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Home: P : P.O.D. : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Atlantic Records)
Boom! Here comes the Boom! Ready or
not, here comes the boys from the South. P.O.D. have exploded
to the stratosphere with their finest work to date, the extraordinary
Satellite. A high-decibel blast of potent cross-cultural
power rock, the San Diego-based quartet's second Atlantic
Records release is at turns joyful, provocative, challenging,
and utterly real. Co-produced by the band with Howard Benson
(the man behind the board for P.O.D.'s RIAA platinum certified
label debut, 1999's The Fundamental Elements of Southtown),
tracks like the fervent first single, "Alive" or the emotionally
charged "Youth of the Nation" find P.O.D. relentlessly
reaching heavenward to evoke a sense of positive vibrations
unique to today's rock n' roll.
"All the great rock bands were always driven by passion
and emotion," says Marcos, the band's versatile guitarist, "whether
it's a negative passion and emotion or a positive passion
and emotion. And for us, a lot of the rock that's out today
- and I'm not saying any names – a lot of it's devoid
of any type of emotion. It's all processed and done up in
the studio. But to us, we always put all of our love and
everything that we have into our music."
Satellite was recorded at Bay 7 Recording
Studio in Sherman Oaks, and Image Studios in Los Angeles
over a three-month period in spring 2001. With Benson and
longtime Metallica engineer Randy Staub at the helm, P.O.D.
recorded nearly 20 new songs. The sessions saw the four
musicians stretching out into the band they'd always envisioned
themselves as being, a truly free rock unit incorporating
an infinite variety of textures and styles – from reggae to rock, hip-hop
to hardcore – into an already genre-blurring sonic
arsenal.
"There's not really a word that can describe P.O.D.," says
Marcos. "If you were to go to each one of our homes
and look at our CD collections, you would see everything
from metal to punk to jazz to reggae, you name it. Everything.
Except maybe country, but other than that, we have it all."
"If it feels good, it feels good," notes Traa. "That's
a P.O.D. rule. When I came to the band, I was very stubborn
about what I wanted to play, but being with these guys opened
me up to a lot of different music. And the most important
thing with music is how does it make you feel? Not whether
you like it or don't like it. If you feel good listening
to something, then it's a good song. If you don't, then it's
not."
The notion that rock n' roll is meant
to move and inspire is prevalent on "Satellite," especially on such
tracks as the style-jumping "Ghetto" and the exultant
anthem, "Alive." "We didn't have a name for
it yet," says Sonny of the latter song's genesis, "but
we were calling it 'Beautiful' because it made us feel beautiful.
And that drove the direction of the lyrical content, because
we wanted people to go, 'Hey, this makes me feel good.' We
recorded the chorus I don't know how many times, because
it was like, 'Let's take it up a notch. Let's take it higher.'"
The lyrical content throughout Satellite – often poignant,
often powerful, always passionate – deals with the
band's outspoken belief in expressions of spiritual adventure
and affirmation. A number of songs, including the Mexicali-tinted "Thinking
About Forever" and the heartbreaking title track, were
inspired by the death of Sonny's mother.
"Satellite" is about that person, that thing in
the sky watching out for you," he explains. "Most
people who lose somebody have that notion, that they're out
there looking out for you, watching your back."
Perhaps the most powerful song on Satellite
is "Youth
of the Nation." The track is the band's raw, wrenching
response to the recent plague of school violence. "We
had done a show for some kids that went to Columbine," says
Sonny, "they wanted P.O.D. to play, just for a positive
encouragement type thing. And it was always in the back of
our minds, like, just what are these kids going through?
This is the hardest time for kids."
"It's always been a topic on tour," Marcos adds. "I
don't want to say it inspired us, but it gave us the motivation
to write something. Well, when we were writing this record,
we wanted to be secluded so we went to Santee, in East San
Diego, where we had this 35x35 rehearsal studio. One day
we were on our way to practice, and we saw all these cops,
but we didn't know what was going on. Later we found out
what had happened."
What had happened was tragic – on March 5th, a 15-year-old
freshman at Santee's Santana High School drew a .22-caliber
handgun and began shooting, killing two and wounding 13. "We
were in the studio," Traa recalls, "we started
jamming, and some eerie guitar notes started coming out,
these dark drum beats. It just came together naturally, once
again. We just told Sonny, 'Man, dig deep and write a story.'"
"It was an emotional situation," Marcos says, "the
main control room in the studio has a TV, and we're watching
the news on there, thinking, "Man, this is a mess.'
I'm the only one that doesn't have kids, but everybody was
like, 'Dude, that could have been my kids in there,' or 'That
could have been my sister.'"
Satellite also sees P.O.D. joined in
the studio by two of their heroes. Renowned Jamaican toaster
Eek-A-Mouse appears on the cool-running "Ridiculous," while "Without
Jah, Nothin" features the freestyle vocal pronouncements
of the prodigiously talented – and notoriously eccentric – HR
of the Bad Brains, long acknowledged as P.O.D.'s all-time
favorite band.
"You don't know if HR's crazy or what," he adds,
laughing. "He walked into the studio with a birdcage
with two parakeets in it, but I don't know exactly what that
was about. I started hearing this chirping and I was like,
'Where'd those birds come from? 'Those are HR's birds.' I
was like, 'Alright'"
"Very few bands today have any respect for the past," Marcos
notes of P.O.D.'s collaborations with their musical predecessors, "and
how can you conquer the future if you don't know anything
about the past? As a band, we respect the past, from soul
to punk, anything you can think of that had emotion, we respect
that. And there's a lot of elements that we've taken from
those people and brought into our music that a lot of bands
today don't even care about."
P.O.D. have long been passing knowledge
onto their legion of devoted fans, known as The Warriors.
This fiercely loyal grassroots following drove the 1999
single/video "Rock
The Party (Off The Hook)" to the top spot on MTV's Total
Request Live - making P.O.D. the third-ever rock band to
reach the #1 position in TRL history, with Korn and Limp
Bizkit. The reason for the Warriors' passion is simple – P.O.D.
are the real deal, a true-to-the-bone rock n' roll band whose
heart and soul are always front and center.
"We don't come with a gimmick," Wuv says proudly. "We're
regular people just kicking it. We're just telling you our
story."
"We do what we know is right for us," Sonny affirms. "And
that's it. We don't go out there and give a sermon when we
get on stage, we don't shove anything down anybody's throat.
But we sing about what's real in our life. And that's the
bottom line."
The men of P.O.D. grew up in the city
of San Ysidro – a.k.a. "Southtown," a
diverse community down near the California/Tijuana border.
In 1992, the versatile drum-playing Wuv invited his hip-hop
devotee cousin Sonny to take the mic in a fledgling hardcore
combo he'd started with his guitarist friend, Marcos. With
the addition the following year of the Cleveland-born Traa
on funk-driven bass, P.O.D. was complete. They blew up stages
with punk heroes like Green Day, Pennywise, and the Vandals,
in venues ranging from skate parks to YMCAs, selling over
40,000 copies of four independent CDs on their own Rescue
Records label before inking with Atlantic in 1998.
Powered by the success of the singles, "Southtown" and "Rock
The Party (Off The Hook)," The Fundamental Elements
of Southtown hit #1 on Billboard's Heatseekers chart, going
on to reap RIAA platinum certification. The critically acclaimed
album was acknowledged as the San Diego Music Awards' 1999 "Album
of the Year," with "Song of the Year" honors
going to "Rock The Party (Off The Hook)," and P.O.D.
taking home the "Best Hard Rock or Metal Group" trophy
for the second consecutiveyear. In addition, the band were
included among Rolling Stone's annual "People of the
Year" for 2000.
True to their hardcore roots, P.O.D. remain one of the hardest
working bands in America, spending more than half the year
on the road, playing largely to all-ages crowds at county
parks, coffeehouses, colleges, and coliseums. They were main
stage sensations on Ozzfest 2000, they toured alongside Staind
and Crazy Town as part of 2000's MTV Return Of The Rock Tour,
and in recent years have shared stages with Kid Rock, Linkin
Park, Primus, Sevendust, and Korn.
The band's Rick Rubin-produced "School of Hard Knocks" was
the first single/video from 2000's Adam Sandler comedy, Little
Nicky. P.O.D. tracks have appeared on the soundtracks to
such films as Any Given Sunday, and Ready To Rumble. They've
also made appearances on a number of high-profile TV shows,
including NBC's The Tonight Show With Jay Leno, The Howard
Stern Radio Show, and Farmclub.com, plus MTV's 120 Minutes,
The Return of the Rock, and Rock N' Jock Bowling. In addition,
Sonny has guested on ABC's Politically Incorrect With Bill
Maher.
"We're trying to be universal," Marcos says. "If
we can get your grandma listening to us, if we can get the
little three-year-old kid listening, then it's done. What
is your purpose as a musician? You're playing an instrument
so that people can hear you, man. Why do you play live? To
be seen. And for your music be heard. If not, why in the
heck are you playing guitar?"
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