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Steven Gillis Filter's Title HolderA couple of years ago
Steven Gillis got a call from his old drummer friend
Matt Walker, who
had been playing in Filter. Walker told him to go buy Filter's Short
Bus and learn it, because he was
going to get the call within
twenty-four hours. Eighteen months later, Filter's Richard Patrick
showed up at a weekly jazz
improv gig Steven was playing and asked him
to join the band. As the man once sang, what a long strange trip
it's
been.
Gillis, for his part, wasn't sitting by the phone waiting.
Instead he was out there playing any
gig he could get, no matter the
style or pay. "I felt like that was when I really learned how to be a
musician," he says, "just by
playing all night long for $50." Though
Gillis had been playing in jazz, blues, and rock bands, the Filter gig
didn't phase
him one bit. "I was a huge Ministry fan back in the day,"
he insists. "And I feel like I can jump into any situation and
really
sink my teeth into it."
While Filter's musical style involves sequencing, Gillis was
asked to come in
and lay down live drums on every song for their recent
release, Title Of Record. More often than not, he says he had to
tone
his inclinations down. "When Richard presented me with certain tunes,
I'd be pumped up and I would know how I
wanted to approach them. The
reality of it was that I had to pull back and play simpler, which is
totally cool." Then came the
song "It's Gonna Kill Me," where the
drummer had the chance to play out. "The first take I did was "The'
take, with
me just going nuts. I was playing way over the bar line and
reacting to Richard, who was screaming his vocals. I needed to
do
something, and I reacted."
Steven's ability to play over the barline and adapt to
changing moods gives
Filter new depth. Gillis is not shy about guessing
how he got this gig. "I think Richard asked me to be the drummer in
Filter
because of all the experiences I've had," he says. "He didn't
see me playing with a metal or industrial band; I was
playing with a
ten-piece improv band. But he thought that my style, or my
aggressiveness, or whatever it was that I brought to
the plate, was
what he wanted in Filter."
David John Farinellai
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