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Raymond Herrera (September 2005 Issue) Embracing The New Fear Bad blood among members can destroy even the most fiercely
committed
band quicker than creative differences, acrimonious label
relationships, or poor album sales. When irreconcilable
differences
between Fear Factory vocalist Burton Bell and guitarist Dino Cazares
split the LA-based group in 2002 - after a
decade together - it felt like
the end of an era for fans of this wildly influential, genre-bending
metal band.
In the
months after the breakup, bassist Christian
Olde Wolbers and drummer Raymond Herrera continued to work
together,
recording a four-song demo that would fulfill Fear Factory's
contractual obligation to its then label, Roadrunner.
Unable to find a
suitable vocalist to fill Bell's shoes, the two approached him about
adding vocals to the demo. Finding
their creative chemistry still very
present, the trio decided to give Fear Factory another shot.
No one was really
disappointed when Roadrunner passed on re-signing the
band; it meant that Fear Factory was truly free to start fresh.
With
Wolbers assuming the role of lead guitarist, Bell felt confident that
Fear Factory's musical integrity would be
maintained as long as Herrera
was on board. "From the beginning of this band," says Bell, "The
essence of Fear Factory was
Raymond's drumming. He's a machine.
We've always known that if you just follow Raymond, that's
a Fear
Factory riff. He's the key to how we keep this band's signature sound."
On the phone from his
home in Los Angeles, Raymond Herrera explains his
integral role in the songwriting process. "When you listen to
Fear
Factory songs, you can tell a drummer wrote a lot of the music," he
says. "The beats and patterns that I do
are
the rhythms the songs are built around. When we write music, I get
together with Christian and we just start
banging out all of these
different rhythms and ideas; then we take it from there. Most bands
write music with the guitar, and
the drummer follows that. Our approach
is more about coming up with a rhythm on the drums and building around
it."
Determined to rebuild Fear Factory as a better machine the
second time around, Bell, Herrera, and Wolbers entered Rumbo
Records
studio in LA to record Fear Factory's fifth full-length album, Archetype, a disc that continues their
unmistakable sound. Already drawing rave comparisons to the band's groundbreaking 1995 release, Demanufacture,
Archetype
is not only worthy of Fear Factory's legacy, the record also marks an
important next step in its
evolution. With the new machine ready to
shift into high gear, Fear Factory found a home at Minnesota-based
Liquid 8
Records. And now Byron Stroud of Strapping Young Lad has
signed on as Fear Factory's touring bassist. Things are, as
they say,
falling into place.
"We're really happy with the way everything
is going," Herrera says, "especially
since we've regained control over
the direction we want to take the band. Much of that was taken away
from us over time
while we were with our former label. Now we're back
in charge of everything, from business dealings to what we want to
do
with the music'the entire package. Fear Factory is so much healthier
now. It's an amazing time for the
band."
MD: Not only is your double bass work incredibly fast, it's
extremely precise. Can you share
some playing tips for developing both
speed and accuracy?
Raymond: One thing that really helped me
generate better speed
was working on broken-up kick drum patterns rather than straight double
bass. The problem with
straight double bass is that it gets boring
after a while. By doing patterns, I started to feel muscles in
my legs that
I'd never felt before. When you practice that way and then
go back to 'regular' double bass, it's so easy to
do that you
automatically become faster. I noticed that starting out, when I
was trying to get a certain speed with regular
double bass, I just
couldn't get there. When I could
get there, I couldn't do it for very long because
I'd get tired. By
practicing patterns, it brought out something else in the way I play
and it built different leg muscles.
It's like a different mentality,
and it's a lot harder to do. If you try to do a double bass
pattern at 200
bpm, it's not that difficult. But try to do a rudiment
on the bass drums at 200 bpm and it becomes a whole different
ballgame.
Then, when you go back to straight double bass, all of a sudden doing
210, 215, or 225 isn't really that
difficult.
As far as my precision, that's just something I've worked on. Fear
Factory music is very precise, so
the only option for me was to become
precise. There are lots of little parts in Fear Factory songs, where
I'm doing all of
this really sick stuff. Then, all of a sudden, I've
got to mute a cymbal with my hand. That's one of my trademarks,
too;
when a song stops, I literally stop everything. I clamp down on my cymbals and everything stops.
Accuracy comes from me playing each individual part over and over. For example, there's a song on
Archetype
called "Corporate Cloning." In one part, we go from the bridge back
into the verse. When I do that, my hi-hat
is open and I have to close
it - but I just finished playing a double bass part. So I have to
quickly take my left foot off
the left kick and bring it down on the
hi-hat. I had to practice that part about forty times until I got it
perfect. The reason
I'm very tight and precise on all that stuff is
I work on those parts so they stand out. As a result, when I go in to
record,
the engineers don't have to piece together a performance or
mess with it; I can just play it. This also allows me to be able
to
play everything live. That's how I became this type of drummer, by
consistently practicing those little sections to
make them tighter.
Gail Worley
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