Illinois Entertainer April 2017 | Page 34

By Kelley Simms JOHNNY ZOMBIE John 5 A stute music fans should already know that John 5 takes guitar play- ing to a stratospheric level. The virtuoso guitarist performs diverse musical styles including country swing, jazz, rock and industrial metal on his eighth solo album, Season Of The Witch. Joining John 5 on the album is his excellent band, The Creatures, consisting of bassist Ian Ross and drummer Rodger Carter. Aside from his day job as Rob Zombie’s right hand man, Mr. 5 explores his adven- turous musical side on Witch. The music videos 5 has released throughout 2016 also appear on the album; a technique Metallica executed successfully last year as well. With the surge of music 34 illinoisentertainer.com april 2017 videos breaking singles online, 5's plan was to get his music on the screens of the fans before the album dropped. Mosh: What do you like about this current video age where music is so visual? John 5: You, the individual are now your own TV station. Meaning, you can watch whatever you want whenever you want. With the MTV days, you don’t have to sit in front of your TV for six hours waiting for the new Van Halen video to come on MTV. You can just [watch] it whenever you want, so you’re your own TV station now. The same goes for Instagram. You’re now your own television, or your own advertising. You can advertise your shows or new video with Facebook or anything or talk about what’s on your mind. You are the new media for yourself and other individuals. Mosh: The Planet of the Apes theme for the “Here’s To The Crazy Ones” video is fantas- tic. How did you or the director come up with this idea? John 5: These are things I love and enjoy. I think it’s very smart. I think the makeup was great and I think the stories were great, and it was so revolutionary. “Here’s to the Crazy Ones” is, meaning anyone who was revolutionary, who had a great idea. The quote came from Steve Jobs, he wrote a let- ter and it said, ‘Here’s to the crazy ones.’ Anything that was revolutionary. I love the Planet of the Apes and I thought what a trip- py thing, if these apes were awesome musi- cians. I just thought it was a lot of fun. Mosh: You’ve always been about diversity in your solo stuff, and these 13 tracks cer- tainly have that. What did you set out to achieve with this album? John 5: I wanted a record that I wanted to listen to. If you’re listening to a record and there’s 13 tracks and all of the songs are exactly the same, it can get monotonous. With this, you never know what you’re going to get back. There’s so many different roads and different avenues that you can take listening to this music. It’s kind of a journey and I’m pushing the limits of myself with the playing and the production, because it’s all done live. And when you see the show live, it will sound exactly like the record. Because it is so live. I would just rehearse, rehearse, rehearse and then go in and record it in like two hours. Mosh: The way you yolk many different styles of music together seamlessly in the songs makes them very intriguing. “Black Grass Plague” really stands out. John 5: Everything is an inspiration to me. I saw a great artist on YouTube and the song is called “Pickin’ and a Singin,’” and he’s switching all these instruments. So at the end of the song, or if you see the video, there’s one part where I’m playing an elec- tric mandolin and then there’s another part where I’m playing a banjo. It’s just some- thing that’s different and fun. People get a kick out of it live, too. It’s just those kinds of things that makes the song, the video and the live experience interesting. And it’s all inspiration. Mosh: Out of your entire solo catalog, you’ve stated in other interviews that this album is your favorite. Why? John 5: I think the way it was all put togeth- er with the videos and the singles and just the blood, sweat and tears of putting it all together. It was a lot of hard work, but it paid off. I’m so proud of it and it’s so rewarding to hold something in your hands after all of the work. I did take my time, because luckily there wasn’t a record com- pany saying, ‘We need this record.’ But remember back in the day when a band came out and you bought the record and you listened to every song and you just worshipped that record. You knew every lick, every lyric and everything. And that’s how I wanted it to be with this one. And the only way I could do that was giving a song a slow pace, so when they get the album, they’re going to know pretty much every song on the record; which is a rarity nowa- days. Mosh: The track “Triple D” has a great neo- classical vibe to it. John 5: I’m glad you asked me about this. There’s six strings on the guitar. So my low Continued on on page38 page 44 Continued