Aku Kytölä
Prestige
Things are rolling just smoothly over here, thanks for asking. Reveal the Ravage has finally seen the day of light, gotten great reviews, and the very first gig with the new line-up at Speed Metal Party went great! Way better than I even dared to dream of. Not that all of us have enough experience, quite the opposite, but that still was the very first for us to play a show as a band, together, and it's been more than a year since the last Prestige gig, so I have to admit, there were butterflies all over the place.
Those two bands you mentioned were truly our partners in crime. If i recall, our album came out right after those two had released their debuts. Lots of great memories of shows we did together back then. But hey, we are the ones who are still around, doing our stuff, kicking and screaming.
Back at the 1992 we decided to take a little break after Ruisrock festivals, we had no rehearsal room at the moment and lots of other excuses. Grunge took the audience, metal went black. We represented either.
Well, it took more than just that summer to play together, but now it feels like time is right.
None of this was really planned, but after all those comeback shows once a year or so since the first one at Jalometalli 2008, all of them always left that certain itch to take the band further, what we never did, but when Tero called it quits, and Matson came out of nowhere to take his place, we decided to give it a last try, this time with all we got to give, and with all the raw energy Matson brought to the band, we realized were back on the saddle again, but this time the rodeo audience is not going to see us face first in the dust.
We totally focused on writing and recording the album, and now when the process is finally over, we can concentrate on touring, but were talking about summer 2022 of course. Or further. Hope this global pandemic dies before all the people are bored to death. Piledriver locked and loaded.
Nothing has changed, except for the line-up a little. Still doing this straight from our hearts full throttle. Though our mascot got wrinkled, but to be honest, so did we.
We used to think that there was nothing but an open road ahead of us, and 1992 road suddenly took a landslide down the hill. Now there are different kind of obstacles, like sofa at the living room, fridge full of treats, jobs and families, but now there isn't no need to prove anything, Prestige saga continues, but nowadays our ship sails only on perfect weather.
We thought that if we spit out couple of awesome songs, of course I am talking about the single cuts, Exit and Weep, they will prove the world were back, serious and definitely worth a deal, and it really didn't take that long before our quite atheistic, but also pessimistic prayer was answered.
Massacre was more than perfect record company for us, and we were extremely happy and pleased with the deal.
Thanks, and at the moment it feels like there is nothing that could stand in our way, but then there is, the motherfucking covid19. and 20. and now 21. Well, it will pass eventually, and then we can start talking about touring seriously. SMP gig proved that band actually is in a great shape, and ready for anything. As you said, true ravage, ready to rage.
I intentionally tried to write lyrics this time with more poetry in them, make them more interesting, and give people a possibility to view them from different angles, but basically I am no poet, and they are all short stories about the stupidity of the human race, a subject I never get bored of. But there are of course more in them than just that. I even wrote a love song, but that one was left out of the album. When our next single comes out, it presents lyric-wise more like gothic romance than death and despair, which was refreshing for a while. I promise I still am going to stick with the destruction of society, that's more like my area of expertise, so to say.
While writing the album not that much, still making 80s metal, but while we were working through songs as a band, of course we did learn a lot from each other while doing so. And most important thing, day by day we grew together as a band.
Well, during all the years we were absent, we did pick up small things here and there from a huge variety of different music styles we explored through as individuals. So when we finally got together, it eventually brought more into it, though we still tried to write as 80's metal as possible. And it was really fun, lots of fun. Sometimes even like we were teenagers again. We just knew a lot more about everything in the process than back then when we basically made a song and played it live next weekend, so the first version was usually the one on the early albums. Now we even had time on our side. Plus, all the experience we had today.
Metal we do comes out easily, naturally, but I have to admit I really don't know that much about modern bands. On any genre. There has to be lots of great stuff out there I just haven't even heard about, cos my stereos blast slayer, way too loud.
And nowadays its cool to listen to anything you want, be what you want, do what you want, you get the point, no more narrow-minded people making up stupid rules, but back then you got punched in the face, if you dared to even mention Duran Duran 10pm Friday night. Unless you were a girl. But even then you had to walk home alone. So there are no restrictions like them sub-genres really anymore, it's ok to think outside the box.
This is what we do, and that's the way it's going to be, been trying to do things the other way around, but still I'm back on square one. And it feels great!
Metal is what I listened to a lot through those tough and rough teenage years, so I'm pretty sure it is true what scientists say, what you listen to at the age of puberty, it's going to leave a mark in your brain forever.
Without Matson, making of this album would probably have been impossible. We got a lot of mojo from his animalistic banging behind the battery, he gave all he got, and by that I mean more like we didn't rob him blind, but we really clicked, cool sync from day one, and we fed each other. Writing the album with him was really easy. We are really lucky to be able to welcome him to the band.
You can't make a metal album nowadays without sounding as big as possible, it just isn't an option. In other genres it's just fine, but when we're talking about aggressive, storming metal, you have to sound like there are enemy troops marching outside, with tanks and all. Samu knows how to make that magic happen. Past is past, and there isn't no turning back.
I wrote the lyrics, Jan wrote most of the song, and after a few weeks in rehearsals we came to realize that this one is the opening track of the album, no way were we going to write anything catchier than that one.
Prime Time was something different, really different, but we all thought it's going to be a great tune, if we manage to do it right. What you hear on album, is probably Zillionth version of it, Lyrics were re-written at least 3 times, and what is left of them, is a combination of lots of different takes in the studio with variety of different styles in vocals, lots of frustrated shouting to each other, and finally us all getting it right. Together. As a band. As we usually manage to do. And it came out great. And it is as it was, the last song. closure. Love it a lot.
Fun fact, few lines you hear on record are taken from demo sessions, from the very first take at Aris home studio, without a glue they are going to end up on the album.
Don't know when we are going to hit the road, nor where the road leads, but definitely year is going to be 2022.
Thanks, mate, until next time!!
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