The Scream Queen Interviews Dave Brockie aka Oderus Urungus of GWAR!
Date: January 20, 2011
You
guys just released your latest CD, Bloody Pit of Horror, how has the response
been so far?
Ah, so far, it's only been out one day, but it appears to be a general
feeling of fanatical support, overwhelming acceptance; unprecedented
bootlegging, ridiculous amounts of shoplifting, all the things you look for for
a big release. We did a thing on Jimmy Fallon. We worked harder
than we ever had for the release of a record before, and we'll see if it works
out or not, you know, depending on how many of them we sell.
No one's selling tons of records it seems like nowadays. You can work really
hard and not get the success you'd want. Plus, the economy is still fucking
tanking, really hard, and it's even catching up with the mighty GWAR.
We'll see, it's always a crapshoot. We knew we'd have to work hard to match the
success of last year's record, and hopefully we'll do at least that, I'm sure.
The question is whether he can step up or not, we'll see.
How do you think it's going to compare to Lust in Space?
I think it's going to be better because I think the album's better, I think
the album's darker and more sinister and more-- it's got some old-school GWAR elements in it. It's just a real different album than Lust in
Space. You certainly can't accuse-- can't say that they sound alike. For
a band to cover so much ground musically in such a short amount of time, I think
it's really fuckin' cool. I see it as the next step. I think we've got twelve
records and all of them sound different, which is crazy. So, that should tell
people just how much thought is going into this band, how many new ideas and how
many different people's new ideas are going into it all the time.
So, I look for it to step up, but we'll see. GWAR's way has always
been a slow and relentless assault, rather than anything particularly
meteoric, you know? The biggest thing that's happened to us in years is getting
to go to Australia this December, which is pretty cool 'cause it's summer time
down there. So, we get to go there, we get to have summer for a little while.
So, we'll see; so far, so good. The GWAR fans seem to like it and when we
play the stuff live, we get a really good reaction on it, so people seem to dig
it.
How
would you describe everything that was going on in your mind as you were writing
Bloody Pit of Horror?
We tried to keep it simple, I tried to keep it just real, more kind of
horror, dark, death, fantasies, and we were on tour in Europe at the time, and I
was writing a lot of it, and I was having a lot of laptop issues, and so it was
like the first album I had hand-written in years; my laptop which became a
"craptop" and died on me, and so I went back to the old way of just having a
journal and just filling it up with scribblings, and then went back and took out
the best, sickest parts.
I didn't really have a big story to tell, we didn't really have a whole--
like, with Lust in Space and Beyond Hell, both were
very much so based around shows we did and "various adventures" that GWAR had. GWAR on this one had more like gone back to Antarctica and was
hanging out and Oderus was just like fantasizing about whatever
sick shit that Oderus thinks about. You try to put yourself in the
mind-set of what it would be like if Oderus was writing lyrics,
you know?
Like, I try to do that when I write a GWAR album. Here I was-- one
morning we woke up and everyone wanted to go visit Dachau [Concentration Camp;
Dachau, Germany]. As usual, I was up early, our bus was parked at the Dachau
parking lot, and I was drinking some beer, it was a day off, and you know, you
can't help but visit Dachau and not have that affect your lyrics, right? So, not
that it took much to ever get my lyrics to be like, obsessed with Nazis and the
Holocaust and World War II, and just horrific human history in general, but when
you're right amongst it, where it actually happened, it had an impact on the way
I wrote some lyrics.
So, you know, you just try to-- you don't write lyrics like you'd write them
for a DBX [The Dave Brockie Experience] album, that's for sure; it's a
completely different thing. It's almost like you're writing for a musical and
the character of Oderus, you have to try to get inside his head
and figure out what he's-- what would be interesting to him, which is pretty
fucked up shit.
You
said you wrote the album with horror influences, aside from
the real-life horror, were there any horror movies or books that
inspired any lyrics?
Well, nothing specific, but the big influence was, we're always-- I kind of
got into horror through Night of the Living Dead, but you know,
I'd always watch horror films when I was a little kid and the classics, you
know, like Frankenstein, Dracula, Creature of
the Black Lagoon was really awesome. There were so many cool, awesome
horror movies like Gore Go, Reptilicus, and so many
fucked up movies I watched when I was growing up. A lot of those movies are so
lost nowadays, especially in this age of like, SyFy Network's computer graphic
monsters-- some of them are pretty amusing though, like Sharktopus, that one was-- you got to hand it to them for Sharktopus!
After that, it just went to everything, when it got to Dawn of the
Dead and then a lot of the movies, modern movies, I didn't really get
into so much. The whole concept of like the crazed killer slaughtering legions
of nude, wild girls-- some of those movies are kind of cool, but most of them I
think are pretty stupid. I like the old-school stuff better. But then when the Dawn of the Dead remake came along, I thought that was really
awesome, and then stuff like Evil Dead II, especially, you know a
lot of the -- even though I thought Army of Darkness was really
lame-- I know people would have my balls for saying that, but like I just have
real specific taste in horror, it's got to be really horrible.
The Thing is probably my favorite all time horror movie, John Carpenter's remake, not the original, and that's rare because
I usually think remakes suck. I really liked 30 Days of Night recently, my old buddy Steven Niles, who I went to high school
with way back in the day actually wrote the screen play to that and I thought
that movie was completely sick and awesome. So yeah, we wanted the GWAR album [Bloody Pit of Horror] to have a flavor like that and
hopefully the lyrics reflect that and we did the zombie video kind of thing, but
we can't help but have a certain amount of humor that's always injected into any
kind of GWAR thing. Even no matter how-- even if you try to keep it all
serious, sooner or later, it's going to end up being kind of retarded.
GWAR
have been all over the media lately with, as you said earlier, Jimmy Fallon and
also Red Eye on Fox News, among many other things. It seems like you're doing
more media appearances than you've ever done. How does it make you feel?
Overworked! (laughs) Overworked, but certainly appreciated because
there's just a lot of opportunities coming up for GWAR and Oderus has quite a mouth on him, and I'm happy that we are able to
kind of cut our way into a few areas that we haven't been before, and especially
delighted about this Red Eye thing; that shit's hilarious. And the Jimmy
Fallon thing, we'll see if that's just a one-off or something that maybe
turns into something else.
I keep thinking GWAR's got to end up with their own TV show or at
least like a recurring spot on some kind of television show. It's just-- GWAR's just too good looking to keep off TV! A lot of people are kind of
afraid of GWAR, you know, we're a victim of our own success, in a way.
The very thing that's made us kind of the "darlings" of so many people out
there. It's hard to imagine GWAR being considered "darlings" of anything.
The very things that have endeared us to people are giant schlongs, and blood
cum, and pus squirting everywhere, are the very things that keep us out of a lot
of venues and have gotten us in a lot of trouble in the past, and to this day
ruined what would have been otherwise perfectly nice venues. You can still look
at them and see the damage we do to them, it's like "ughhh!" Half the dirt in
these places came from us. You look up at the ceiling and see these stained
ceilings and shit everywhere, like "Oh, we were here! We played here once the
last ten years in a row and boy, you can tell!" It's like, sooner or later these
clubs are going to collapse, "Yep, 20 GWAR shows will do it!" (laughs)
Do
you think GWAR is one step closer to world-domination?
We're always another stumbling lurch close-- not really a step, more of a
groping fall forward that's caught at the last second by a forward thrust of a
foot. I wouldn't call it a step so much. And the question is, "how many of those
steps or lurches are left until global domination is achieved?" You know, 28 or
34 million? We're not really sure, but all we know is that every year, the
carrot at the end of the stick seems to be a little bit closer, or we're that
much more desperate. We can't tell. (laughs) I'm not going to bullshit
you! (laughs) But, it's a struggle worth fighting, you know? It's our
lives, it's our bane, it's our reason to exist, it's like all things bad and
good, mostly good though. And the alternative is having a life that didn't
involve being able to do stuff like this, which would be unthinkable at this
point. After doing it for so long, for any of these guys that have to go and
deal with the real world again, forget it! (laughs) Hey, it could happen!
They probably could mimic it for a little while; sooner or later, banks are
going to get robbed, people are going to die. (laughs)
That answers the big question about GWAR - will it ever get the
success it really deserves. There's never been a band that's been around so long
and has worked so hard and has been loved by so many people, that was still
definitely like the underdogs of the industry, like we are, so we'll see.
You guys did a Halloween pay-per-view concert--
Yeah,
that was really cool, an indication of things to come. We didn't find out until
after that they'd been doing free web casts of the same thing. I was just like,
"Oh. Great." 'Cause I notice the next week, cKy is playing, right?
They're doing the same webcast that we did, except their's is free. I'm like,
"What's up with that?" So, then I find out, "Oh no, like 5 or 6 bands before you
guys did it as well, also free from the same place." I'm like, "Oh. Great." So
basically, they're like, "Oh, we can get away with charging because it's GWAR and we can put some money in our pockets for what we haven't been
charging for the rest of the time." I was like, "Yay! Wow. That's great."
Sometimes you find out shit like that after the fact they make the deals seem
a little-- cause we were kind of wondering why a ton of people didn't
sign up for it, we're like, "Ok. Now we understand. People have been getting
this thing for free for the last few months and now they want us to make them start paying for it." It was like, "Great." I thought it was a
misrepresentation on how we would've done it. But you can't control all the way
the business shakes out, there's just so many deals going on at so many levels.
You try to have a quality and standards department, but it's tough. Especially
when you're GWAR, it's hard to think of us having quality or standards!
Like, "Yeah, somebody called from GWAR." "Yeah, ok, put that on hold!" We
don't need to hear that.
You guys are known for your live shows, when you're recording can you
translate the raw presence you have from the stage into the studio?
I don't know that we really do. I don't think it's possible to play anything
like the way we play live in a studio.
What about the energy?
The energy-- I don't even know how you'd do that either because you don't
record in any format that's anything like the way that you perform with these
guys. You don't set up the band to record it, you don't record it live, everyone
record their tracks separately and then you hear them coming through headphones.
Really hard to-- most of the times actually, almost all the time, the stuff
you're playing hasn't ever been played live.
So, you have no idea what kind of energy the song is going to inspire in
people, sometimes it's a lot different than the way you think it's going to be,
and the songs you really don't think are going to be standouts, turn out to be
the standouts, or the ones that people react to the most. So, it's really weird,
you just have to give an energetic performance as you can, and you have a lot of
other things working for you; you need to be in a very comfortable environment,
you don't have to wear all of this shit, and if you have a good enough
imagination, you can close your eyes and be in that mindset, and everything
sounds really good.
You just got to work with the strengths of that and make a really cool sound.
It's really not that difficult, it's really not. I mean, if you're halfway
decent at playing music, it would be very easy for you to go in the studio and
record you doing it. You get the same thrill out of playing good music. I mean,
sure you get more of a thrill when you're playing live because you get that
whole energy from the crowd, but you still get a buzz on just playing good music
when you're rehearsing or working on an album.
Messing with music at any level, I guess what I'm saying, is a joy. So you
just try to take that joy and put it into your performance and give you the
energy and kind of make up for how furious it is live. And that's why live
performances, when you hear live recordings of studio songs, songs you've gotten
familiar with, but by listening to the studio recordings of them, and then you
hear a live recording of them, and you're like, "Oh my God!! It's so much more
ballsy, so much more crazy sounding!!" And they end up actually being like
you're favorite version of the songs sometimes. Like, I know when I was a kid, I
loved live albums a lot because I just felt the bands played a lot more
raw-fashioned; I really dug that a lot. So, I just kind of go for it.
You
were involved in professional wrestling in 2009...
Hah!! I wouldn't say I was involved in pro wrestling!
Well, I know you had that match...
I wouldn't even say it was a match!! (laughs) I went up there, they gave me
some money, I fuckin' went out there in the ring, he [Tracy
Smothers] came out, grappled with me, then fell over, and said I won. I
think he was completely freaked out by me. I mean, I was supposed to wrestle
this real wrestler, he looked like fuckin' Mickey Roarke. He tried
to teach me a few things... I just stood there, I got this huge costume on, I'm
like, "Dude, I can't do anything! I can't wrestle you!" He's like, "Alright..."
He came out there and was like, "Mismatch! ARGGG!" He quit and I was like,
"Ok, great!" He's like, "Ok." He taught me one move to do, I did it, he's like
"OHHHHH!!!!!!! You cheated!!!" and quit. I thought it was brilliant, it was the
perfect way for him to get out of having to actually wrestle me. He was like,
"You cheated!" and stormed off. It was great. I saw him after the show and was
like, "What's up, dude?" He was crazy looking, he really looked like Mickey Roarke, he really did. He was a very scary person. Scary
physically, very nice man.
I really don't want to do that anymore, it's pretty horrible. I had to drive
like 5 hours up into the hills of West Virginia. I really don't want to do that
again. (laughs)
I
heard from a wrestler before that GWAR wanted to create a set for a wrestling
show, what's going on with that?
Yeah, we've talked about doing stuff with them before, but nothing's ever
panned out. Personally, I'm not a big fan of wrestling, it's like stock car
racing to me. (laughs) It's like something rednecks get into. (laughs) I like Mexican wrestling a lot better, I like that lucha kind of
stuff, it's really cool. And I like some of the American wrestling stuff.
You can't help but to appreciate the athleticism of these guys, they're
pretty fucking amazing with the shit they do. I do appreciate that end of it,
but you know a lot of the-- I guess maybe it's the fans that I don't like. (laughs) Some of them just seem so moronic! I just can't-- I'm not about
to begrudge anyone else's fun. I even have a respect for fuckin' stock car
racing; it's not stock car racing anymore, NASCAR, whatever. I mean, it
is insane and cool and people blow up and die, but once again, it's the fan base
that sometimes I have a problem with. They can be a little bit much sometimes.
That's all I'm saying. To each their own, I'm certainly not a proponent of
that.
How would you describe the legacy that GWAR has left in metal with each new
record that you release?
Umm... I think-- Umm... (pauses) We're definitely embraced as a metal
band, I think maybe before Violence has Arrived came out, I'm not
sure people really thought that anymore. They weren't sure what kind of band GWAR was, but the last five records have all been solid metal records.
So, we've been firmly re-embraced by the metal community and been on nothing but
tours with metal bands.
I think with every album, we underscore that a little bit more and build on
our legacy a little more. And, unlike a lot of other bands, I think our albums
are actually getting better. Not only with age; the older albums, I go back and
listen to them, I think they age well, and our new shit is up to par better than
anything we've ever done. So, I think the band's still progressing. Metal's
still inventing itself. Bands will go on, and go on, and go on for years, and
years, and years, and years. For God's sakes, look at King's X; somebody
told me that dude was in his 60's. WOW!
Yeah,
and there's always Black Sabbath/Ozzy...
Yeah, there will always be incarnations and Ozzy's going to go til
he's fucking-- I was about to say til he's a fucking twaddling old man, but then
you realize he's been that for about the last twenty years. I heard his new
album was so (pauses) "studio'd" that you couldn't even really tell if it
was him singing or not and I just think it really sucked because I'll never let GWAR get so lame. And, that's one of the good things about kind of
staying at the level of obscurity that we're at; it does tend to keep you
honest. It's like, you can't fall prey to the traps of rock 'n roll success if
you don't ever get it. (laughs)
Over the last 26 years, how would you say that GWAR has grown with
metal?
Wow. I mean, we've stayed alive, you know? It's like, metal's one of the most
enduring forms of rock 'n roll and we've been with it now for 25 years; the
majority of it's existence really. We'll go down in history as metal pioneers
because I know that metal will be around forever. And, just like symphony music
is being played, was being played in the 1400's, until electricity became music.
Now that it has, we will have it forever.
People will always look back at the beginning bands in metal history; bands
like, [Black] Sabbath, and Slayer, GWAR, Metallica,
and etcetera, etcetera, the heavyweights. And, they say those are the guys that
invented metal; and we'll probably go down in history as the guys who, you
know-- along with KISS and Alice Cooper, we'll see who history
remembers more, obviously those guys are way more famous than GWAR is.
For some reason I think we're still-- I think we'll be remembered just for the
audacity of what we did. And, we'll be one of those bands that was there at the
birth of metal. That will be something to be really proud of for a long time,
definitely.
What
is something you would like to see change in not just metal, but music in
general, whether it be the internet, the media, CDs, etc?
Umm... I'd just like to see musicians make lots more money for no particular
reason, they just get money. I think-- honestly, my whole view point of the
thing, the way we deal with arts and music in this country [United States]
should be a lot more like the way they deal with it in Europe. Unfortunately,
this country has just this aversion to socialism because they think because of
the propaganda machine, they seem to think they put socialism with communism,
and they equate taxes with death, taxes with tyranny; so we'll never be able to
have the benefits of a socialistic society. A socialistic society where artists
and musicians are supported and education is a lot bigger part of society. Sure,
taxes are more, and you get things like better schools, better educated people,
better social programs, less people in prison, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera...
But, for some reason our country won't ever become that.
That's what I'd like to see, a whole fucking backing off of this--
unfortunately, our government is proven to be so corrupt and unreliable, that
it's hard to get behind a socialism movement in this country because politicians
suck so bad, you know? So, that's what I'd like to see, and more of a support
system. You know, it's ridiculous that we've been working as long as we have and
we don't have any kind of retirement fund, or health insurance, or even a health
plan. Anything like that for our guys who just pay it right out of pocket
anytime anyone is sick or hurt, and our good health has managed to keep us in
the fight. But if anything really bad ever happened to this band, we'd be pretty
fucked, pretty quick. There's no safety net and there should be. There
definitely should be.
I have one more question... And actually Hank III wanted me to ask you
this--
AWWWWW!! Hanker!!! Our buddy! He's like my best friend that I've never met.
He is like-- I'm always getting messages from him and stuff, and he's just such
a big GWAR fan and GWAR supporter and anyway, so what's up?!
He
wanted me to tell you that... He's in battle mode and awaiting orders... Should
he attack now or wait til night?
Now. Attack now! Attack now! I want to do a Hank III/GWAR tour so bad.
Yes, we must join forces and do something this next year! So, get him to call us
or send us an e-mail or something like that. Yeah, attack now though! Don't wait
for orders, just attack!! Attack, attack, attack!!! Yeah, we'd love to fucking--
I'd love to work with that dude. He's such a maniac and I think he's just got
the right spirit, you know? So, yeah, that would be great. Attack
immediately!
Would you like to say anything else?
Ummmm... Nothing much, except... Yeah, you hit on it, I'm very impressed. We
were so busy doing our two year long 25th anniversary, we didn't notice it had
become our 26th anniversary!!! (laughs) Oh my God!!! So, fuckin' after
it's over, after the 25th anniversary is officially over, I'm not mentioning
anniversaries AGAIN, until 30, at least!