"We
call ourselves 'Christians who play music,'" says
drummer Ted
Kirkpatrick, mastermind behind the highly successful Christian metal
band Tourniquet. This power-metal trio has
released ten top-selling
albums since 1990, yet still holds an underground audience. "Some
Christian traditionalists would say
that we're playing evil cut-time
rhythms and distorted guitars tuned down to B with yelling vocals,"
Kirkpatrick says. "But
to us it's just notes. What counts is the
lyrical content, and mainly what our lives portray. That's really what
shows
whether we're genuine or not."
Tourniquet's music goes way beyond traditional Christian music
concepts
and extends much further than the basic metal format.
Kirkpatrick is a self-taught drummer, guitarist, and keyboardist, and
he
writes most of the music and lyrics for the band. Yet he doesn't
read a note of music. He's also a huge classical
music fan. "A lot of
the guitar riffs I write have a definite drumming influence in that
they're very rhythmic," he says. "In
fact, they seem to have become a
trademark of the band's sound."
As for other musical inspiration, Ted
mentions some of the
masters. "Neil Peart was certainly an influence on my playing," he
says. "I learned to play practically
every Rush song. Another major
impact on my drumming came from watching Carl Palmer on television
doing a drum solo on
'Karn Evil 9' back in the '70s. And I've really
learned a lot about being an aggressive drummer from
watching Simon
Phillips, more so than anyone else. That type of progressive approach
also helped to teach me how to think
of the drumset as a musical
instrument and not just a noisy timekeeper."
Kirkpatrick is also a world traveler in
search of rare
butterflies and insects, which he says counters his hectic metal
career. His travels have taken him to Papua,
New Guinea, the Solomon
Islands, the Amazon Basin of western Brazil, and beyond. "I've been to
places where
they've never seen a white person before," Kirkpatrick
states. "I have no choice but to stay in top physical shape with
the
kind of music we play. Climbing mountains and chasing insects and
butterflies through swamps keeps me physically fit.
It's very
therapeutic as well. The sounds of the jungle help in creating new song
ideas. I do a lot of my writing in the
jungle.
"Many of our lyrics simply focus on what we all struggle with
as a human race," Ted adds. "We're just
trying to open people up to
think a little deeper about why we're all here."