In a brand new interview, Mudvyane’s Chad Gray tackled the present state of heavy music, stating his perception that new bands “sound the same” whereas suggesting that trendy rock and metallic artists’ influences do not run as deep as they did again when he was arising.
The Mudvayne vocalist’s remarks got here in a chat with The Underground Australia, as Blabbermouth identified — Gray was answering a query about the nu-metal revival that is cropped up in popular culture, in addition to early nu-metal’s affect on at the moment’s bands.
Listen to the full interview down under.
READ MORE: How Does Chad Gray Feel About Mudvayne Being Called Nu-Metal?
Not holding any punches, Gray tells The Underground, “Dude, maybe I shouldn’t say this, but I don’t give a fuck. Because I’m me, and I’ve got stuff to say, and I’m going to say it. Music now to me — God bless them, new bands — but they sound the same. All new music reminds me of the same fucking thing.”
He continues, “[Nothing separates] one band from another. It’s like, one band kinda does something, a hundred bands follow that band, then another band does something, then a hundred bands follow that band and sound just like that fucking band.”
Nu-Metal Now + Then
By manner of illustration, and harkening again to the golden age of nu-metal, Gray referenced Mudvayne’s assortment of tourmates on the 2001 Ozzfest, asserting that between his band and the others on that invoice, all of them had been noticeably completely different in sound.
“I was on Ozzfest 2001,” Gray says. “So you had Slipknot, [Marilyn] Manson, Papa Roach, Disturbed, Mudvayne, Drowning Pool… Every fucking band, every band I just named, none of them sound the same. None of them. And I think that’s why it was such a special time in music because everybody was bringing what they were bringing to the table. You had System of a Down and shit-tons of bands, man. And all very original and all doing their own thing. We were part of that.”
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The Mudvayne figurehead distilled the thought even additional, holding that the musical influences fueling him in the early 2000s got here from additional again in the rock and metallic continuum. Now, he stated, bands take extra from modern music than they do from rock and metallic classics.
READ MORE: How Rock Bands + Radio Got Screwed in the ’90s
Difference in Influences
Explaining the distinction, he continued, “The things that make me Chad Gray are James Hetfield, Layne Staley, Phil Anselmo, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. I could fucking go down the list and name you probably 50 different singers that I — Chris Cornell —that I used to sing every fucking thing that they ever put out in their songs and on their albums. And I’ve taken all that influence that inspired me … to want to do what I do, and I’ve processed that inside of myself.”
However, as of late, “What bands do when they look at this new band, and everybody follows that new band,” Gray provides. “It’s not even an influence really because they’re current. … Even when I came out in 2001 … my influences were from 1981 [or] 1983. Like 20 years, almost 20 years prior [to] me dropping my first album. I wasn’t ripping off a band from 1999 and releasing my album in 2001.”
Mudvanye’s Chad Gray Talks to The Underground Australia – Jan. 12, 2024
Watch: 10 Unforgettable Mudvayne Moments
True or False: Which of These 18 Legendary Rock + Metal Stories Actually Happened?
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Gallery Credit: Philip Trapp
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