Enlarge Photo Credit: Miikka Skaffari

Devin Townsend on Collaboration with Nickelback’s Chad Kroeger: “It’s Just Brutal Fucking Music.”

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I love the forthcoming Devin Townsend / Chad Kroeger collaboration precisely because of how angry it makes certain folks. Nickelback’s music may not be my thing, but I have full trust in Devin. He hasn’t led us astray at any point during his 25+ year career thus far, so why would he now? I’m positive Devin’s reasons for working with Chad are pure, and I’m even more certain the result will be great. Plus it’s, like, only one song out of a dozen or so on an album, out of hundreds in Devin’s catalogue… if you don’t like it, hit skip. I’m sorry if if burgles your turds that Chad Kroeger now has a Metal Archives listing while Converge, Clutch and your band do not.

So: Devin recently elaborated on how his one-song partnership with Kroeger came to be at a guitar clinic at London’s guitarguitar this past weekend and how their friendship inspired Devin to pursue Empath in the form that it ultimately came to be. He also tells us a bit about the song Kroeger appears on, which he describes as a death metal track of “just brutal fucking music.”

Here’s an excerpt from that clinic transcribed by Blabbermouth, with the full videos posted at the bottom of this article:

“[Chad] and I are about the same age. We grew up in the same town. You know, everybody — you’re supposed to hate Nickelback; that’s what you’re supposed to do.”

“I was super critical of the band. I was, like, ‘Fuck that band! Blah blah blah It’s disingenuous. It’s this and that and the other thing.’ Then I heard one of their songs last year. And a bunch of my friends worked with it. So I wrote on Twitter, ‘I like the new Nickelback song.’ Because I thought it was cool. And the ensuing shitstorm that came down my neck was insane. ‘Fuck you! I will never fucking listen [to your music]. How dare you like something I don’t like?’

“So the next day I got a text from Chad. And I’d never talked to the guy before. And he was, like, ‘Thanks for not talking shit about me. That was cool.’ And I said, ‘Just to be clear, I have — for sure.’ And I said, ‘I’ve analyzed my feelings on that. And because we have mutual friends, I heard you had talked shit about me.’ And I was also jealous, I think, on some level, because that’s what you do in Canada. If someone has success, you cannot be happy for them. You just have to be, like, ‘Well, he clearly sucks cocks in hell.’ So it was cool. It was a nice little interaction. And I said, ‘When I’m back in Vancouver, if you’re free, we’ll just get a coffee.’

And so I got back and gave him a call. And he said, ‘Well, why don’t you come over?’ And I said, ‘Yeah, sure.’ The dude’s got a lot of money — no lie. I remember pulling up and just being, like, ‘Oh.’ So, anyway, I went in and we found out we got along well. And it was interesting to me as well, because his level of success was such that he’s done all these things that I’ve never done. And in my career, I’ve done some cool stuff. You do some festivals, you get to play an arena every now and then. But there’s no handbook for that. So if you have questions about it, if it emotionally affects you in a way that is confusing, there’s no one to talk to about it. ‘Cause a lot of times people interpret that as bragging. Like if you go up to somebody, like a buddy across the street who works at the gravel pit, and [you say], ‘We played this really good show. And people were staring at me. It was so weird.’ And he’s, like, ‘Why don’t you just shut the fuck up?’ But this was a really interesting for me, because I was able to say, ‘I’m confused about this.’ He’s, like, ‘Oh, it’s this and it’s this.’ And I was, like, ‘Oh, that’s actually really interesting. I’ve never had it laid out that way.’

“Full disclosure: I’m 46 years old, and prog metal is not a particularly lucrative genre. So every month that goes by, there’s money things. The kid needs braces, or there’s insurance on the gear, and it’s expensive. So last year, when I quit DTP, there was a part of me that was, like, ‘Maybe I should just make a pop record.’ Honestly! I was, like, ‘Maybe I should just put together a couple of choruses. I know that there’s six hundred to twelve hundred kids a night, or people a night, who will maybe buy that, and it will kind of be like Ocean Machine except for the bigger kick drum or something. We’ll start with the chorus and maybe we can make it three and a half minutes long. And we’ll make it about positive thinking, because that way I know it’s a sellable market.

“So when I was with Chad, I said that — I said, ‘I’m tired, man. I’ve been doing this for-fucking-ever. And we’re still [living] month to month. Would you help me produce — ’cause we get along — a commercial record?’ And he was, like, ‘I’ll tell you what you need to do. You need to get over this fear. You need to make exactly what it is that you need to do. You need to make uncompromising music. And you need to turn your vocals up.’

“It was crazy. He was the one that convinced me to make this, in a lot of ways. And it was such a profound experience for me, in a way, because I wouldn’t have expected that. He was, like, ‘The reason why I do the music that I do is because this is who I am. And people may not like that, but this is how it comes out for me.’ And then watching him, ’cause at the time, he was playing his demos for his new record, and he was super into it. It wasn’t like, ‘Oh, I’ve got this thing, and I’m gonna pull the wool over everybody’s eyes.’ It’s, like, he had broken up with his wife, and he’s, like, ‘This is a song…’ And I was just, like, ‘You do the same thing I do. It’s just what you do results in something that a lot of people have problems with.’ But also, it doesn’t mean that he’s not being genuine. And in the same way, I realized from that meeting, that I need to do the same thing in a way. But what happens when I do that is this gong show that you’re about to hear in a couple of months. But it was really an important thing for me to hear that from somebody, and specifically from somebody [people have] so much hate for. He was, like, ‘People fucking hate me, man. And this is my advice to you. You’re not supposed to make pop music. You’re supposed to do that. If you make pop music, that’s being disingenuous in a lot of ways.’ And it was so intense for me, in a way.

“Had I not had that experience with him, I think I would have been tempted to make something that would have, in a sense, gone in direct opposition to the thing that I’ve done for years that has allowed people to be so supportive. So I feel like I owe him a real debt of gratitude in a weird way.”

“He sings a harmony on a song that is death metal. It’s just brutal fucking music — it’s brutal. It’s seven minutes of 32nd note kick drums. It’s just artillery fire. And then all of a sudden, there’s Chad. But it’s a harmony. It’s hidden… it’s not hidden in the music, but it helps the music. It’s a cool thing.”

Devin’s new album Empath comes out in March. Watch parts one and two of a mini-documentary series about the album. You can also catch him on tour on North America this spring with Avatar.

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