villaopti.blogg.se

Garbage band
Garbage band






She has the presence to rein us in or blow us out, and she gives us a lot of leeway." "She has such a strong presence as a singer that allows Duke and Steve, and me to go off on tangents musically, and yet she still controls the vibe of the song front and centre. Since releasing their self-titled debut album in 1995, Garbage have garnered worldwide critical acclaim, amassing numerous hits as well as 7 Grammy nominations and 17 million albums sold.ĭescribing the band's sound as electronica, punk rock, orchestral music, pop songs and fuzzy guitar riffs, Butch adds: "We are very lucky as a band that we have a strong sonic identity, and I think a lot of that has to do with the sensibilities that we share and how we play as musicians, and also because of Shirley. For better or worse, it sounds like Garbage." We're not going to get played on Top 40 radio, and it was an important record for us to make. "It's the most social-political record we've made, but I think we're really extremely proud of it.

garbage band

"Once we started finishing the songs and Shirley started writing about the world that she saw and that we are all seeing everyday – all the craziness and then COVID kicking in in early 2020 – the record just took a hard detour and it became much more social political and very much more of a reflection of just the insanity that everybody is dealing with, not just here in the US, but everywhere around the world," Butch says. Going their separate ways post Palm Springs, the band members took the demos to individually tinker with before reconvening in the Los Angeles studio of engineer (and Shirley's husband) Billy Bush, where they finished their last day of proper recording together as a band on 15 March, 2020, right before they went into lockdown. "And it's funny because the songs at the time had a very kind of relaxed, sort of expansive vibe – almost orchestral or symphonic – and the record does not sound anything like that." The seeds for their first record in five years were sown over two weeks in the US summer of 2018, when the quartet convened in the desert in Palm Springs at a home belonging to one of guitarist Steve Marker's relatives.ĭrummer and co-producer, Butch Vig, who first melded musical minds with fellow Midwesterners Steve and Duke Erikson (guitarist) in the '80s before inviting Scotswoman and frontwoman Shirley Manson to join them in 1994, explains: "We just jammed, and they were really low-key, relaxed sessions. With tracks touching on themes ranging from global unrest and encroaching climate change, to the Black Lives Matter movement, the Me Too movement, sexism and misogyny, the record is overtly political and socially charged in a way that the band has not been before. Alt-rock pioneers, Garbage will release their long-awaited seventh album 'No Gods No Masters' this Friday (11 June).








Garbage band