2005 fall issue of interlude magazine from interlude-magazine.com
full scan from mcrhollywood.blogspot.com
2005 fall issue of interlude magazine from interlude-magazine.com
full scan from mcrhollywood.blogspot.com
chemical burn by jeff schechter 06/2004 amp scans from mcrhollywood
“THE LIGHTS DIM, AND WITH THE CROWD MILLING AROUND THE energy amongst the young fans in attendance at the Majestic Café in Detroit seemed like a pocket of gas, pent up and ready to erupt. Like a match struck, My Chemical Reaction hit the stage with an explosive presence and the room goes from dormant to devastation. "The crowd’s energy was amazing tonight,” says singer Gerard Way, “The kids climbing up and diving offstage; man that’s why we love Detroit.”
Tearing through a set interwoven with fan favorites, and songs off the impending release on Reprise Records: Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge, My Chemical Romance left the stage littered with equipment, and the crowd screaming for more.
Since the release of the debut, I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love in the summer of 2002, it has been a relative landslide of hype about the band. Well- deserved hype at that. From starting the fire on the Warped Tour, to tour-ing constantly throughout the United States, My Chemical Romance has established a heightened state of street credibility and a much wider fan base, as well as a growing energy in their songs and stage performance. Described as an explosion of rage and integrity, whether at one of their shows, sweating and screaming right along with singer Gerard Way, or enchanted by the melodies of “Demolition Lovers” screaming from a stereo, all in question have to agree that My Chemical Romance is a prevalent force to be reckoned with in the years ahead.
Recently signing with the major, Reprise Records, My Chemical Romance jumped right back to work after relentless touring that has spanned the United States and much of Europe; in the UK, Germany, Holland, and Spain. As they now come into their own, My Chemical Romance does not plan on taking their music, newfound position, or their fans for granted. Like a snake full of fresh venom, My Chemical Romance curl up to attack, back in the studio recording what is described as, the darkest and hardest music to date by singer Gerard Way. After such intense songs as “Headfirst for Halos” and “Cubicles” it will be an anxious wait to see what this fresh young band will crank out next.
“We went for a grainy, dirty sound, trying to capture the intensity of our live performance on the album,” stated guitarist Frank lero. “We were a bit apprehensive, waiting to see how the label treated us in the studio. But it worked out great, Reprise gave us creative license to create the sort of record we wanted, this is definitely the record we set out to make.” After a debut record that made such an impact, receiving acclaim from Keith Morris of Black Flag, and the Circle Jerks fame, it will be quite a thing to see how the band has approached their sophomore effort. “Keith Morris is one of my musical idols,” lero admits with enthusiasm, “He contacted the band, and expressed how much of a fan he was of what we were doing. He is actually on Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge. That is one of my greatest experiences so far, writing a piece of music for one of my heroes to perform on our new record.”
My Chemical Romance is like a chemical reaction leaving all things in their wake changed forever. These guys come right off a freight train of rock and roll fury; first stop, right in your face. Raw talent, dark lyrics, and heavy angst cover the debut I Brought You My Bullets, You Brought Me Your Love. Layered musical tent coupled with a fierce sense of annihilation unleash an addiction for My Chemical Romance that is manifested in their solid, loyal fan base. Such a diverse sound was cultivated from the individuals in the bands different tastes.
“We are all different guys, musically,” says lero. With tastes from Brit-Pop, to classically trained guitarists, and hardcore punk rock enthusiasts, My Chemical Romance is a melting pot of beautifully chaotic sounds. “Heading back into the studio, we were anticipating it to be more difficult, so having a lot of ideas already prepared helped in the process.” lero comments on the recording process, “As a band we wanted to capture the live aspects of our shows, because we didn’t feel that the first record did our live performance the justice it deserves.” While exuberant in the youth of My Chemical Romance, this band has paid their dues, and it is like.breaths of fresh air to have such an original band make such an impact in so short a time. Hailing from the turbulent streets of urban New Jersey, the tale of My Chemical Romance chases these five young men back to the days of high school. As acquaintances in younger con-years, the members of My Chemical Romance were tried and true members of the local music scene. It was in their own individual bands that they began a fledgling approach to the world of an indie-rock movement. As time goes, so did the bands, and they all head off in separate directions, seeking separate paths. Keeping in touch over the years, it became apparent that each man’s path wasn’t leading to the places they had imagined. Singer Gerard Way was living in his mom’s basement, making transit to New York City doing animation, when he called up drummer Matt Pelissier, and found they were both in precarious limbos. Not sure where they were headed, the two got together to play some music. After rounding out the roster with Ray Toro and guitar and Mikey Way on bass, the seething seed of My Chemical Romance was born. lero recalls the early days, “After they had all gotten together, Gerard, Ray, Matt and Mikey, I was a huge fan of the music they were making. After the band I was in at the time split up, they decided to get another guitarist, and asked me to join.” The story behind the band is as captivating as the music they create. “This new record is really gonna blow up, it is just as true to what was done with ‘Bullets’ but more energetic and over the top. I can’t wait for the fans to get their hands on the new record. We are set up to tour so much in the next year; I forget what my house looks like already.”
With the release of Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge slated for June, the growing fever of the band’s energy criss-crosses the nation with Avenged Sevenfold on a tour that kicks off in Detroit April 3rd, also look forward to them on this summer’s Warped Tour www.warped-tour.com. With all that lay ahead of them, it is impossible to see just how far My Chem’s signature sound can go. You can check them out online at www.mychemicalromance.com, or wait and find My Chemical Romance in your town, tearing a relative black hole for the masses to peer into throughout the country. In the opinion of this writer, the harder they rock, the darker the better.“
06/2004 amp scans from mcrhollywood
photos
01/06/2003 salle lx rainbow montreal ca – junkedcamera.com
01/07/2003 horseshoe tavern toronto on – photos from leafangel55 on lj dead link saved by cathedral decay on tumblr
01/12/2003 fireside bowl chicago il – mychemicalromance.com 2003
01/25/2003 bottom of the hill sacramento ca – photos by danny ensele sacramentomusicarchive.com
02/05/2003 irving plaza nyc nc photos by justin borucki – mychemicalromance.com 2003
02/08/2003 palladium worcester ma – from punk-it.net
02/10/2003 kool haus toronto ca – junkedcamera.com
02/20/2003 mississippi nights st louis mo elizabeth gaines rotten photography
03/22/2003 sting rays birchhill oldbridge nj photos by ed auletta
04/24/2003 skate and surf fest grand arcade asbury park nj – idolize magazine
05/19/2003 the guvernment toronto on photos – allfalldown.org
05/23/2003 imusicast oakland ca jerryguzmanphotography on instagram
05/26/2003 troubadour west hollywood ca from burial plot on deviant art
07/25/2003 the downtown farmingdale ny – gaelen harlacher
08/18/2003 9:30 club washington dc – brokenvoices
08/26/2003 the phoenix concert theatre toronto ca – all fall down photography on flickr
10/29/2003 the axis boston ma – photos and bonus interview from punk-it.net
10/31/2003 club krome south amboy nj – drew guarini on twitter
gerard pic/interview 2003 – artsucks.com
mcr’s old website 2003
videos
spaceyraygun’s youtube(quality original recordings of most 2002-2003 shows/interviews we have access to)
01/11/2003 fireside bowl chicago il – brad nolan videography
02/20/2003 mississippi nights st louis mo – brad nolan videography
02/21/2003 beaumont club kansas city mo – brad nolan videography
02/28/2003 boonton elks lodge boonton nj – user: random stuff
03/23/2003 club krome south amboy nj – douglas carl
05/14/2003 north star bar philadelphia pa – deadhoarse
05/23/2003 imusicast oakland ca – skyline studios – oakland
06/08/2003 bloomfield avenue cafe montclair nj – spaceyraygun
06/26/2003 the knitting factory nyc ny – luxlillian
07/26/2003 the chameleon club lancaster pa – spaceyraygun
08/18/2003 9:30 club washington dc – TEPMIHATOP_HvH
08/19/2003 trocadero theater philadelphia pa – spaceyraygun
10/23/2003 downtime nyc ny – spaceyraygun
10/31/2003 south amboy nj halloween show – user: MCR stuff and things
11/14/2003 university of connecticut-stamford stamford ct – user: random stuff
12/14/2003 irving plaza nyc ny – spaceyraygun
interviews
03/26/2003 gerard way interview wvau radio w/ dj rossstar – spaceyraygun
07/03/2003 seton hall’s pirate radio 89.5 wsou interview south orange nj – spaceyraygun
07/11/2003 seton hall’s pirate radio 89.5 wsou interview south orange nj – spaceyraygun
04/11/2003 gerard way interview whus 91.7 broken promises radio with spike – spaceyraygun
scans
11/2003 revolver from mcrhollywood.blogspot.com
07/2003 spin from mcrhollywood.blogspot.com
05/2003 rock sound from mcrhollywood.blogspot.com
04/2003 alternative press from mcrhollywood.blogspot.com
flyers
“mikey way
“me and gerard, we’re the best friends in the world”
Once again, we meet Mikey Way. But this time this guy talks soooooo much. Hi hi hi! Never thought Mikey could be this chatty!
Long coat and black jeans, that’s the outfit worn by Mikey Way when he met W at the Malia Hotel, Thursday afternoon, January 31, 2008. Wow, he looked really neat. But when watching MCR’s concert a few hours later, it turned out that Mikey was also wearing the same costume, he he he. It’s very clear that his long coat and all-black jeans are not just a style but an important part of his identity.
Anyway… Mikey looked relaxed as he shook hands with W. As a small talk, W of course asked him what he thought about Jakarta. He answered honestly. “So far, great. But I haven’t been here long. Only 12 hours, only half a day. So, you know.”He said as he took a large white plastic cup of coffee from the table in front of him. His hands looked a little shaky.
Gosh, Mikey, the conversation has become so serious, huh, he he he. W reminds me that the name My Chemical Romance was taken from one of the books Mikey read when he was still working at Barnes & Noble bookstore, namely Ecstasy: Three Tales of Chemical Romance by Irvine Welsh. mentioned by Mikey, here. Wow, it seems so funny to imagine Mikey being a bookworm, huh? Apart from Gerard being the vocalist and frontman of My Chem, he is still Mikey’s ‘big brother’. So, let’s just start asking about Gerard, shall we?
Mmm, maybe we can start with a question that’s not too direct, huh…
What’s the most annoying thing about Gerard?
“Him? There’s nothing bad about him. Even if there’s something annoying, it makes me love him even more. Ha ha. Even if there’s something bad about him, it’s endearing. Gera is a very talented and admirable individual.”
What is the annoying side of you in Gerard’s eyes?
“Me? Well, I don’t know. Ha ha. Maybe you guys better ask Gerard directly, haha ha.”
Have you two ever fought?
“We have. It’s natural. But not too often. In a few years maybe.”
Can you tell us a little bit about how you and Gerard are actually brothers? what kind?
“We’re the best friends in the world. We always hang out together. We always talk. Especially when we’re on tour, we always share a room in a hotel. only once we fought, ha ha ha. We barely fight.”
Do you still have time to read a book?
“Yes, I still am. Right now I’m reading Needful Things by Stephen King. This is actually my second time reading it, he he he.”
Wow, you really like horror stories, huh?
“Ha ha ha, yes. I like horror novels and also horror movies. Stephen King is a great horror writer. Many of his books are horror themed. I really like Stephen King.”
From early on, it seemed like Gerard did most of the talking.
“I only talk when necessary. Not only me, Frank, Bob and Ray have also. But more often than not we have to take care of our own musical instruments, so we leave that responsibility to Gerard, he he he.”
Totally agree, Mikey Unfortunately, Gerard isn’t there, hu hu hu!
On stage, Gerard is the same. Have you ever joined in the conversation with the audience?
“Well, yes sure. I have.”
Anyway, really happy to chat with you. Lately, MCR has been using piano players a lot at concerts, huh?
“We do everything like other big bands do.”
Are there plans to make James Dewees a permanent member of MCR?
Oh, James. He’s already become My Chem family member since ama. Even though he is not a member of MCR, he is our friend. We have also known him for a long time. Besides, we like the sound of our concert piano. So, we keep using it.
Why, the hell, is the sound of the piano so important to MCR?
“Piano is the basis for all music. Since we know a cool piano player like James Dewees, we might as well include him in the line-up. Unfortunately, James is currently at sound check, so he can’t be here.”
My Chem, that’s how Mikey shortens the name My Chemical Romance. Frankly, W also knows nothing, he he he. When asked when My Chem (yikes, I’m following Mikey) will release a new album, Mikey said it would be around early or mid 2009. Wow, that’s still quite a long time away, huh. When W asked about My Chem’s three previous albums, this guy remained enthusiastic, cas cis cus.(?)
Tell us about the metamorphosis from the first to the third album…
“Sure sure”
Album: Bullets
“We were still very young. We were in our early 20s and we had only been in the band for about 10 months. Every song that was created at that time was indeed in accordance with our condition at that time. If you listen to it, you will definitely feel the nuances of My Chem now. The songs on the first album are like ‘the younger brother of The Black Parade,
Is the creative process different?
“Let’s see… The first album, / was really green, he he he. Gerard was also very young. We felt more spontaneous. The second album, Three Cheers… was more mature, more aggressive. The longer it went on, the clearer it became in The Black Parade. The difference was probably with the presence of Bob on drums. He is one of the phenomenal drummers. Many people say so. Because of Bob, The Black Parade seemed touching on many musical genres.”
What if someone says that The Black Parade sounds smoother than previous albums?
“Technically, yes. The first album was made in the basement. The sound was rough. But eventually we had a bigger studio and had more time to prepare the material.”
adhika annisa, marti photo: yudha
08/2008 kawanku (indonesia) from mcrhollywood
english translation done by google translate
english translation:
pg 1. “VISIONS
MUSIC FROM PASSION
Gerard Way
and the fight against one’s own image”
pg 2.
“Double attempt
my chemical rumanre
It is the story of an album that never became one and a band that is fighting against its external image: My Chemical Romance reinvent themselves as a pop art band, as futuristic Mad Maxes with funky laser guns in a universe of quotes, cross-references and broken meta levels. The end result is Danger Days: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys – a record that would not exist in this form if My Chemical Romance had not failed at the first attempt.
TEXT: JAN SCHWARZKAMP
PHOTOS: SEBASTIAN ARTZ”
pg 3. “ A new My Chem song with rough edges was Black Dragon Fighting Society, a hardcore hit in the Misfits style that suited the band perfectly. That’s right: "was” and “stood”. Because that too is now buried in the archives. “Some people will probably hate me for saying something like that, but: The song is more punk than punk. Nobody expected us of all people to record a song like that. The song was deliberately not meant to be longer than a minute and a half, because only the best songs are that short, if you think of Minor Threat alone.” At this point, Gerard has no idea that he is about to make a new start and that Black Dragon Fighting Society will not survive. But there is something that will point the way for the future. A comic. “I’m currently working on a project called The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys, which will be completely different to anything you’ve ever seen from me before. It will be my first adult comic, extremely violent. Imagine it as a sci-fi lo-fi punk odyssey, full of references to the Ramones and with a lot of laser-creaking.” The stuff you can knit an album out of, as we will see.
SECOND ATTEMPT
End of September 2010, ten months later. A trailer for the new My Chem album has been circulating online for three days. Danger Days: The True Lives Of The Fabulous Killjoys is what it is called. The trailer shows the four protagonists: Gerard, Mikey and the two guitarists Frank Iero and Ray Toro. No sign of black parade uniforms, but My Chemical Romance now look like four Tank Girls, reinforced by a sissy rollerboy. There is also action à la Mad Max vs. Power Rangers, a bit of 70s road movie flair in the style of Vanishing Point and the crude, grainy look of grindhouse cinema. The band’s reinvention is complete. The light-shy moth has turned into a bright butterfly that fires laser beams.
My Chemical Romance – minus Frank, who is looking after his newborn twins – have been answering journalists’ questions since the early hours of the morning. The most luxurious place to do this is the legendary Sunset Marquis rock star hangout in West Hollywood. Let’s start where we left off the recording device ten months ago: with the comic, which has now become an album. “Yes, the comic is about exactly the same topics that are also found on the album,” confirms Gerard. “The nice thing about the album is that there is no overarching story, it has no concept whatsoever.” Gerard, now with red hair and a healthier complexion, is sitting on a couch again, this time without a cigarette. Ray and Mikey support him. Or not. Because if anyone has anything to say here, it’s only Gerard.
No concept, then. But soon a comic and finally the corresponding album. On the record we meet the DJ called Dr. Death Defying
From black and long to blonde and short to black and the parade moved on. The new costumes are colorful, the record is not as grim as the last ones. “The new record is the most important thing. The last video we had I had this color palette of red.[makeup]”
FACE
With make-up and goth outfits, Gerard looked for a while like the illegitimate son of Robert Smith and Tim Burton, with his hair tied back. In that respect, My Chemical Romance only had themselves to blame for being perceived by some as a dark puppet show. At least you have to give them credit for being early on in this. “We did what we did, regardless of what others thought of it. When the whole thing became popular, we stopped it because we were simply done with the style. After all, our aim with The Black Parade was not to put on a cabaret show, but rather an expansive, theatrical death rock show.”
HANDS
Gerard doesn’t play an instrument, even though he’s a guitarist. He takes care of the lyrics and conceptual ideas. Armed with a notebook, sketchpad and laptop, he works on his comics mainly on tour. “That works best. I sit in front of my computer and write scripts. I get the most done on the road because I have a lot of free time. And then there are the nights. So what do I do after a show? I write until two in the morning.”
FEET
At concerts, Gerard walks a few hundred meters. No instrument ties him to one place. He is one of my absolute favorite front men,“ says brother Mikey. He is General Patton, that is his role. He is also so intelligent and eloquent. Having a brother in the band makes a lot of things easier. We would hang out together even if we didn’t play in a band together.”
HAIR
long. And now: red. The gloom has gone, the black look is sunny, the music – brighter. “The lyrics of the new songs on The Black Parade are so dark that I wrote them. The opposite.” One change that the band turned to was that of teenagers. They were already fed up with black and white.“
COMPLEXION
You can’t tell from the photo, but the California sun is rubbing off on Way’s new home. Gerard looks like he’s just come back from a beach holiday. "I’m quite happy about that. There’s no reason for me to stay pale,” he says. Brother Mikey adds: “29 years of pale skin is enough.”
T-SHIRT
“It has no political meaning. The American flag is used all the time anyway.” In the interview, Way is wearing Chucks with the Stars Spangled Banner. We’ll probably have to ask ourselves that question more often in the near future. The record is clearly not political, and neither is the look. We’re just using it – a flag is like a tribal, you mark your territory with it. Our corporate identity, the symbol with the spider, is also such a powerful, universally applicable symbol.“
PANTS & JACKET
The look changed: Gerard and the band won’t be appearing on stage in simple denim outfits any time soon. "We wore marching band uniforms for three or four years,” says Mikey. When we came back from the Black Parade tour, we had to redefine our lives and deconstruct ourselves. We wanted to drop everything and see what was left. Killjoys is the result of that – as if we were rebelling against The Black Parade, taking a stand against our own last album. A trailer shows the band as colorful end-time punks with laser pistols and Pontiac Trans Ams. Fans are already sending us photos, inventing color concepts for their Killjoy gangs and making their own weapons.“ "Sure, there have been things like that before,” says Gerard, but what band offers that today? It’s like a new Star Wars movie coming out. Nobody knows exactly who this Darth Maul is yet, but people are already dressing up like him. “Last time, our fans designed their own uniforms. This Killjoys thing is a bit more personal because it leaves more room for interpretation. The kids aren’t dressing up like us anymore, they’re creating their own characters.”
pg 4. “Dr. Death. He delivers the intro, reads a traffic report and hosts the spectacle. There is a trailer for the record and now also a music video for the single Na Na Na, which is about our heroes and their new alter egos Party Poison (Gerard), Kid Cobra (Mikey), Fun Ghoul (Frank) and Jet Star (Ray). That’s not a concept? "Well, yes, it is. But what it is supposed to be above all is a big pop art experiment. As it progresses, the fans and we will add more and more to the story. For the comic itself, my co-author and I already have precise ideas about what will happen. But we could also still question everything. If we shoot scenes in the desert, for example, they will dictate what the comic will look like.” Aha. Let’s wait and see instead of going into too much detail. Otherwise we’ll get tangled up like in the confusing universe of Coheed And Cambria.
When we met last year, there were seven songs to listen to, none of which made it onto the album, or at most in a heavily modified form. What happened?
“When we met, we were mixing. Ray was at home with family things. Frank and I were trying to make the album sound the way we wanted it to. But it didn’t work. Since I’m only the lyricist, I couldn’t explain in musical terms what sounded wrong to me. Anyway, we had to approach it from scratch and talk to our producer Rob Cavallo about how we could do it. I had a song called Na Na Na that I had written in the desert. While we were still working on the old recordings, I said: let’s record this song. We went into the studio and within one night the thing was done. That’s when we realized that we had to rebuild the entire album from scratch, including the songs that we had already finished.”
Last time you said that the new album would be a reaction to how you are perceived as a band. What is the situation now?
“It can’t be about what anyone thinks of what you do. It’s about doing it for yourself. That would be the worst thing: making music for the people who
not like you just so they like you. Should I be a bit tougher? Or more punk somehow? Will you like me then? Nah, not with me. That was also my biggest beef with the last recordings. They were good, but not outstanding. And if I had any complaints about them, it was the feeling that I had accommodated other people’s views too much. We wanted to assert ourselves as a rock band. We only managed that with Killjoys.”
The days of The Black Parade, the big gestures and all the pomp, definitely seem to be over. Looking back, did you lay it on too thick?
“Yes and no. It was an extremely ambitious album. I wouldn’t say it was too hard-working, because we didn’t try too hard. But we put a lot of work into it. We had to use a certain arrogance for the album. A lot of people thought at the time that we were a flash in the pan. We had released a hit album and were now going to go under with the emo hype. So we exaggerated everything, a defiant reaction. Even though it wasn’t fun at times, we were constantly laughing because we felt kind of stupid doing it. With Killjoys we may not have laughed as much – but we had more fun.”
THE WATCHMEN
The last sign of life from the band before Killjoys was the Bob Dylan cover Desolation Row on the soundtrack to the graphic novel adaptation The Watchmen. The video for the song was directed by Zach Snyder. “For free,” Gerard marvels to this day. “Zach was so in love with his own film that he was still re-shooting scenes even though he had already finished it. This included the video for our song, which was obviously very important to him. He wanted to know what I thought about it. I told him that our cover version should sound like the Jim Carroll song People Who Died – like a big, loud ‘Fuck you!’, the film is one too.” Snyder chose My Chem because he knew that Gerard is a comic book author and that his The Umbrella Academy, like The Watchmen, won an Eisner Award.
GRANT MORRISON
Morrison plays the bald villain in the Killjoys trailer. He’s a comic book writer like me and my personal hero. We’ve been friends since The Black Parade. Greg is one of the most respected artists in the comics world, alongside Alan Moore and Neil Gaiman. He wrote his own character from the trailer and designed the costume himself.
COMICS FOR YOU
The second part of The Umbrella Academy, called Dallas, has just been published in German translation by Cross Cult Verlag and has already won Gerard and illustrator Gabriel Bá the Eisner Award. We are giving away three copies of the hardback piece of bloody pop culture. Write an email with the subject “Dallas” to [email protected]. The deadline for entries is November 19th.
11/2010 visions magazine
2010 spin – photos by ture lillegraven
“For My Chemical Romance, a new LP isn’t just music — it’s a full on art project. That’s certainly the case with their November 22 concept album Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys. And it was the same with their recent photo shoot for SPIN’s December cover.
The band — singer Gerard Way, 33; bassist Mikey Way, 30; guitarist Frank Iero, 29; and guitarist Ray Toro, 33 — met up with SPIN photo director Michelle Egiziano and photographer Ture Lillegraven at L.A.’s Pink Motel, a ’50s joint often used in movies and music videos (like Cee-Lo’s latest).
The idea was to continue the concept of the album, which is about a post-apocalyptic, Mad Max-like gang called the Killjoys who fight an invading army of vampires. The tale unfolds like the comic books Gerard grew up on, and also takes cues from Japanese animation. “Gerard said he discovered Japanimation when the band was on a tour of Japan. He was really inspired by that imagery and it influenced the album, videos, and photo shoot,” Lillegraven says.”
source: turelillegraven.com
“DEATH COMES RIPPING” – SPOOKY ISSUE
‘THE BLACK PARADE, THE TRIUMPHANT NEW ALBUM BY MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE MAY HAVE A TRAGIC STORYLINE, BUT IT’S NOTHING COMPARED WITH WHAT THE BANDMATES ENDURED TO BRING THE DISC TO LIGHT
PHOTOS BY JON WIEDERHORN PHOTOS BY JUSTIN BORUCKI
STANDING ON A BALCONY nine floors above the teeming streets of New York, Gerard Way overlooks the city in which My Chemical Romance began assembling their ambitious new album, The Black Parade. The newly peroxide- blond frontman takes a deep drag from a cigarette and exhales with a sigh. He knows he shouldn’t smoke, but it’s his only remaining vice.
“If I hadn’t been sober, I think The Black Parade surely would have killed me,” says Gerard, who climbed on the wagon in 2004. “We were going insane the whole time, and I had to cling to my sobriety to stay even a little lucid. The album became like this beast that was consuming us.”
Following up a release as successful as 2004’s Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge, which sold 1.4 million copies in the U.S. alone, is never an easy task. And the various scares the band experienced as they worked on the new record-drummer Bob Bryar had a near-fatal staph infection, Gerard seriously injured his foot, and some restless spirits at the studio where they recorded kept them all on edge-did not help matters. And neither
did MCR’s decision to make The Black Parade (Reprise) a concept disc. Together, Gerard and his bandmates-Bryar, guitarists Frank lero and Ray Toro, and bassist Mikey Way (Gerard’s younger brother)-decided to craft a record about a dying young man who is visited by a cast of strange characters that help him examine his short life.
But diving into the conceptual deep end proved well worth the hassle. The Black Parade is not only MCR’s most realized offering; it’s also one of the most eclectic, enjoyable rock records of the year. One listen to tracks
like “House of Wolves,” “The Sharpest Lives,” and “Dead!” makes it clear that My Chemical Romance can still rip a good metallic punk tune. But the bandmates are now equally influenced by epic albums like Pink Floyd’s The Wall, David Bowie’s The Rise & Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars, and Queen’s A Night at the Opera.
“A lot of bands from the scene we came from try to strip down their music to ‘keep it real,” Gerard notes. “But the real you is what you’ve always had inside you and what you strive to be. So when we started compiling the material we had written, we were like, You know what? This has to be a huge, theatrical record.”
MY CHEMICAL ROMANCE started working on ideas for The Black Parade in the back of the bus while on 2005’s Warped Tour, after which they flew to New York and rented a rehearsal space for two months. And that’s when things started to get weird.
“I was living in Queens, and I had to commute on the subway every day,” Gerard says. “I was suddenly very scared and paranoid. I felt more like an outsider than I ever had, and I had no confidence, which is bad when you’re trying to work on a record. And I had no anonymity because there were a lot of teenagers on the train.” In reaction to the young fans he encountered on the underground,
Gerard wrote “Teenagers,” a T. Rex-style romp with the chorus line, “Teenagers scare the living shit out of me.” “The song came directly from commuting when school let out and being so terrified of them,” the singer says. “I was like, Wait a minute. These are the same people that listen to our band. Why am I scared? And I realized it was because they’re scared, too. Teenagers are made to feel like they can only solve their problems withviolence. They lash out at each other in a really volatile way.” After several months experiencing the joys of mass transit, MCR had completed only a handful of songs and felt like a change of scenery (and climate) might do them some good. “I couldn’t keepworking in New York,” says Gerard. “We wanted isolation.”
id: Gerard leads the way to what will likely be the band’s second platinum record
So the group relocated to Paramour Mansion, outside of L.A. Nestled high in the hills, the deluxe estate overlooks the trendy Silver Lake area and boasts spacious rooms, a gorgeous pool, lush gardens, a state-of-the-art recording facility-and a few special guests.
“The place is definitely haunted,” Gerard says. “Doors would slam, and the faucets would turn on. You’d get a bath drawn for you of freezing-cold water in your room, and you wouldn’t know why.” As unnerving as its mischievous spirits could be, the Paramour was also inspiring, and contributed to the haunting vibe of songs like “The End” and “This Is How I Disappear.” More important, it led Gerard to come up with the bleak, surreal concept for the record. “I would have these night terrors, where it would feel like someone was choking me, and my heart would stop and I would stop breathing,” he says. “I would wake up in the middle of the night and write these notes to myself, and one of them read, ‘We are all just a black parade.’ So I started thinking about how this band is kind of a black parade, like a funeral-procession rock thing. And I used that idea to piece together this story about the idea that when you die, death comes for you however you want.” Gerard molded his concept into a narrative about a character he dubbed the Patient, whose strongest memory from childhood is of his father taking him to the city to see a parade. Two songs into the album, he dies, and the black parade comes for him.
“During the rest of the story, he meets this entity of death and all these characters, like Mama, who represents anyone who’s ever lost their son in a war,” Gerard explains. “It’s almost like these Canterbury Tales, where he goes along on this journey, and at the end he decides whether he wants to live or die.” With the concept in place, My Chem made the songs as sweeping and theatrical as Gerard’s lyrics. They accomplished this, in part, by combing through their own eclectic record collections and pulling choice elements that would set them even further apart from other melodic punk bands.
The first two minutes of “Welcome to the Black Parade” stemmed from Gerard’s love for Broadway musicals, the horns in “Dead!” came from Mikey’s interest in Blur and Britpop, and the jaunty feel of “Mama” was informed by Tom Waits and Nick Cave. But the most poignant moment on the record, “Cancer,” was (unlike its morbid moniker) something of a pleasant surprise. “I was very upset about something in my personal life, and that’s when that song came out,” Gerard says. “It was really spontaneous, and it was recorded pretty much live with Rob [Cavallo, the record’s producer] on the piano and me in the vocal booth. Then we added layers of drums, which gave it a certain urgency. It’s the song I’m most proud of because it was the most pure emotion we’ve ever captured, and it gets such an immediate response. You can’t shake what the song is about.”
As the CD approached completion, some members of the band began to show signs of nervous exhaustion. The group was scheduled to fly to England to play the Reading Festival, and as the date grew near, Toro, who has a fear of flying, got noticeably agitated. Then, after the band tracked “Welcome to the Black Parade,” which was originally called “The Five of Us Are Dying,” the guitarist lost it.
“I thought I had this premonition,” Toro explains. “I was flipping through the TV channels, and on the news. there would be something about a plane crash, and every time I woke up in the morning, the clock would say 9:11. I was playing Tomb Raider the night before the flight, and on the level I ended up at, there was this whole flashback to a plane crash. So right before the flight I was like, ‘That’s it. I’m not flying.”
Despite his misgivings, Toro boarded the plane, and when My Chemical Romance returned to L.A. (all of them still very much alive, thank you very much), The Black Parade was completed without further incident. Listening back to the record, the band members were in awe of what they had achieved and eager to share it with their fans. “There was a real confidence that came to us,” Gerard explains. “Having survived it, we felt like we were changed forever. I feel different as a performer now, and I think we really finally discovered who we were as a band.” But just because MCR were done with the record didn’t mean that it was done with them. About a month later, the band was shooting a video for “Famous Last Words” with director Samuel Bayer (Garbage, Smashing Pumpkins) on a set featuring walls of flame, when-seized by the moment-lero grabbed Gerard’s throat from behind and wrestled him to the ground. The singer rolled one way; his foot went the other. “It bent completely backwards, and I heard a crack and felt this agonizing pain,” Gerard recalls. “I tore all the ligaments in my foot, but I got up and continued to perform.”“I didn’t know what I was doing,” says lero, shaking his head. “I wasn’t trying to hurt him. I felt awful. I still do.” Gerard’s injury was serious, and he still walks with a cane, but it paled in comparison to what happened to Bryar. At the end of the shoot, the pyro was so intense, the drummer could feel his leg burning, but he stuck it out for the rest of the song. By then, he had a nasty third-degree burn. And the misfortune didn’t stop there. Bryar didn’t take his antibiotics regularly, and he failed to keep the wound clean. By the time the band got back from a brief tour of Japan, the burn was severely infected. Then Bryar’s face swelled up and, after doing the MTV Video Music Awards preshow telecast and a special club show, stumbled into a hospital emergency room in intense pain. “I thought I’d be there for 10 minutes, but as soon as they saw me, they got all serious and gave me an IV and said they had to do a CAT scan,” recalls Bryar.“They did all these blood tests and kept me there for 14 hours.” Doctors discovered that Bryar’s leg infection had spread to his blood and caused an abscess in his face that was creeping dangerously close to his brain. If it had been left untreated for another two days, he could have died. “The whole thing was such a nightmare,” Bryar says. “This doctor stuck my cheek with a needle about six inches long and the width of an IV tube. Then he went in and out of the inside of my mouth with the needle about 10 times. Fortunately, the treatment worked, and Bryar left the hospital three days later. With tragedy averted, My Chem are now focusing on touring for The Black Parade. They’ll be in Europe for most of November, and when they get back at the end of year, they’ll start rehearsing for a U.S. arena tour that starts in February. "We want to put on a full show with props and staging like The Wall,” Gerard says. And MCR plan to keep the Patient alive long after they’re done touring for the CD. “I would love to see the story turned into a play or a musical, and it could easily be a movie,” enthuses Gerard. “Making this record, we cut ourselves open every day, pulled out every organ, and lay them on a table so it would be something we’re completely happy with. We want The Black Parade to exist for a long time.” “The whole hole thing nightmare. This doctor stuck my cheek with a needle about six inches long and the width of an IV tube.” -BOB BRYAR
“I felt more like an outsider than I ever had, and I had no confidence, which is bad when you’re trying work on a record.”
-GERARD WAY
12/2006 revolver – mcrhollywood on flickr
02/2011 alternative press from mcrhollywood
photos by roberto vhamorro
ID: HOWL THE STATE OF MUSIC
My Chemical Romance wax passionate about their rabid fans, contemplate saviorhood and recound the [near] death march that has become the black parade
Photographed in Balboa
Park in San Diego, December 10, 2006
FROM LEFT
Ray Toro: Diesel jeans.
Frank lero: Calvin Klein Jeans pants.
Mikey Way: Energie jeans.
Gerard Way: Calvin Klein shirt and tie.
By Timothy Gunatilak Photographs by Jennifer Tza
02/2007 spin from mychemfan_78