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VOIVOD: FUTURE SHOCK! by Mike Gitter
Metal Mania Magazine, July 1989
Re-typed by Marko Capoferri
Contributed by Jason Justice
It was one of those years. The best of times and the worst of
times for French-Canadian techno-metallers, Voivod; a year they
will long remember. Triumph and defeat, agony and ecstacy, and
quite nearly tragedy. Winter 87/88 found them putting the finishing
touches on Dimension Hatross, the fourth installment of an avant-thrash
legacy. Long seeking to escape from the "black metal"
tag they've outgrown years ago, they were beginning to be recognized
by critics worldwide as "Voivod music", a sound and
approach of frightening originality. Spring saw the release of
Dimension Hatross, increased popularity and a video for the track
"Tribal Convictions" winning
substantial MTV play. A tour headlining over Bay Area stalwarts
Testament was planned and negotiations were being completed for
the band's signing to Mechanic Records, and off-shoot of the powerful
MCA label. For the one-time struggling undergroung act, it was
like a dream come true. Then, disaster struck. On a routine, pre-tour
check up for a long-lasting head cold, guitarist Dennis "Piggy"
D'amour was diagnosed with cancer. With a young tumor lodged on
the horomone secreting hypofices gland located dangerously close
to his brain and optic nerve, doctors warned that if
they were to operate, the fiercely innovative guitarist may never
be able to play again.
"We freaked out when we got the news," says drummer
Michel "Away" Langevin tersely through a heavy French
accent. "If any member of the band were to leave, we would
never be able to continue, considering that each member is important
to Voivod as a whole."
There were rumors, word of Piggy wasting away, never able to play
guitar again and certain break up looming in the band's future.
While Voivod fans were tolling funeral bells the world over, truth
was far less severe than most were led to believe.
"They never had to operate," beams a robust, healthy
Piggy. "The tumor was too young to operate on and could be
dissolved by pills. The funny thing was that I had that tumor
for five to eight years and I never knew it. The symptoms were
so subtle and the tumor grew so slowly that it took an X-ray examination
to realize what was going on. When you find out something like
that, you start to realize how fragile the body is.
Flesh and bones are cheap, adds Away with an off-worldly
gleam. We should be nothing, psychic entities that think
but dont exist.
Doctors warned the band that while Piggy could have safely toured
during the summer in the event of complications, he would have
to seek medical attention. At a cost of $25,000 for a stateside
operation that at home would have been paid for by Canadas
program of socialized medicine, the band postponed their U.S.
visit while Piggy made his two-week stay at a Montreal University
hospital.
I feel responsible, laughs vocalist Denis Snake
Belanger. I wrote songs like Ravenous Medicine
and Brain Scan and to be honest, everything that happened
this summer really scared the me- I hope it wasnt my fault.
Ironically enough, even before Piggys alarming malady, preproduction
on The Nothing Face, the bands fifth album and the latest
installment in the saga of Aways evolutionary, atomic hero,
Voivod found the nuclear hero boldly going where no French-Canadian
mutant has gone before-the brain! With new song titles including
X-ray Mirror, Into My Hyper-Cube, The
Unknown Knows and The Sub-Effect, Voivod take
their strangest journey yet.
Away stresses that he had been working with his tale of an inner-body
trip, inspired by numerous French philosophers as well as Don
Juan author Carlos Castenda long before Piggys brush with
disaster. This summer has really helped the psychic atmosphere
around the band, says Away. It might be a bad way
to get publicity, but the way things have been so strange, it
only helps our self image.
While theres no definite storyline as on Dimension
Hatross, there is a basic theme to the new album, describes
Away. A lot of it has to do with the mind, paranoia against
schizophrenia, depression and personality-split while maintaining
our science-fiction edge. A privileged listen to the demos
the band has prepared for the albums up-coming mid-winter
recording,
yields an even deeper plunge into the chasms of Voivods
aural insanity.
Piggys seering guitar work touches upon the classic Voivodian
atmospheric snarl colliding with highly influential elements of
early Rush, Genesis and Yes. Snakes vocals cut over them
with the zest of a rusty butter knife (possessing more feeling
then ever before) while Aways drumming and bassist Jean-Yves
Blacky Theriault whip up a rhythmic storm, a most
brutal descent into maelstrom. The bands most recent signing
to Mechanic/MCA
proves that there is indeed hope for a truly fresh and original
voice
on the metal scene.
A longtime Voivod fan, label president Steve Sinclair saw the
uncompromisingly original edge the band has long possessed and
hopes to elevate them to Bon Jovi/Metallica/U2 status the world
over.
Face the fact sheckie, Voivod have as much to do with the spandex
n Satan set as they do with Tom Jones. Theyre
the kind of band that deserves throng of followers who at the
slightest French-accented mutterings would invade chem-labs at
high schools the world over, mix the right chemicals and insure
Voivods reign of intelligensia.
Transition: Theyre smarter than the average bear. Were
a band for the nineties, says Away. Every decade theres
a few bands that emerge as leaders for the next generation. In
the seventies, virtually everything original in music was destroyed
by disco and the only thing that was interesting survived into
this decade. That was the punk movement, something we definitely
came out of. Were going to get a lot bigger in the next
couple of years because people want something thats totally
out of the mainstream, a void we definitely fill.
Expect only the unexpected from these Canucks. With each album
theyll inevitably unveil a teeming horde of fresh ideas
and unexpected twists.
While their sound can be described as a wistful amalgamation of
art-damage punkers such as Killing Joke and the little known Chrome,
Venom-influenced metal and King Crimson-like progressives, each
album can be taken as an evolution in their overall sound. From
the crude yammerings of their 1984 debut, War and Pain, to The
Nothing Faces near melodicism, Voivod arent about
to linger on relatively safe ground.
Look at what Metallica did on their last album, interjects
Blacky. They went and recorded an album that sounds like
every band that ever copied them. They should have been way more
adventurous, trying new avenues and taking risks. Theyve
found a formula and theyre just beating it into the ground.
You shouldnt be afraid of what people are going to think
because if they arent going to follow now, chances are theyre
going to follow in a couple of years.
Our goal has always been to be part of a musical evolution,
continues Away. We want people to think of Voivod as part
of a great, intellectual boom that will occur at the end of this
century. Personally, I dont see the next century very positively
and I think its good to serve as a warning to terrible tragedies
like the death of intellectual thought. A lot of whats going
on now with yuppies
acceptably using drugs reminds me of 1984 or Brave New World where
the government gains control of the population by brain washing.
It seems that anyone can be a good American as long as he makes
$50,000 a year, owns a house and snorts coke. Thats just
empty and meaningless to me.
What a year. Voivod can rest a bit easier knowing that theyve
looked death square in the face, spit in its all consuming maw
and come up smiling.
They might just re-write the all-too complacent face of metal!
Theres a strange aura about us these days, concludes
Away. Weve come this far and worked our asses off
to get where we are today. Weve also managed to keep our
integrity totally intact which is something a lot of bands lose
sight of. People may not understand what were doing 100%
at first but that will soon change. We are the sound of the future!"
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