Josey
Scott - vocals
Wayne Swinny - guitar
Jon Montoya - guitar
Dave Novotny - bass
Paul Crosby - drums
In every
life, there are moments of revelation. Some are tragic, like near death
experiences or divorce. Others are joyous, such as birth, new love or
a career breakthrough. But both kinds leave indelible stamps on the individuals
experiencing them.
For gold-selling
Memphis turbo-rockers Saliva, the past couple years of their decade-long
career have brought an ocean swell of such change. One or more members
have had children, stopped drinking, ended longterm relationships, gotten
married and/or left the group, and each instance has been accompanied
by a new sense of clarity.
As a result,
Saliva's fifth album Blood Stained Love Story resounds with a previously
untapped level of passion, energy, sincerity and diversity, not to mention
an undeniable melodicism that will endear the band to anyone that feels
any sort of connection between reality and music.
"I think
we've all been through a blood stained love story of one type or another,"
says frontman Josey Scott. "It's kind of a metaphor for how things can
be a certain way for so long, and then within a day, they just change
and you're on this whole other path."
Blood
Stained Love Story is an album of growth, a realization that there are
more important things in life than cover stories, photo shoots and big
Hollywood parties. But while it may be more mature than Saliva's past
efforts, it's no less turbulent.
"These
songs are about waking up after the party and your wife is gone, your
money's gone, your cars are gone and you go, 'What the fuck just happened?'"
explains Scott. "It's about trying to get all that stuff back, having
a second chance and starting again."
It's also
about returning to the fray after three years with something to prove.
Blood Stained Love Story opens with the ringmaster vocals and mid-paced
guitar chug of "Ladies and Gentlemen" before slipping into surreal Beatles-y
vocals and a call-and-response chorus. "Broken Sunday" seesaws between
bittersweet reflection and raw frustration, combining head-in-hand sorrow
with angry, lunging punches. And "Going Under," is a portrait of beautiful
sadness -- a textured amalgam of delicate piano, spare guitar picking
and world-weary vocal harmonies.
"I wanted
to go back to the nuts and bolts of Saliva, which the emphasis on nuts,"
Scott says. "I wanted to capture that musical diversity, that heaviness,
but in a really catchy way. And that meant going back to [producer] Bob
Marlette, who produced out first two Island albums. He really knows how
to get the best out of the five of us."
Saliva
started writing for the album in early July 2005, but at the time he was
in Hollywood working on "Wanted," and the show's grueling schedule kept
him from getting much done for Saliva. Around the same time the show wrapped,
Scott and his wife Kendra discovered they were going to have a baby, and
suddenly the creative floodgates opened up. Almost exactly nine months
later, the songs for Blood Stained Love Story were finished. "The baby
was really my second chance in a lot of ways," Scott says. "I had the
chance to raise a child and be a better man and those feelings and emotions
gave me all these ideas for songs."
Along
with the personal epiphany came the realization that he could no longer
continue living like a stereotypical rock star on the highway to hell.
So, Scott stopped partying and focused on being more productive.
"I decided
that I didn't have to totally pattern my life after Nikki Sixx," he says.
"Before that, there were times when I didn't know if my body was coming
or going. I had so many drugs in my system and was partying so hard and
living the lifestyle to the letter. One day I just woke up in amazement
that I had survived the night before. And I said, 'This is fucking stupid.
What am I trying to prove?'"
As he
curtailed his self-destructive behavior, Scott found it easier to focus
a create, and he quickly finished the music and lyrics for Blood Stained
Love Story. Saliva entered Marlette's studio in April 2006. Once again,
Scott was joined by longtime bandmates Wayne Swinny (guitar), Dave Novotny
(bass) and Paul Crosby (drums), and former Full Devil Jacket Axeman Jon
Montoya.
"Jon and
I have been friends since we were teenagers," Scott says. "It worked out
great because it was someone we knew, someone we were comfortable and
somebody that knew our songs and was really happy to take the position.
He's great player and an absolute dynamo onstage."
Clearly,
Scott considers Blood Stained Love Story as a document of redemption,
but Saliva never needed a second chance. Ever since their formed in 1996
they have remained relevant and revelatory for an audience disillusioned
by fads and fashion and looking to rock. Less than a year after they got
together, Saliva was a finalist in the 1997 Grammy Showcase sponsored
by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. Soon after, they
self-released their eponymous debut and created a buzz tour the country
opening for whoever would have them, and more often than not, blowing
those bands off the stage.
Island
got hip to Saliva's appetite in 2000 and released their debut Every Six
Seconds in 2001. Combining their love for hard rock, metal, hip-hop and
southern rock, the group put together an album that was in-your-face and
capable of blowing out your teeth.
"We were
hungry and fierce and we just wanted to write music we loved," Scott says.
"It wasn't about rap-rock. We didn't even know what that was. We were
just adding all the flavors that we saw around us in Memphis and pouring
that into one mold, and we wanted it to hit like a nuclear bomb."
Saliva
scored hit singles with "Your Disease" (#3) and "Click Click Boom" (#15)
and spent most of the year touring before the record went gold. They returned
in 2002 with Back Into Your System, a more melodic disc with fewer hip-hop
references. The album also went gold, thanks to the #1 hit "Always" and
its successors "Raise Up" and "Rest in Pieces."
"Back
Into your System was a more technical album and we were aiming more for
radio play," Scott says. "We really tried to give every song the attention
it deserved and make it the best it could be."
The band's
last album, Survival of the Sickest, which came out in 2004 was Saliva's
unabashed tribute to their influences, resurrecting the seismic sounds
of classic hard rock with the reverence and fortitude of true fans. "It
was produced by Paul Ebersold (3 Doors Down, Sister Hazel), and it was
straight up rock n' roll, a big fist in the sky to AC/DC Black Sabbath,
Motley Crue and all those bands that paved the way."
As cathartic
and enjoyable as Survival was, when Saliva reconvened after Scott's Hollywood
stint (in addition to playing a starring role in "Wanted" he had a bit
part in the movie "Hustle and Flow", they knew it was time for a return
to form. Only this time they wanted to steer clear of the extra-curricular
activity that previously fogged their future.
"We all
had the chance to party and do the rock star thing," Scott says. "We got
that all out of system, and now things are more serious and valuable.
We've found out what really matters to us, and now we want to get down
to the business of real rock n' roll - undeniable writing, albums and
live shows, with no stupid shit in the mix."
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