turning into a man, so closer to one, and I just drew it down. I have always loved Led Zeppelin, their four symbols on their fourth album and Rob Zombie and White Zombie's visuals and stuff like that. I always wanted to make a symbol for our band, and then we got it.

You have had a slow build in the United States. As you have toured theU
.S. for the past few years, how has touring changed you?


Well to be brutally frank, touring in the States is a pain in the ass every now and then because the travel is really, really heavy, especially on this tour. We just flew in from Seattle, tomorrow we are flying to New Orleans, so it is like zig zag, zig zag, zig zag. The distances are so long compared to Europe. Europe is a lot easier. It is like maybe 200 miles a night. You have a bit more time to hang out and sleep better and stuff like that. This is heavy duty traveling all the time. With Dark Light being the first album properly released here, we have been doing some press for it and it's being played on the radio now, thank God. Of course it has changed the vibe. A lot more people know who we are.

What was the biggest challenge in making Dark Light?

In making an album, there are always a lot of little tiny challenges. On Dark Light, I think that the biggest challenge was to try and sing the background vocals while they were shooting a Playboy video at the same spot where we were recording. It was pretty hard because all we could see was naked ladies running about so it was really hard to concentrate.

Understandably! How long did it take to write the album?

I write constantly, so it may take two months to record and a month to mix it. I write all the time, so maybe four years. I usually write a lot of stuff that is not necessarily ready and we start working on it later on. We are not one of those bands that would go into a pre-production stage and write everything there. A lot of American bands, for example, do it.

What is the typical song-writing process for HIM?

I have a hangover and sit down on my bed, I have an acoustic guitar and start strumming and pretending that I am Neil Young. Then we put on the distortion pedals and we rape the song. That's what we do!

How many songs will you normally write in preparation for an album?

Only the good ones. I hate songwriters that write 100 songs for an album and pick up the 10 best, because it is a fucking waste of time. We try and write the stuff that feels really good and we are sure that we want to record it. So if there are 12 tracks on an album, maybe 14 all together.

After listening to HIM, what do you want people to walk away with?

Walk away with the understanding that all roads lead to Black Sabbath in the realm of rock n' roll.

For those how haven't seen HIM live, how would you describe it?

Umm ... We are like a very miserable version of the Backstreet Boys.

You used to do a cover of the Backstreet Boys.

Back in the day we did, yeah. Actually we played "Larger Than Life" at a couple of festivals. We wanted to piss off some goth fans. It was pretty funny to see guys like that know the chorus and be singing and dancing along to it.

What are some of your favorite songs to play live?

Well that is the good thing about being in this band. It differs from day to day because at some places people prefer some songs and when you are playing live it is supposed to be an interaction thing happening between the crowd and the band. So it keeps on changing everyday. That is the only reason to do it or it would be boring. 

Do you get a different energy from playing a small club versus a bigger venue?

Well you know, thank God, we use so many strobe lights and heavy lights that I can't see shit nowadays anyway, so it doesn't really matter. I just see the three first rows.

Your music translates very well acoustically. Any plans for a possible future acoustic release?

No, well, no. Umm. Fucking hell, no. I think that there are so many good acts doing great acoustic stuff now and our forte is doing what we do, so not necessarily. Maybe we will incorporate a bit more of acoustic sections in our music in the future, but no, it would be boring. I hated the "Unplugged" series. 

Have you started working on your next album?

Yeah. We have about eight songs that I am working on at the particular moment.

So you have been writing while on the road?

Yeah, I carry my guitar with me, so I try to read and write and do everything as much as possible.

What does the future hold for HIM as a band? I have heard that you have contemplated some solo work in the future.

Well, no, no no. I have a few more Pink Floyd-ish things that I have been writing in the past, but we will probably incorporate that into HIM's music, as well. Because at the end of the day when I start writing a song, it always ends up being on our album.

What do you think about the state of rock music today?

I think that the state of rock music is really good. I think there are a lot of good

bands that we have had the pleasure of touring with, like a band from Seattle called Aiden on this tour and they're great. Kill Hannah's new album is really good. The Strokes new album is really good, the latest one. I think that there is a lot of good happening, but people think that rock is dead. But it has never went away.

You guys have been on the road for a while now, and toured relentlessly. How has life on the road affected you and your music?

The more you tour, the more liberating it becomes. You don't think about the technical aspect of it anymore. You just have fun. It is a bit more loose, and the hangovers are worse. That is what it does to you! [laughs]

Any stories from your life on the road that you might want to share?


Plenty, but most of it is very X-rated. [laughs] You know, the normal stuff, just watch Spinal Tap and it has all happened to everybody who has played in a rock band and been touring.

Have you ever had any “Spinal Tap" moments onstage?

We, you know, I am always losing myself. I never do soundchecks, so I never know where the stage is, so I always keep on fucking that up. I always walk in the wrong direction. We've had most of it. We never had the cocoons where our bass player couldn't get out and we never had Stonehenge. The rest is very close. [laughs]

What was the first album that you bought?

The year was '84 or '85 it was Animalize by KISS. I still have the vinyl.

What about the last album you bought?

The She Wants Revenge album.

Aside from that, what else are you listening to?

I am listening to Killing Joke and Kill Hannah and everything that starts with a "Kill." I don't listen to a lot of music. I think that nowadays the best music is books. So I am reading a lot of Chuck Palahniuk. I think that is more inspiring than listening to a lot of rock bands or pop bands or whatever. And Damian Marley.

And finally, when do you think Chinese Democracy will be released?

You know, hopefully never. I haven't heard the songs that leaked onto the Internet, but somebody told me that they were shit. I think that they should either do a reunion or you should call it a day.

Is there anything else you’d like to add?


Ummm ... No!
[laughs]

 


Posted on 08/11/2006 2:28 PM Comments (0)
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