FAITH NO MORE | 23.01.1988 | Sounds
Hear My Train A'comin'
The dance floor heavy metal of FAITH NO MORE makes them one
of the prime contenders for '88 and the lyrics of vocalist Chuck Mosley
penetrate deep into the human psyche. NEIL PERRY meets up with the Californian
quintet on the Atlanta leg of their American tour. Making tracks MARY SCANLON.
FAITH NO More's wiry drummer, Mike Bordin, cuts himself off
in mid-sentence as he surrenders to the dominating roar and clank of a huge
locomotive which crawls past just a few yards away. From dusk to dawn you can
hear the goods trains, ponderous heavy metal behemoths, as they punctuate the
night with mournful wails from their horns. Mike watches as container after
container rattles by, thick dyed dreadlocks bouncing as he walks, his mind more concerned
with downing a few pre-gig drinks. "We got stuck here for
ten days once," he resumes, "but we never ran out of guitar picks.
We'd sit by the rails, putting coins on. Man, the train squashes 'em. flattens
'em right out.. ."
The last wheels roll by, shaking the foundations of this
modern American city. Trains or no trains, when you're in a band called Faith
No More ten days is a long time.
LATE NOVEMBER '87, and the Californian based quintet have just arrived in Atlanta, Georgia, one date on a six week US
tour supporting zany homegrown funksters The Red Hot Chili Peppers. 'Introduce
Yourself', Faith No More's second LP (their debut unavailable in the UK) was
released over here last October. A breathtaking harmonisation of molten metal
guitar, deadly dance rhythms and poignant, pointed lyrics it was the sound of a
band with no precedent. Introduce yourself, with a threat and a promise. Faith
No More like playing in Atlanta. Much of the city was razed to the ground in the American Civil War, and - during the band's
two day visit ~ smoke colours the sweet Georgia air once again, as Atlanta
State Penitentiary is burned during the third day at a prisoners'
riot. It was poetic justice indeed that the town's brothel was one of the few buildings to survive the Civil War unscathed and logical
that when the world's oldest profession moved out rock 'n' rod should move in.
Now it's a graffiti covered club called The Metroplex, and
as far as Faith No More are concerned it is a spiritual home and their hotel
for the night. They still have to prove themselves to their financiers before
such a luxury as bed and breakfast is provided. As midnight approaches. Faith
No More take the stage to what looks like a capacity crowd inside the dingy
Metroplex.
Live, they are energy, movement, malice. Within the space of
two songs there is more sweat and lust and desire in the air than the
building's former clientèle could haw mustered up in a week. Singer Chuck
Mosley croons, cries and howls over juggernaut rhythms, exploding riffs and
strands of hypnotic synth. From the opening 'Chinese Arithmetic' - a love song
of dark splendour - to the closing insanity of Black Sabbath's classic 'War
Pigs', the gathered Atlanta fans make a concerted attempt to injure themselves.
As one so succinctly puts it,'F***, man! That band kick ass!"
AS THE chili Peppers boom above their heads, Faith No More -
minus Chuck - gather in a dusty cellar. There's guitarist Jim Martin,
professional drunk and party animal, Furry Freak Brother meets the ghost of
Zappa past, Mr Deranged; keyboards player Roddy Bottum, the watcher, tall,
handsome and dry, Mr Unflappable; bassist Billy Gould, amino-acid, pill popping
soul-food fan, Mr Spaceball and drummer Mike, dark hawk features, wary and - as
the others insist on pointing out gleefully - prone to bouts of deep
bitterness, Mr Revenge.
The band's history is the usual convoluted tate of comings
and goings and various dodgy outfits, although Jim and Mike were in a band with
the late Cliff Burton in his pre-Metallica days; it was he who gave vital encouragement
and liquor when Faith No More took serious shape several years ago, and now
this gaggle of disparate individuals find things are beginning to happen.
Roddy leans against a pillar while the others sit, Jim
swiftly relieving a beer can of its contents before speaking, eyes playful.
"There's a story, the story, And you've got to tell it because I'm not
qualified.
But Just as the going looked good after ten minutes of
jokes, accusations and unhinged laughter-Jim berates Mike for knocking the tape
recorder with his foot, and they fly into a brief and irrelevant verbal battle.
Roddy and Billy look on, amused.
"It's because we're sitting in this van every day hating
each other," says Roddy, "and when we play it all comes out. We re
not really nice people or anything,.. we just try real hard."
Roddy occasionally helps Chuck out with the lyrics, such as
on the twisted social conscience anthem 'We Care A Lot', a fine line between
sincerity and sarcasm. "Yeah, are you full of shit or what?" chides
Jim, eager to hear an explanation. "It is absolutely verbatim,
liberal," says Roddy, unruffled. "It goes to the borders of what you
would and wouldn't care about. It's what I cared about, at that time."
Billy sits cross-legged on his chair, scratching at an
exposed knee in jeans made more of air than denim. "On MTV there's certain
videos I watch.. ." he says before trailing off, hawing possibly forgotten
what he meant to say next. "Lack of sense of humour, that really
pisses me off - that's good inspiration," continues
Roddy. "People who are too stuck up to have a good time. They can laugh at
us or with us, I don't really care."
"F*** it man, there is no laughter!" screams Jim,
his corkscrew mane jiggling wildly.
"Billy, Mike and Roddy got together cos they were
feeling down, so they could pool their strength and feel like big shots and
laugh at measly shit. They asked Chuck to sing, who said. Just one show, which
shows you how easily Chuck can be sucked in. .. He's yours
depending on how well you tell the story.
"I was in a shitty faggot rock band who sang about
their dicks (Jim's previous bands include Pigs Of Death, Agents Of Misfortune
and Vicious Hatred), I went to a Faith No More show and it was a pretty weird,
ugly experience. I figured they could use my help."
AND YET for all their flippancy, sleeping rough and touring
the States for six weeks in a cramped hire-van - with just Joe the all-purpose
roadie to help out is not something you take on without some sort of faith.
"We are absolutely f***ing serious! " Jim
explains, with his best wide-eyed face on. "I really hate it when I go to
do something," he continues, "and I'm stopped cold by some measly
shit. Like, you go to fix the pipe and you haven't got the wrench! But we want
to play bad enough, we'll do whatever we have to, you just go on stage and hurt yourself. I just want the heaviest sound possible. Oh, and
unlimited everything. . , for ever." Jim and Mike claim absolute
ignorance where Chuck's lyrics are concerned, and neither intend to change,
both (un)happily immersed in their chosen roles.
"Chuck's vocals aren't in my monitor? on stage, that's
for sure," deadpans Mike. "I learnt drums from this guy, he had this
philosophy, he gave me a different way of looking at drumming. I put a lot of
hatred into it."
Goaded by Jim, he sighs irritably Before Continuing.
"The story? Well. . . things are a lot worse than they seem, you're all
deluding yourselves, you may as well give it up. Slide down the ladder, give it
all up."
"You see, Mike's a bitter tittle man," says Jim,
"but That's the first time I've heard that. I'm frightened! Chuck's pretty
riled up all the time but he's like a poodle — highly strung."
Roddy then tells of his and Bill's Catholic school
upbringing, an experience they found so unpleasant that the two still find
time, when at home, to pay the old nuns a visit, heads filled with thoughts of
tyre-slashing vengeance.
"I still hate them enough to go and torture them. Faith
No More. . . it comes down to a lot of frustration."
"I don't think there's any moral lesson to be learned
from us," says Billy, grinning slightly. "We're pretty rotten people
really. Assholes."
Separating the truth from the humour is all part of the
game, part of the band's voodoo charm. Watching these four screwy but
hungry musicians - together one of the most exciting rock bands to emerge from
America, period - cope with their oddball coupling is a story worth telling.
"You know, it's a real pity you can't travel in the
truck with us," says Mike, as the lure of the bar becomes too great to
ignore any longer. "Yeah," enthuses Jim? "then you could really
feel the bitterness. How bad do you want to suffer?"
MID-MORNING after the night before, and Chuck Mosley sits
alone in The Metroplex, maybe wishing he'd stopped partying earlier and grabbed more than two hours sleep. He sucks on the soggy
remains of a joint, trying to take the edge off the day, before ploughing
through a sea of beer cans and paper plates in search of a more comfortable
place to feel grotty.
"Man, these rock stars who do coke for ten years, get
shit-faced drunk every night and still get up and play. They get called
assholes but I call them supermen - I couldn't do it."
Chuck Mosely, cool but mischievous, keen on loud tartan
suits, with features which could easily be described as beautiful: Mr
Sensitive.
He slumps by an upstairs porthole window and looks down on
the railway line, behind the club at another monster engine creeping along the
track. Part American Indian, part Jewish, Chuck was raised by foster parents,
his first interest in music being a desire to play the Batman theme on a piano
when he was four years old. "My natural parents? My Mum was 17. my Dad was
20—they lived in the valley, one of the white communities in LA. He was a
musician, and her family had a Jewish doth business. This was 1959. one of the worst
times to have an inter-racial kid.
"I don't know how much they were in love, that's why
I'd like to meet them. So they don't go through life with a problem in the
back of their heads."
Chuck's lyrics are a trip into the human psyche, and more
often than not they deal with relationships, where the distinction between love
and hate it is next to nothing. Onstage he will intimidate to get a reaction,
his solo acoustic spot the night before being a perfect wind-up for the band's
eventual electric detonation. "'Chinese Arithmetic', that's an obsession
song. 'The Crab Song' they're different stories, stuff that people are thinking
a lot conversations. The lyrics often come from listening to the music - like
'Death March', that had the music and title before the words.
"A friend of mine, doing a lot of drugs, just went out
in the ocean and drowned. I used to be on the beach all the time and I got
the feeling that he was so f***ed up when he drowned that he doesn't even
realise he's dead. He's out there, still swimming around. 'Death March' is
someone talking to their dead lover, the soul lingering on."
In common with the rest of the band, Chuck is more than
quick to point out his own failings as well as those of his colleagues.
"I'm probably capable of the worst things. I get really hard when people kiss up to me. I turn it around, I'm real mean. Anything can
be true, I'll give them five different answers. But if I do something real bad
I'll tell people, so it's off my chest. "I was the class clown and all
that shit, I don't have much confidence but i can act like I do. I'm too
freaked out to have a girlfriend for a long time because of a love gone bad,
gone sour. Like a scaredy-cat, I get possessive, paranoid.
"Like this saving the world stuff, the only attitude I
know is from personal experience."
It was Roddy who suggested that without his hour on stage
every night, Chuck would flip. He suddenly forgets his Budweiser sponsored
headache, and quickly dismisses the bassist's accusations. "Shit! That's
bullshit Bill doesn't know what he'd do, Mike would abuse
his girlfriend - mentally, without even touching her - Jim
would abuse everybody's girlfriends, physically and mentally. Roddy would go
out, have a good time. I'd go skating, go to Europe see my friends. Play in my
other band, ha! "Jim will tell you, my bitterness is that I gave up
another band to be in this one for promises of millions just around the corner.
Not that I was stupid enough to believe it, my only other option was moving
furniture. And Mike, Bill and even Roddy will worry way too much about my shit
when it comes to studio time."
IT'S AS if Faith No More is an endurance test, a big game of
chicken; a fatalistic beast founded on mutual mistrust and alcohol abuse that
should have chewed its own head off before a song was ever written.
"Everyone's totally different," laughs Chuck,
"even though we fight I'm closest to Jim because I can't stand phoney
politician types. Roddy has a high, high, high boiling point. They hold their
anger in too much. Jim lets it out on a regular basis, Mike will hold it in for
ever- He is bitter, he wants to bring you down into his doldrums. "Mike
and Billy are so tense! When I first Joined this band Billy would just rock out
- I just bang my head becauseI don't know what else to do - and now he bangs his head. he stands like this (feet turned out,
heels together, legs bent), his butt is so tight you can see his cheeks. Tight
sphincter rock 'n roll! "He wants to construct things, he wants
discipline. He's funny and I really love him. He s perpetually tortured by
demons."
As for whatever holds this zoo together. Chuck spends a
while staring out of the window before answering. "Oppression. There is no
soul. . . a band without a brain. If there's a soul it's a fight that guides me.
It's people's miserable lives and stuff, mine included, when it's miserable
it's a joke. "I'm proud of being part American Indian but I've got
bitterness towards blacks as much as towards whites. I'm half Jewish but I hate
Jews. I give out my love and hate equally."
By midday Faith No More had emerged from The Metroplex, and
it was the same band who made the most of the November sunshine, letting off
fireworks and leaping onto passing trains before heading off to find some
essential soul food. Faith No More have a good time they party, they fight,
sometimes they laugh until it hurts - they are the furious sound of five worlds colliding. That's the story.
I didn’t dream it. I didn’t make it up. My friend, Dana, and I drove from Knoxville TN to see Metallica for $5/ticket at the Metroplex in Atlanta. This would have been 1985, ‘86, but definitely before ‘88. Anyone with any info to link the Metroplex to this show would make an older man much, much happier.
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