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Jake Fowler Mad At Gravity's As if recording
wasn't tough enough, imagine having to play drums with a bad cold and
having your mouth
covered with duct tape. Alas, that's where Mad At
Gravity's Jake Fowler found himself while recording the band's
debut
release, Resonance. Turns out he has a tendency to grunt and
groan while playing. Perhaps it was
Fowler's early fascination with all
things hard rock, from Led Zeppelin to Motley Crue to Deftones, that
led to his overly
audible playing style. Then again, maybe it's just
because Fowler is passionate about drumming. "I've been
playing
drums for about twenty years," Jake says, "in just about every type of
band there is--rock, goth, nu-metal - all sorts of
stuff." Bands such as
Korn, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and Soundgarden dot his modern-day
influences. But Fowler says that
when he started to put this band
together, he was looking for something different. "That stuff is really
aggressive," Jake says,
"but I kind of got that out of my system. I
didn't want to have another nu-metal band this time around. I wanted to
have a
more timeless kind of rock band."
Mad At Gravity blends the best of driving rock and hooky pop with
touches of odd time
signatures. "Walk Away," the band's first single,
is in three, "Burn" is in seven, and the tune "Historypeats"
shifts
between three different time signatures. Listeners might hear some Josh
Freese influences on the album. "Probably a
lot of that was because I
was stealing Josh's work," Fowler admits with a laugh. "I stole the
beginning thing that he does
in A Perfect Circle's "Judith" for "Walk
Away" because it's in three. I wasn't purposely trying to do it, I
listened
back and was like, Oh, no."
"Burn" offers Fowler the opportunity to expand on that approach. "It
was a challenge
to take a song in seven and make it groove," he
reports. "But it was a lot of fun. People really respond to that one
live,
because I think it's a lot different from your average song."
David
John Farinella
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