It’s no secret that Billy Corgan wanted to try to re-create some of the sounds of Smashing Pumpkins‘ first few records on their latest release, Aghori Mhori Mei.
“I was just writing riffs, no vocals, just riffs,” Corgan told Chuck Armstrong on Loudwire Nights Wednesday (Aug. 7).
“[Jimmy Chamberlin and I] did a bunch of stuff, you know? A Siamese Dream riff here and a Mellon Collie riff here and Gish riffs there. It was kind of interesting, we were just kind of playing with the idea.”
It didn’t take long for Corgan to connect what he was attempting to do with his band with one of the biggest bands of the ’80s.
“All of a sudden I start talking about Motley Crue,” he recalled, “specifically the Too Fast For Love and Shout at the Devil albums … In their own crazy minds, they thought they were doing glam. Nikki thought they were doing Sweet and early Bowie, but they couldn’t really do it and they hadn’t really studied the records, so they did the Motley Crue version of Sweet or something. And you end up with this beautiful, almost primitive but more visceral version of the thing they were trying to kind of be.”
As soon as he made that connection, he realized that was what he was doing in the studio with Aghori Mhori Mei.
“We couldn’t be Led Zeppelin, but we could kind of do Pumpkins’ fake version of Led Zeppelin or Pumpkins’ fake version of Soundgarden or something,” he said.
A light bulb went off. As much as Corgan could try to sound like he did three decades ago, the reality is he was a much different artist and musician then compared to today.
“You have to get back in this mindset because we’re so much more skilled 25, 30 years later than we were then,” Corgan said.
And because he still wanted to connect to that earlier sound of the band, he had to remind himself of a few things.
READ MORE: Bush’s Gavin Rossdale Reflects on 30 Years of Sixteen Stone
“You’ve got to find the thing that made you want to rock in the first place,” he shared, thinking about some of the influences on Aghori Mhori Mei, like Black Sabbath or Dio.
“Not the 30-years-later version of what makes you want to rock. What kind of riff would get out of the garage? Not what kind of riff would get out of the expensive, SIR rehearsal space in the 21st century. What kind of riff would you be willing to risk your life on? Get in the van and drive all over America?”
Billy Corgan joined Loudwire Nights on Wednesday, Aug. 7; the show replays online here, and you can tune in live every weeknight at 7PM ET or on the Loudwire app; you can also see if the show is available on your local radio station and listen to interviews on-demand.
You won’t want to miss a thing.
Gallery Credit: Chad Childers, Loudwire
Play | Cover | Release Label |
Track Title Track Authors |
---|