Beni the Animal
Exit
•
July 11, 2020
I'm Beni, the vocalist and guitarist of EXIT. I write a lot of music but also all the lyrics. I'm one of the founders of the band, thus I'm in the club since 25 years.
There are different aspects. The most severe at the moment is that almost all of the planned shows have been canceled and no one knows when we can playing live concerts again. On the other hand we have plenty of time now to make music which is quite cool. But after all I wish we could on with our lives as metalheads as we used to: Playing shows, seeing fans, going to festival. Let's keep our fingers crossed that this pandemic will be over as soon as possible.
Honestly, I don't know. But we for sure enjoy writing and playing heavy music. I love the intensity and the power that comes from it. We are not made for easy listening sound. But there has to be a certain amount of recognizable melodic and rhythmic parts as well. It still needs to be party music. Take some rock'n'roll and mix it with brutal stuff and you'll get the perfect Saturday night mix.
When I wrote Empire, I had this idea of combining the not-metal-like-rhythm of the clean part with the fast parts and the blasts of the mid-section. And I wanted to use the clean part as a variety to the heavy distorted guitars of the rest of the song. It's interesting to check out chords and harmonies outside of the classic metal riffs and to use them in your songs.
During the last 25 years we gained a lot of friends and even though we got older we are still connected to a lot of them. This means a lot to us
There are lots of influences: Several ones from the 90's like Slayer, Cannibal Corpse, Pantera, and so on. We also listen to a lot of heavy or fast stuff like Misery Index, Aborted, The Crown Revocation, Rivers of Nihil, Lamb of God. Personally I do also like bands like Hatebreed, Converge or Terror. And then there are the ones that no one would assume. In my case this would be stuff like Chuck Berry, ZZ Top, Black Sabbath or Pearl Jam
Hard to say. Hopefully next year.
Our bass player's passport has been stolen while we were partying after a show in Riga, Latvia. For him, the tour was over and we had to play all the shows in Russia without him. Thank god to the allow you to play as loud as you want 😉 So we could make it up a little bit.
Enjoy every day of it. Time is moving fast. And party as hard as you can!
T-Rex
It was always the same: We want to play heavy music, we want to celebrate with people. Even though we play some heavy stuff, it still has to be a party. A full throttle party, so to say.
I did a lot of composing work in advance. Afterwards, we discussed the stuff together and changed it here and there. Sometimes songs sound good in the composing software but they somehow just don't work when they are played by a band. Then you need to make some changes or start from scratch. Step by step we developed the songs until we were happy and started the pre-production.
We wanted to go different ways to produce this album compared to the other ones. We weren't up to going in a studio, do the job and let others make the rest. We wanted it as raw and natural as possible. It should sound as if we were playing right in your living room. Loud! And the second goal was to let it sound as much like EXIT as possible. Therefore we did a lot of recordings by ourselves, but we had great people in the background who guided us and gave advice if necessary.
I think they made a great choice when they put "Johnny B Goode" by Chuck Berry on the Voyager golden record because it represents so much of rock and metal music in it. I would amend it with "The Evil That Men Do" by Iron Maiden, "Urfaust" by Misery Index and "Hell Awaits" by Slayer. Then, almost everything is said.
Being on the road can be boring. We pass the time with listening to music or reading. Sometimes you get the time to see something or to check out some local food.
Well, as Kant says, it is the attempt that is pleasure, thrill, hope and fear at once. You always want to compose the ultimate song. But even though you write a great song (which is not always the case), you still have this feeling that there is more. And I guess this is the sublime part of writing music. And it's also what drives you further as a musician.
Always try local food. Usually it's the cheapest and best choice
I guess this was the buffet backstage at a show at Szene in Vienna. That was very delicious.
Evolutions in music are hard to predict, because the evolution, driven by new influences is getting faster and faster. Tools and Software made songwriting and producing much easier than it was 20 years ago. And the internet offers underground bands more opportunities to broadcast themselves and to gain a crowd, which is absolutely great. On the other hand, an album is still something I want to hold in my hand. Because at least to me, a physical copy is part of the piece of art itself. For example: Having the "Master of Puppets" album only as bits and bites on my notebook is an awful thought.
Support the underground. Don't let anybody tell you what to do. Never trust a politician and party as hard as you can!
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