Cody Souza
Hatriot
Good! Been living the Dream! Creating music and traveling with my friends! Having a blast!
It's crazy the pandemic really changed life for a lot of us. For good and bad I suppose. I felt the band and myself really found who we were during the pandemic - we took Hatriot from a high end hobby to where it needed to be as a main career focus and pretty much a small business. I think the time in isolation and away from concerts really made us realize what we love doing.
Up to the pandemic we were setting our life's up to try and conquer and succeed in the music scene; getting bills lowered, setting up a good family system at home, setting down careers and finding jobs that will allow touring. We really tried to take what we had learned from our Fathers (Steve Zetro Souza of Exodus) trials and tribulations through his musical career and instil a level of pedigree in what we do.
It feels great, at first we tried to go to a show every day we possible could because we miss if that much. But being pent up in my home studio we wrote a monster of an album. Now that the world is getting back into its rhythm and our album "The Vale Of Shadows" released - we are ready to get out there and show the world what we are about!!
Yea, as far as the music for "The Vale Of Shadows" evolving a little bit, I feel the themes we stuck to are very Hatriot. Themes like: Violence, Coming Of Age, Serial Killers, Horrors, Monsters, the evil side of society. We always take aspects of life, mix it with how we are feeling, what we like, some amazing art, then press it all together.
I'm a pretty open book, what you see on stage or in videos and on twitch is pretty much who we are. The album title and the cover art do go side by side as "The Vale Of Shadows" a term loosely coined from stranger things' "Upside Down" - hence when you turn the album art upside down it becomes a new image. Definitely something we had fun with.
Yeah as I mentioned we definitely had a lot of pent-up aggression especially our last release from Days Unto Darkness had kind of gotten overshadowed by the pandemic we aimed to write this one and release it right out of the pandemic which we feel we did a good job on.
Definitely I don't think it was near as extreme as that was, it's something that Kevin our rhythm guitar player always loved images of and really ran with again showing the darker sides of society. A little symbolism.
We sought out with the vision of the album cover being more than just art. A little interactive if you will, turn the album upside down and the image of a skull appears. We feel Paolo G really knocked this one out of the park.
Yeah, we really set out to make an album of music that we enjoy ourselves. Being fans first we incorporated many different elements of metal into this release and have made an album some are calling hard to define an exact genre. Though the themes, lyrical content, and the Goblin Shrieks reigns through this album still very much make it Hatriot.
We really just set out to make music that we enjoy. I know that when Hatriot started out it was fronted by father and definitely going in the realm of what he did in the 80s is just pure aggressive thrash metal, but definitely wanted to curb our own cravings as well in so being hard-core, melodic death metal, Death-core, among others. I don't believe there's any pinnacle or any absolute goal it's just what we feel like writing and if we feel it fits along as another Hatriot song.
I definitely feel our ability to write and create material has been upgraded. Again another thankful Pandemic attribute, we all adopted working digitally in our own homes and sending tracks to each other via dropbox. Everyone can put their own spin on things has their own opinions and get some molded from Demo rather than trial and error song writing. No more everyone meeting up in a room blowing a whole afternoon and hoping you walk away with something, more of the attitude doing it for fun at your own home at your own leisure and sending it to your band for editing and input.
Most of the music is written and started by Kosta V, at that point usually several band members or single band members will write lyrics to said music. Lyrics get brought back up to the whole band and are kind of group evaluated by phrasing, cadence, and lyrical content among other things. At the end of the day there really are no rules and just is the core band happy with Calling what we created a Hatriot title.
Again adopting a lot more of that smarter not harder mentality, during thick isolation we had all make sure to keep our band like a family bubble, not really seeing people outside of who we work with. We had a physical studio during that time and then also even condensed to practicing digitally in my home studio. We found a way to get it done.
What I like about the Hate inside is there's usually one track on the album that Kosta V right entirely himself lyric and music and that was this track. We really felt it was modern had a lot of blends to different sounds almost "Slipknot" like aggression and feel. Kosta absolutely not that one out of the park
The mid-tempo songs are definitely the department of my brother Nick Souza and Kosta. Clemency denied was written by my brother. He wrote it from the point of view of someone who is found guilty of a crime they didn't commit, they then request clemency and the court system denies reviewing the case. Dark but real shit.
The release of the albums came up kind of late to be on the festivals this year. I have I have some things I'm working on now I can't really talk about but would love to of course. When the world was normal and we had released days into darkness in 2019 we had found ourselves on a few festival flyers. I feel this album has been received even better than that and hoping in due time we are available everywhere.
Thank you very much for your kind words, and the opportunity to get my voice and Hatriot's noise out there.
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