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EDDIE JACKSON, Born January
29th, 1961
Confidentially Speaking With
Eddie Jackson From Queensryche
Hey man, I'm curious about the string sections you've got on this
tour. How easy is it to get that all together? You're using a different
section in each city, right? It can't be easy.
It isn't easy. It's been kinda tough and not every city is
fortunate enough to experience the string sections. It's because of
space limitations or availability. Half of the shows have had strings
accompany us. We take a good half hour to an hour with 'em every time we
work with them on show days. They'll go through the songs like three or
four times apiece. They've got it all charted out so it's just a matter
of them getting a feel of the song. They've been pulling it off every
time we've used 'em.
Did you try some things early on in the tour that you eventually
scrapped - be it a song or a prop?
You're gonna experience things like that every time you go out on tour.
Whether we take songs out or just rearrange them, that's how that
usually works. With the props, yeah we started off with a certain visual
look. As you go throughout the tour you're gonna change things a bit to
kinda simplify it all.
How is it you're incorporating a preview of Operation:Mindcrime II?
Is it a live preview, audio samples, video...
What we've put together is a video with a song that's potentially going
to be on the next release. As of right now we're really looking for a
sequel to Operation:Mindcrime. As soon as we're off stage - the last
song is "Eyes Of A Stranger" - as soon as we walk off the video comes on
with the new music. It's almost like a pseudo-encore. It's not really us
performing but it's us giving them an audio track of a song that could
be on the next release with a video behind it. We don't know if
something like that has ever been done before. You'll see
Operation:Mindcrime with the roman numeral II on the monitors. The fans
get a kick outta that. There's a lot of anticipation for a sequel. I
have a lot of mixed emotions with this because there is something
magical and spiritual. There is integrity and the whole chemistry we had
when we created the first Mindcrime. To do a follow-up for that is like,
do we wanna mess with the mojo, ya know? You're gonna hear that
throughout the course of the tour. Some fans will say it takes a lot of
guts to do something like that, especially with the success of the first
one. There's other fans that are saying they can't wait for the sequel.
Some fans have been waiting for the sequel ever since the first one was
released 16 years ago. It's a tough pill to swallow. All you can do is
write the best you can. We really have no control over what it's going
to do when it's released, how it's going to perform sales-wise.
Hopefully it will connect.
It really sounds like you have some hesitations to do a sequel. Did
the whole band question even doing the sequel?
We've been talking about that throughout the years. That's why it's
never happened. We all tried to figure out if that was something we
wanted to do. Fans are still wondering what happened to Mary and what
happened to Nikki and Dr. X. Were they related? It's amazing how the
fans are just reaching for these answers. Do we even want to miss with
that? There's the hesitation you were talking about. Do we really wanna
approach this? Maybe it is time. It's hard to say. We all have some
mixed emotions about that. It can only help, ya know?
Was the original Mindcrime written with every intention of doing a
sequel? Did you have the answers to questions like the ones you just
brought up or are you having to think up a new story with the answers?
It's definitely like Operation:Mindcrime in the new millennium.
Sonically it could sound different. Stylistically it could sound
different. We're still trying to capture that same sort of sequel feel
like they do in movies. Some characters are gone but you'll maybe create
new characters to keep the story going. We never really anticipated
doing a sequel, let alone still doing this 20 years later! Since this is
happening, Mindcrime is definitely a lot more popular now that it was
when it was first released. That's interesting because there's a whole
new generation of fans being exposed to it. You've got to "Speak the
word," ya know?
I saw you guys in '90 when you had Suicidal Tendencies opening. You
did a version of Mindcrime then. What are you doing differently this
time out?
Without giving too much away we have arranged some of the songs a little
differently. There are some props and live actors. You're gonna get your
video accompanying the music, too.
Since you're obviously working on Mindcrime II, how hard is it to
write a song that can be delivered to radio when you know upfront that
you have to write songs that follow a very strict story line? It can't
be easy to write a song that follows a script and make it vague enough
to where you can dig the song and not really know the story of
Operation:Mindcrime.
Good question. I don't know if we've ever written songs exclusively for
radio. Perhaps it might sound like I'm full of shit! Honestly, we write
what we feel. If it connects, it connects. "Silent Lucidity" wasn't even
going to be on Empire. We just didn't feel it was gonna fit. Our
producer encouraged us to put it on there and look what it did. We had
no anticipation it was gonna take off and be in the Top 5. This time
around, writing a sequel, the pressure is on. There's more pressure now
because we've created something and now we're trying to expand on it.
Before we were just writing what we felt. I don't know what to expect
but I hope our fans are open-minded. I think we've been very fortunate
to have a fan base like that so we can evolve and experiment with our
music. They allow us to do what we want to do. I hope this time around
they appreciate that as well. We not only have to create a new story
line but we've got to create the music to work alongside it. We're all
up for the challenge.
So how far along are you with the songwriting process?
It's hard to say. We have quite a bit of material written. Half the
material has lyrics that we feel could be complete songs. As it always
happens you'll start to rearrange songs before you go into the studio.
That's inevitable. Ever since we've been recording it's been very rare
if we've written a song that's complete and not had to tamper with it.
Not many people take on the job of writing a concept record. I'm sure
you want to make sure the music flows well while also keeping the story
in order. Do you write the music first and piece the songs together or
do you write the lyrics first? I could be a dumbass and it doesn't even
work that way!
Don't flatter yourself! I think in the past we've written music before
lyrics. Geoff might have a lyrical idea that we might have written music
to. I'd say 80-90% of the time you're gonna get the music first. Since
we're recording the sequel they're gonna have to go hand-in-hand. This
is an exception to what we normally do.
Are you recording any of your current shows for a possible live DVD?
There has been talk. We were trying to organize and get everything up to
speed before this leg of the tour started but we were a little behind on
pre-production. We were trying to focus on making sure the show was
gonna run smooth. There is that possibility in January or February that
we may record this whole Operation:Mindcrime live thing. Maybe like we
did before, but this will have actors and different visuals.
There is a big difference in the band from the original Mindcrime -
Chris DeGarmo is gone. Has he been asked or is he interested in
contributing to the Mindcrime sequel?
There has been talk. Nothing has developed. It's hard to say because he
stepped out in '97. He did help write on the Tribe record. There was
always that possibility of him coming back and writing with us for the
sequel. Whether it will or not remains to be seen. I think it'd be great
to bring him back because he was part of the first Mindcrime.
Stylistically it would definitely have that cohesiveness. Mike Stone's a
very talented guitar player. He's got a little different style from what
Chris had. That's not a bad thing. Maybe that's good. Do we want to
create the same style like we did in the past? It has to have it's
intensity and it's dynamics because it's 16 years later. Maybe it's not
a bad idea to write the sequel with a different guitar player.
I'm a real sucker for guitar tones. Do you think the guitar tones
will be similar to the first Mindcrime or is that the wrong thing to
wish for?
For cohesiveness and to have it sound similar to the first one would be
great. You're talking about a different engineer, a different producer.
It's hard to say whether it's going to have the same sort of feel. We're
doing what we can to make that happen. I thought there was a certain
style to Operation:Mindcrime. To have that same style 16 years
later...will it fit with the new styles of music out there? Radio has
changed so drastically it's a whole different world now. It's a whole
different industry now. I guess change is inevitable.
What would you like to say to your fans and the readers?
Thanks for listening. We've been around quite a few years. The fans have
been so good to us. To give us the ability to evolve, to experiment with
music, has been very amazing. We're like this band who's trying to come
up with different styles each time we release a record. That's giving us
the freedom to do what we wanna do and our fans have allowed us to do
that. You can't ask for a better group than that. Thanks for listening
throughout the years.
By: Jesse Capps
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