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Home: P : Project 86 : Biography
Biography (courtesy
of Tooth & Nail Records)
Return. Return. Return.
One word. One message. One resolve.
It is as much of a command as it is a plea, as much of
a call as it is a challenge. And it is the word that is
the culmination of nine years as a band, a history that
has led Project 86 to the here and now. After nearly 300,000
in lifetime sales, four albums, and fifteen national tours
it seemed this Orange County, California outfit had begun
to forget who they really were, why they had formed Project
86 in the first place. …And
the Rest Will Follow is about the return. This one word chorus
is found on the fifth song of Project 86's fifth album.
Lead vocalist Andrew Schwab explains, "This chapter
of our band is about growing up, becoming a man, and taking
responsibility for who you are, who you have been. It's time
to embrace our gifts and live in them to impact others' lives
for the sake of faith, hope, and love. It's also time to
stop beating ourselves up over past mistakes. We started
this band to pour into kids' lives and that's the spirit
we have recaptured on …And the Rest Will Follow."
For this release, Project 86 knew they
had to do something brand new, while still managing to
capture their classic, unique sound. So, the band traveled
to Vancouver, B.C. to team up with Gggarth Richardson (Rage
Against the Machine, Chevelle, Atreyu) the producer who
was at the helm for Project 86's most successful release
to date, Drawing Black Lines. In addition, the band decided
to make a film about the recording process, and has now
released this film on their first DVD, "Subject
to Change: The Making of …And The Rest Will Follow." The
DVD is an entertaining compliment to the record, allowing
fans to get closer to the band than ever before.
"We were forced to be more vulnerable than we had ever
been in making this album," Schwab explains. "We
pushed ourselves to go further musically, to find something
new deeper down. This is definitely our most diverse release,
with as much focus on melody as there is on destruction.
I tried to show the tension and victory of the process in
the lyrics as much as possible. Every single song was a challenge
to overcome the fears that I was holding onto … fears
of failure and loss. True hope is found when you are forced
to confront your weaknesses."
On the opening track "Sincerely, Ichabod," Schwab
addresses the band's past in the very first line, making
it clear that Project 86 has no interest in anything else
but looking forward: "We once drew some lines in black,
and right now it's about time we took them back." These
sentiments continue later in the song as a multitude of voices
scream, "Off with your head. We'll take it all back
and then some … never again."
Though the opening track is perhaps
the heaviest song the band has ever written, the record
as a whole is refreshingly versatile. Several of the more "radio-friendly" tracks
shine without sounding as if the band planned it that way.
Memorable harmonies sneak up on you at every turn. The production
quality is dirty and raw, with drum sounds big enough to
make you reference Metallica's Black album. The song-writing
of Bassist Steven Dail and Guitarist Randy Torres is subtle
and effective, maintaining a less-is-more approach that features
substance over flash. Drummer Alex Albert guides the pace
with his signature heavy beats and occasional china smashes,
accentuating tastefully employed breakdowns. Schwab's vocals
range from whispers to shouts to wails to melodies, as this
album contains, decidedly, his best performance to date.
This is the record that they had to deliver. Simply put,
there is a life to it that is missing on a majority of heavy
albums today. You can sense that this band has boiled everything
down to what matters: great songwriting with heart and purpose.
Citing a broad array of influences from Queens of the Stone
Age to Hatebreed to The Faint, it is hard to pinpoint what
category to place the new incarnation of Project 86 into.
And they wouldn't have it any other way.
Schwab states, "I don't see us
fitting into scene-core land. That's just fine by us. The
bands that last are the ones that pave their own paths.
I guess we have evolved into a heavy rock band that just
wants to play music that we love. We have had to fight
to be in the place we are now, and we are very, very thankful
for every single supporter, every single kid who connects
with what we are doing. Everything that has happened in
the last nine years has led us to this point. We know who
we are and where we are headed."
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