SIX
FEET UNDER
Chris
Barnes - Vocals
Terry Butler - Bass
Greg Gall - Drums
Steve Swanson - Guitars
Metal
Blade Records releases SIX FEET UNDER's latest release
13 with Graveyard Classics 2 as added bonus!
On
August 9th 2005 you will be able to purchase Six Feet
Unders latest release 13 with Graveyard Classics
2 as added bonus!!! 13, as Barnes puts it is our
Reign in Blood. I in no way, shape, or form mean to
suggest that 13 is better than, sounds like, be as
ground breaking, or will be remembered with as much
regard in the history of metal as Reign in Blood.
To clarify for those of you who don't get it, and
for those of you who are quick to dismiss us, let
me break it down once again... in my opinion this
is our best most exciting work since Maximum Violence
and I am thoroughly excited and proud of what we did
on this CD and to those who doubt us, you would doubt
us no matter what, and to our fans -you wont be disappointed.
13
features the following tracks: 'Decomposition Of The
Human Race', 'Somewhere In The Darkness', 'Rest In
Pieces', 'Wormfood', '13', 'Shadow Of The Reaper'
(first video directed by Gary Smithson, featuring
actors Meagan Crawford and Aaron Kinser), 'Deathklaat',
'The Poison Hand', 'This Suicide', 'The Art Of Headhunting'
and 'Stump'.
The
bonus disc will be Graveyard Classics 2 which was
originally released on October 19th 2004. Death Metal
heavy weights Six Feet Under did what no other metal
band has done before... covered an album in its entirety!
Six Feet Under's Graveyard Classics 2 is none other
than the AC/DC's infamous 20 times platinum release
Back In Black! Six Feet Under recorded GC2 at Morrisound
Recording in Tampa, Florida with Chris Carroll mixing
and Chris Barnes producing. For those of you who don't
know the track listing, and shame on you for that,
here it is:
1.
Hells Bells
2.
Shoot to Thrill
3.
What Do You Do For Money Honey
4.
Givin the Dog a Bone
5.
Let Me Put My Love Into You
6.
Back in Black
7.
You Shook Me All Night Long
8.
Have A Drink On Me
9.
Shake A Leg
10.
Rock N' Roll Ain't Noise Pollution
When he's not drag racing near his
Tampa, Florida home, Six Feet Under's Chris Barnes
is a non-stop death machine. In fact he may be the
only living grandfather of death metal - a tag he
"always gets a smile out of," the singer
admits with a blushing tone. "If anything, that
kind of recognition makes it worthwhile for this style
of music. I definitely appreciate that."
On the verge of unveiling their latest
slab piled with human remains, Six Feet Under are
getting grim this time... grim reaper that is, a recurring
theme surrounding the 11 tracks found nestled within
this freshly-hewn casket. Recorded at Morrisound Recording
in Tampa, Florida and Criteria The Hit Factory in
Miami, the band's eighth full-length studio effort,
13, "will rip your fucking heads off," as
Barnes so eloquently describes (although this is a
mission statement the dread-locked legend has used
since the band's debut, Haunted, in 1995). Along with
guitarist Steve Swanson, bass legend Terry Butler
(Death, Massacre) and drummer Greg Gall, the foursome
continue to follow a strange career path that merges
simplistic death metal with their fetish for the tried
'n' true classic sound of the art form. And consistency
is the key to Barnes' rather stomach-turning ideals.
"We try to put out some kind
of release every year," he says, with respect
to the band's creative outbursts that have been an
ugly but regular occurrence for over a decade. "Most
bands outside of the '70s and '80s were releasing
one album every three or four years. I don't have
that much time. I feel like I have to keep moving
and keep creating as much as I can while I'm here.
I'm not gonna dilly-dally and play the games most
bands play. I'm here to write lyrics and make music
for ourselves first off. We are definitely in touch
with the people that like our music and we try to
stay in tune with our fans. I think that's one thing
I've always done: stay aware of what's going on out
there around me in the music industry. I've always
had a real love for this thing that I do. It's a passion
of mine and I really, really love creating. And to
do that every three years or something... I can't
pace around that long. I'm an anxious type of person.
When I know I want to do something I do it. It may
take me a couple of minutes to plan it out right,
but I do it and I get into it. I can't wait for when
it comes time to write; it's my passion."
"This album is my main catalyst
right now," he continues. "We've been getting
this together since October. Now with mastering being
completed and a release date set, it's just a matter
of really pushing myself to accomplish the next step
in what I did with this record and what the band did
in writing it. It's just taking it to the next step,
which is what's going to drive me the next six or
seven months."
And Barnes more than ever guides the
SFU death ship, as he's also credited with producing
13 alongside longtime engineer and mixer Chris Carroll.
13 features the following tracks: 'Decomposition Of
The Human Race', 'Somewhere In The Darkness', 'Rest
In Pieces', 'Wormfood', '13', 'Shadow Of The Reaper'
(first video directed by Gary Smithson, featuring
actors Meagan Crawford and Aaron Kinser), 'Deathklaat',
'The Poison Hand', 'This Suicide', 'The Art Of Headhunting'
and 'Stump'.
Fans of Barnes' Cannibal Corpse roots
(he split with the band after 1994's The Bleeding)
and the malicious, speed-ridden underbelly of Six
Feet Under's death metal vision will embrace 13.
"It seems like it's more on the
up-tempo side." Barnes describes the frenzied
affair. "I think it's a direct echo of where
we were when we wrote it. We had just got off the
road, three or four days before we went into the studio.
We had no material written. I had an idea of approaching
this album in a different way, writing and recording.
We just went into the studio and wrote this thing.
The aggressiveness and the tempo reflected our mindsets.
We really tapped into our feelings and it set our
pace. We've been putting out lots of releases and
doing lots of touring. From studio to tour, studio
to tour… everything. We've been on the wheel
this past year. I didn't want to let the band relax
after being on that. I wanted to use that energy that
forward motion, and it really showed itself in the
writing process and in the recording, which was really
what I had an aim to do. We wanted to get a breath
of fresh air in the writing process and hopefully
that would stir things up a bit and make this album
contain more stand-out songs. When you force yourself
into a situation, you tend to absorb the energy and
it definitely helps you; I think that was my motive
on this one - for me and for the band."
But while idle hands are the devil's
playground, taking advantage of the momentum proved
fruitful. Creatively speaking, 13 came together in
a flash of death metal spirit, nurtured along with
Barnes' focus on extraneous ingredients and spiritualistic
accompaniment.
"I had a vision, like everything
else I've done through meditation and smoking lots
of marijuana. I've developed a keen third eye sense
- it's a straight vision, tunnel vision. I can't break
free of that tunnel. There's one set mind pattern
in motion and I have to follow it. That was really
my idea for this. I said, 'That will work, this will
work.' Some people will use this against us if they
don't like it, but this is the strongest stuff we've
done. I always say it, but this is completely off-base
for us writing-wise and it works in an aggressive
way. We wrote this album and laid the drum tracks
down in seven, eight days. I wrote 14 sets of lyrics
(11 for 13, the rest for the box set) in just under
five days. I laid my vocal tracks down in six hours
on this thing. Everything came together so spontaneously
and to me it's more solid than anything we've ever
taken time on. I really don't know how it came together
but it did; it's weird. They're really good songs.
A lot of great albums were written in the studio under
the influence of lack of sleep and entertaining substances.
It's a good thing to go back to the way things sounded
and the way people put things together. Some people
at the label are saying this is the best thing since
Haunted. I really think we accomplished something
and we pushed ourselves in a different way and it
formed itself right. It was a cocky thought I had,
but everything I do has got a little bit of ego to
it - it's got to. That's what an artist does, he embraces
his own creation and that's where it begins. Hopefully
people will enjoy it as much as I do."
The lyrical element behind 13 is,
once again, not for the weak at heart, as Barnes plunders
the dark side, scythe in hand. "It's definitely
a loosely based concept," he says about his twisted
poetry. "It takes you through a story. Everything
I've done lyrically is about life and death. And this
is no different, but it's a little more concentrated
and focused towards the grim reaper and the thought
of the coming of death in many ways individually and
on a grand scale. People that are really into my lyrics
notice certain patterns of reminiscing towards older
things that I've written. There's maybe a little bit
more of a puzzle here to try and connect the pieces.
13 is kind of that, but directed in a manner of things
to come, things that have been, things that are happening.
The number 13, on many different levels, biblically,
historically, supernaturally, is a vague type of thing;
it's not just a scary number. “
Six Feet Under’s 13 in store
March 22nd, 2005!
DISCOGRAPHY
• Graveyard Classics 2 (Metal Blade Records,
2004)
• Live With Full Force (Metal Blade Records,
2004)
• Bringer of Blood (Metal Blade Records, 2003)
• Double Dead (Metal Blade Records, 2003)
• True Carnage (Metal Blade Records, 2001)
• Graveyard Classics (Metal Blade Records, 2000)
• Maximum Violence (Metal Blade Records, 1999)
• Warpath (Metal Blade Records, 1997)
• Alive and Dead (Metal Blade Records, 1996)
• Haunted (Metal Blade Records, 1995)