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Metal Mania magazine 1986
First and foremost, the question on everyone's
tongue is, what exactly is a Voivod? According to "Away,"
drummer for the band with this strange name, it is a Warrior that
lives in the land of Morgoth. Obviously, this creature, and this
place, are products of his very vivid imagination, which continues
to create new avenues and settings to house this curious, ferocious
creature. Away (who's real name is Michel Langevin) came up with
Voivod and it's concept in 1982. He then formed a speed metal
band with friends Blackie, Piggy, and Snake (obviously not their
real names either), other and incorporated his science fiction
ideas into the band's makeup. Four years later, we see Voivod
(the band, not the warrior) rising steadily on the hardcore metal
scene. Since their formation, they have moved from their small
hometown of Jonquiere to Quebec, where they landed a record deal
and put out two LP's, War And Pain, and RRROOOAAARRR. A third
release entitled Killing Technology, should be out sometime this
winter. Voivod's success could be due in part to their creative
talents, and their never-ending persistence. Away, (who also happens
to be the member most fluent in English), spoke to us about his
creation, and its growth.
How did the whole Voivod Image and concept
evolve?
Away: I created the whole Voivod concept. When I was younger,
I read about the barbarians that were living in the f north of
Europe, and they were called Voivods, They ate their people, and
drank their blood. I imagined them with nuclear weapons in their
midst, and so I created the concept of the band around these Voivods.
I told the story to the rest of the guys, and they really enjoyed
it. they felt it would be the perfect image, to correspond with
the kind of music that we were going to play. And so we Created
all our songs around this nuclear Voivod.
But what came first, the band
or the concept?
Away: I wanted to form a band around this
concept, but at first I didn't explain this concept to the guys,
I only asked them if they wanted to be called Voivod, but they
didn't like the name. They didn't understand it. Then, a couple
of months later I explained the whole thing, and then they realized
that it was a perfect name.
How and when did the band come
together?
Away: Myself, Piggy and Blacky, got together
in November of 1982, and then in January of '83 Snake joined us.
Piggy and I knew Blacky from school, so we got together. I also
knew Snake, and I introduced him to the guys. It wasn't really
difficult because we lived in a really small town where everybody
knew each other. Voivod is the first band for each member. None
of us has ever played in another band.
Is this the only kind of music
that you would consider playing?
Away: Yes.
What would you call it?
Away: I don't really have a word for what
we're playing except for 'power metal,' but some people call us
'nuclear metal,' which I also consider an appropriate term. We
really don't care about what we're called, as long as they don't
call us 'black metal.' We're not into Satan. "It's funny,
'cause we've been compared to Venom many times. When we released
our first album in 1984, there were a lot of new bands. You were
either compared to Venom, Slayer or Metallica. Snake's vocals
are maybe similar with Cronos' vocals, so that's probably where
they made the comparison. But we're not like Venom. We're really
not 'black' or 'death metal.'
It's pretty unusual to have a
band that's totally based and revolves around one concept Would
you ever consider being in a band that has no concept?
Away: No, Never! If we dumped the concept,
then I 'd prefer not to play in the band at all! because a band
without a concept is a band without an image. You can't put your
ideas out if you don't have an concept behind them.
Speaking of image, how come you
haven't really done anything in the way of costumes to promote
the Voivod look more?
Away: Each time we do a new album, we'd
like to do something new with the look; but right now, like all
young bands, we have problems with money. The money that we do
have, we use for equipment. But we are thinking of making some
Voivod equipment with fiberglass, as well as some weapons. Something
to put the Voivod image more onstage.
Do you like other kinds of music
besides 'power metal?'
Away: Yeah. Every member listens to many things. We'll listen
to metal, hardcore and film soundtracks, and also stuff like Killing
Joke and Bauhaus. Stuff like that. There are many influences in
this band.
What are some of those influences?
Away: At first it was Motorhead, old Raven,
Tank and Metallica's first demo. Then it was Slayer, Venom, and
also bands like Discharge, and GBH. And after that, Corrosion
Of Conformity, DRI, and SOD.
So you like hardcore?
Away: Yes. We don't listen to much metal,
except for Kreator, or Motorhead. Piggy's the one that listens
to the most metal, for the guitar playing.
Who does he listen to?
Away: He listens to everything. He's the
oldest member, so he has old influences like Grand Funk, Led Zeppelin
and Alice Cooper. He also listens to guitarists like Yngwie and
Akira from Loudness, just for their playing. He's the most technical
player in the band, that's why he writes the basic tracks for
the songs. Then he brings them to us, we add to it and Snake writes
the lyrics.
Do you ever listen to any commercial
music, like pop, or rock 'n' roll?
Away: No. We don't listen to stuff like
Motley Crue or WASP, but we like bands like U2, and Lords Of The
New Church. I like some new wave bands.
Away, what was the concept behind
your first LP, War And Pain, and how is it different from your
second, RRROOOAAARRR'?
Away: The first LP is about a Voivod that
just woke up after a nuclear war. His flesh is totally maimed.
On the second album, it's after five or six nuclear wars, so he
is stronger and more powerful. He's also got new equipment that's
more technical and sophisticated. He's become Korgull, The Exterminator.
On the third album, he will evolve even more. Now he'll be in
space.
You say that you are not a political
band, and yet your whole concept involves nuclear war.
Away: I don't like the political side of
let's say, the Star Wars project. We're into the technical side
of all the nuclear weaponry. We're not for or against nuclear
war, we just talk about it. Just like a cartoon or a comic book.
Some people think we're political, but we're really not, that
gets old pretty fast. People will get sick of that really soon,
just like Satanism.
Basically, Voivod has the 'survival
of the fittest' concept.
Away: Exactly. I feel the message is that
the band are Voivods, and like the guy on our album cover, we
fight, Voivod is really a part of us. We are Voivods, we fight
for survival. We want to the the kids to do the same thing. If
they want to do something, they shouldn't let people bring them
down. They should just fight and they will make it, just like
we did. We had thousands of problems since the first album. We
had all our equipment stolen and much more, but we kept fighting
and we're still here. You've just got to fight to survive.
So then, this band does have
a message, and it's a positive one.
Away: Yeah. The message that comes from
this band is if we are where we are today, it's because we believe
in what we do, and we work. We've worked a tot to be here, so
that's the message. If the kids see us, that's what we're gonna
tell them. If you want to do something in your life -I don't care
if it's just to be a mechanic- then you have to believe In yourselves.
And the only way to get there to is work at it.
So, the Voivod concept will keep
evolving with each album?
Away: Yes, The third album will be called
Killing Technology and it will be about the Voivod in space. Everything
on earth will be deceased around him, so that's why he has to
go elsewhere, to space. I'm already thinking about the fourth
album, which could take place in the outer dimension.
Away, since you are an artist,
how do you come up with ideas for drawings?
Away: I don't know. They Just come to me.
Sometimes I walk around in the streets and try to take the morbid
side of life and put that in my work. I don't really have to think
about it. Ideas just come to me. Sometimes I even get ideas from
my dreams.
How long did something like the
album cover drawing take you to do?
Away: The first one took me about two months,
and for the second one, I really took my time. I did it in about
six months. For the third one, I won't have that much time, 'cause
we're going to start recording in November, but I'm not worried.
I've bought some equipment that will help me do it better, faster.
I already have the whole idea for the Killing Technology cover.
Do you do any other kind of artwork,
aside from the voivod drawings?
Away: No. I'm really too busy with Voivod
drawings to do anything else, except for sometimes. Like this
Montreal hardcore band took my drawing to do the cover of their
demo and also a band from Seattle called Accuse asked me for some
drawings, and I sent them some. Usually, though I really don't
have time to do outside stuff.
I see that you also do the Voivod
logos. Are those going to keep evolving and changing as well?
Away: Yes. On every album it will be more
technical and mechanical. Every time I make a new logo it's going
to be different. I don't ever want to draw the same thing twice.
Do you also appreciate other
forms of art?
Away: Yeah, I really like paintings, and
also cartoons. I want to do cartoons. If I do any I will call
them Morgoth Tales. 'Cause I want to show the story of life on
Morgoth, and the Voivod.
Musically, how would you say
that your two LPs differ?
Away: At first, technically, we weren't
very good. Except for Piggy, none of us were very proficient on
our instruments. When we started the band, that's when we started
playing our instruments. Piggy knew how to play guitar, and he
showed Blacky how to play bass. And I only played drums for like
a year-and-a-half in my room. I had no outside playing experience.
So on the first album, it was not very technical. On the second
album all of us really improved, even Piggy. We all got better
on our instruments, and the music is stronger and more united.
We made a big progression because we had a lot of time between
the two albums. It could have been our third album.
How have you worked on improving
your playing?
Away: We practiced every night, and we worked
very hard. We're not quitters.
So then you are striving to be better musicians?
Away: Yeah. We want each album to be better than its predecessor.
We don't want one album to be great, and the next one to be bad.
We want to always get better.
Since Snake writes the lyrics,
and the concept is Voivod, is there anything that he writes about
that does not involve your concept?
Away: There are some songs that are not about Voivod. Snake and
I usually talk, and we exchange ideas. When I get an idea about
the Voivod concept, I explain it to him, and then he writes the
lyrics. But he has some of his own ideas, and he's done his own
songs like 'Suck Your Bone,' and 'Fuck Off And Die,' which are
not really in the Voivod concept. It's more like punk. Also 'Ripping
Headaches' was Snake's idea, and that's not about Voivod. For
the third album, he's really developed his own ideas around the
Voivod concept, and he really understands what's in my mind.
What about a song like 'Cockroaches,'
which will be on your third LP?
Away: That's also about the concept. After
three, four or ten nuclear wars, I'm sure the cockroaches will
still be there. And they'll be there to eat the rest.
Then the concept is really nuclear
war, with Voivod in it.
Away: Sometimes the Voivod isn't there.
Sometimes there are other people there like, The Warrior Of Ice,
or the Helldriver, who is not a Voivod. All those people are in
Morgoth, which is the land of Voivod. That's all in my dreams.
On the second album RRROOOAAARRR,
the Voivod is still in Morgoth, but on the third album he'll be
in space, and on the fourth album he'll be in another dimension.
If that's the case, then after the second LP, the Voivod will
no longer be in Morgoth, so then this land of Morgoth cannot be
your main concept. It all leads back to the same thing, that your
main concept is nuclear war.
Away: Yeah, but more so nuclear equipment.
Everything that involves nuclear instrumentation. Like, we've
got a song called 'Uncontrolled Reaction,' which is about the
China Syndrome. It's nuclear, but not really nuclear war.
Do you think that you could ever
run out of ideas just basing your whole band on one concept?
Away: No, because there is an evolution
in the concept. Like if you go in space,
it's definitely not the same thing as being on Earth, and if you
go in another dimension, that's even further away.
Do you ever get a mental block,
where you have no ideas?
Away: No I think we'll never have this mental
block, because we've already got ideas for the fourth album. With
each album we develop a concept, and so it's easy to find new
ideas for it.
What is Voivod like in the studio?
Away: We try to capture the live sound,
that's why our sound engineer on the tour, and in the studio,
is the same person, 'cause he knows how to put our live sound
on tape. We're a live band, basically, and we enjoy being in the
studio, but we do it so we'll have songs we can play live. We
want this live kind of garage sound in the studio, but we don't
want a cheap sound. Voivod has a typical sound that we want to
keep and in the studio we don't fool around. We don't take six
months or five hundred hours to do an album. The first album was
done in 33 hours, and the second one was done in about 90 hours.
This past summer you did an American
tour with Celtic Frost. Was it your first time in the U.S.?
Away: It was our first American tour, but in April we did play
a show in New York at the Ritz with Venom and the Cro-mags. That
was our first appearance outside of Quebec.
And what do you think of the
American audience?
Away: It's a really good crowd. We had great
audiences in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Chicago especially.
How is an American audience different
from a Canadian one?
Away: The two are very similar, except for some places, where
you find a bit more stagediving.
Speaking of which, do you find
that you get more hardcore fans coming to your shows?
Away: Yeah, there are more punkers here
than in Quebec. We get more metal fans at our shows in Quebec.
Are you surprised that the hardcore
fans like the band?
Away: Not really, because hardcore is one
of our main influences, so we try to do a kind of mix between
metal and hardcore, a kind of speed-core. Here in the States,
the fans are a bit more violent. They're bigger thrashers.
How do you feel about violence
and the fact that your music may promote it?
Away: We have a song like 'Live For Violence,'
and sometimes people blame us for that violent side of our music,
but I think it's kind of a canonization of the violence. The kids
go to a show and they get violent, but it's better to get ,violent
at a show than in the street where you can really hurt something,
or someone. It's not as violent as a hockey game or a wrestling
match. For us, our shows are therapy. It's a release. When the
show is over, you can see how tired the people are from thrashing
and stagediving, and they don't want to fight or anything like
that. They just want to go home and sleep.
Is there a thrash-metal scene
in Quebec?
Away: Yeah, and it's growing. When we did
the World War III show with Destruction, Possessed, Nasty Savage
and Celtic Frost, over 2,000 people showed up. That's not bad
at all. It's all in marketing. Today we have a band like Metallica
that sold over half a million albums in two months, well, that's
a big move. The first song from Metallica was on Metal Massacre
III, and Voivod had a song on Metal Massacre V, so for us the
I success of Metallica is real important. It proves that there
is something new coming. I think that Metallica has opened the
door for Slayer, and Slayer has opened the door for bands like
Voivod, who are a little bit different.
Getting back to Canada, are there
many local bands like Voivod there?
Away: In Quebec, we've got Aggression, which
is a speed-metal band, and also a band called Outrage, who sound
a bit like Motorhead. In Toronto there are some bands like Sacrifice
and Slaughter, and there are old bands like Exciter and Anvil,
but nobody cares about them anymore. Also, there's a band in Vancouver
called Sacred Blade who just released an album. We got their demo
a long time ago, and it was really good.
What other speed metal bands
do you like?
Away: I like Kreator for the music, but
the lyrics are still the same pentagram Satan stuff. It's difficult
to say, because I don't listen to much metal but my favorite band
in power metal, is Motorhead. I will always listen to them. The
rest of the band likes Possessed and Slayer.
Are there any bands that you
don't like?
Away: Not really. I don't think it's good
to rank out other bands. I just read this article in Destruction
fanzine, and each band puts down the other. I don't agree with
that.
When and why did you start playing
drums?
Away: I started just in my room about 1980-81.
I always wanted to do music, and I wanted to do art. I found that
if I started a band, and did the artwork for it, then I could
combine the two. The instrument that I liked most was the drums,
'cause when I would go to a concert, I would always look at the
drums. I was fascinated by it.
Did you ever think of pursuing
anything else as a serious career?
Away: Well, if I would do anything else,
it would be either cartoons or painting. It would definitely be
art.
Your first real break came when
you had a track on Metal Massacre V, How did you get on that compilation?
Away: We had a 16 song demo tape, that was
a practice tape done on a 4-track. We sent it around, and we got
letters back that a lot of people really liked it. Then this guy
we knew who lived in Jonquiere, Wayne Archibald, sent this demo
to Metal Blade records, and they sent us a letter that they wanted
to put a track on Metal Massacre V. They chose 'Condemned To The
Gallows,' which was the first song we ever wrote. It has nothing
to do with the Voivod concept. Hellhammer (who later became Celtic
Frost) also had a track on this LP.
Did you get a lot of responses
to that cut?
Away: Yeah. We didn't expect much, 'cause
we didn't like the song. We had no money, so I couldn't bring
my drums into the studio. Instead, I had to play on a little Mickey
Mouse drum kit, which does not sound so great. We didn't like
the sound, or the song. It really wasn't Voivod. Everybody sent
us letters and told us that it was the best song on the album.
We were surprised.
And from there you got your first
album deal with Metal Blade?
Away: Yeah.
And you can't deny, that although
you had problems with Metal Blade, that compilation and the following
LP, War And Pain, helped to establish Voivod.
Away: That's very true. It helped us a lot.
They helped us to break. They just put us on the map.
Why did you decide to go ahead
and record the second album on your own, and then sell the finished
product to a label?
Away: We had a good following after War
And Pain so we decided to go ahead and do the second album and
try to sell it. We had at least six offers. So we were pretty
confident when we went in to record RRROOOAAARRR. The response
to War And Pain wasn't phenomenal, but it was pretty good.
Tell us a little bit about your
slogan, 'To The Death.'
Away: It's like when the Voivods are sitting
around a table with people impaled around them and they're drinking
their blood. It's like a toast, 'to the death.' But it also means
that when you get in Voivod, you're in it to the death. It's also
one of the main tracks on the second album.
Is there any message that you'd
like to relay to your fans?
Away: Well, we heard that a lot of people
thought that we had broken up, because it took us a while to get
the album out. Well, now that it's out, we've just finished a
U.S. tour and we'll be back in the studio soon, we want the fans
to know that Voivod is definitely still around. We'll be releasing
Killing Technology as soon as possible, so look for it.
I think that speech deserves
a toast. Let's lift our glasses, 'to the death'!
Away: RRROOOAAARRR!!!
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