Billy Talent : photo by Michael Bielecki : missingframephotography.com
Billy Talent live at Cirlce K Tempe Music Festival
Billy Talent performed live at the Circle K Tempe Music Festival in Tempe, Arizona March 28, 2008.
Vocals – Benjamin Kowalewicz
Guitar – Ian D Sa
Bass – Jon Gallant
Drums – Aaron Solowoniuk
Billy Talent : photo by Michael Bielecki : missingframephotography.com
Billy Talent : photo by Michael Bielecki : missingframephotography.com
Billy Talent : photo by Michael Bielecki : missingframephotography.com
Billy Talent : photo by Michael Bielecki : missingframephotography.com
The Circle K Tempe Music Festival is the largest music festival in Arizona, boasting three stages of entertainment featuring national, regional and local acts including Fergie, My Chemical Romance, the Meat Puppets, Puddle of Mudd, Eve 6, the Gin Blossoms, Cowboy Mouth, the Chris Parker Project and many more.
Billy Talent bio
Appearances can be deceiving. By all accounts, Billy Talent is a young band just releasing their second album. Hell, its even called II. But like most stories worth hearing, the best part often lies beneath the surface.
While II is the Toronto-based quartets sophomore record, the number hardly seems appropriate for this group of friends that first began this journey 13 years ago. And its those years of grounded experience that kept them from sacrificing II to the dreaded second album curse.
There can be a bit of a curse but its a curse thats explainable, says guitarist Ian DSa. You have your whole life to write your first record but sometimes you only have a few months to write the second one. The most important thing is to not get bogged down in other peoples timelines and just do it when you feel comfortable with the work. The band finished touring for their award-winning self-titled debut in late December 2004 and were scheduled to hit the studio the following February. But going from the road right to the recording studio isnt how Billy Talent rolls.
We took some time off, spent time with our friends, family and all the different people that need to be connected with, says singer Ben Kowalewicz. You need to have things to write about, you need real life to give you things to write about. Im not going to write about touring up and down the highway.
We definitely wanted some time to slip back into normal society and let the songs come out naturally, says DSa. I think it was important to take our time with it like that. We were very confident with the material we had early on so we didnt want to rush it and end up with three good songs and seven others that were filler.
The band will be the first to admit that the last three years has been like living a rock n roll dream. Whether jamming backstage with their musical idols or showing up to awards ceremonies in a full-on military tank, Billy Talent has taken advantage and fully appreciate where they are and how far theyve come. But it was working day jobs and playing everything from rented suburban halls to downtown Toronto dives for more than a decade that set the stage for their explosive debut, so its no wonder the band wanted a return to regular life in order to refuel for the follow-up.
Billy Talents version of regular life started when Kowalewicz, DSa, Jon Gallant (bass) and Aaron Solowoniuk (drums) began playing together in high school forging their own creative vision through a common love of punk rock. Bands like The Clash, Rage Against the Machine and Janes Addiction provided the foundation for what would become the foursomes own unique sound. The band, then called Pezz, put out a few independently released cassettes and recorded a full-length indie CD called Watoosh. By 1999, Pezz was traded in for a new moniker, lifted from a character in the film Hard Core Logo based on the book by Michael Turner.
With all four guys working full-time jobs autoworker, financial planner, radio producer, animator they released their 2001 EP Try Honesty. It was then Billy Talent planted the seeds that would take them from Toronto-rock club obscurity to a North American major label record deal, sharing stages with heroes the Buzzcocks and Janes Addiction, touring with Lollapalooza, the Warped Tour and a gaggle of European showcase stops including the U.K.s infamous Reading & Leeds festivals.
Their self-titled major label debut came out swinging, establishing the band as a melodic tsunami of fist-in-the-air rock n roll that garnered the guys accolades from Best New Group, Group of the Year and Album of the Year Junos trophies to Best Video and Best Rock Video MuchMusic awards, as well as a passionate following of fans at home and abroad.
For the follow-up, Billy Talent maintains the elements that makes them who they are hard-hitting, hook-filled, tight arrangements with an edge but with a more refined sense of purpose.
The first record was very angst-fueled, says DSa. We had spent 11 years as a band together and hadnt really gotten anywhere so the result was an angst-filled album. This record is a lot about trust and trust issues, and a little more of a personal and emotional record. That said, its still Billy Talent. Theres a good balance of simple hard songs and more complex songs, but no 10-minute prog jams.
While its definitely clear the months of constant touring have sharpened their musical chops, one of the stand-out differences is the way Kowalewicz has tempered his screeching lungs of steel to reveal his inner punk rock crooner.
I sing a lot more than I did on the first album, he says. I dont want to be known as the Scream Guy, so Ive worked on that. When youre telling a story you need commas and periods. I think I was more angry on the last record, all around. And on this one, Im a bit more focused and pick my moments.
One thing Kowalewicz and the band havent changed is their deft lyrical depiction of personal experiences and keen observations. The blistering opener Devil in a Midnight Mass shows how Kowalewicz can take an issue and talk about it in a personal way.
Its from a story I read about a priest in Boston who had been arrested for child abuse and the church kept moving him from parish to parish, says Kowalewicz. The Supreme Court tried and convicted him of molesting 150 kids over a 30 year span and while he was serving his sentence another inmate broke into his cell and murdered him. I stumble upon these stories, they dont necessarily have to be directly personal but its things like this that move me. Im a big advocate for childrens rights and this song looks at sexual abuse. Its not against the church or anything, its more about that individual betrayal between adult and child. I dont have the answers but hopefully if I sing about a certain issue it will get people talking about it.
The album seamlessly weaves such the issue-based songs with more personal tales, from friends falling victim to drug addiction in Fallen Leaves, to hipster snobbery in Where is the Line? to dealing with people who dont stand by their convictions in Covered in Cowardice the music sets the scene while the words tell the vivid stories.
I think this record is more focused for us as writers and people telling stories that are a bit more personal and revealing the side of us that we were more hesitant to reveal on the first record, says DSa.
Musically, the song This Suffering melds all the sounds and styles that fans were first introduced to on their first record. I think its a good representation of the band and all the little things we do in our music, says Gallant.
But while individual songs can be picked out and highlighted, II is not a collection of singles but a single work put together with purpose which explains the spartan title. A lot of times you look at certain songs to get the name of the record, but the problem with that is then youre saying that is the song fast-forward to this song, says Kowalewicz. For us, the record is an entire album not just a few songs and some filler.
Like getting to know a good friend better over time, their lyrics and sound are familiar but delve deeper into who Billy Talent is and where they stand. The first 13 years of their career established them as an authentic, honest and direct force of energy and these next 13 songs add to that legacy. Welcome to part II.
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