News

My Chemical Romance Fans
Disappointed
November 10, 2008 - All My Chemical Romance
guitarist Frank Iero needed was one week — two days, even — to
help save one of the most promising bands he's heard in a long
while: his new side project, Leathermouth.
The way Iero recalled it, Leathermouth formed in a very
natural and organic way. A couple of his friends, who had been
in other bands, were thinking about starting something. They'd
already written and made crude recordings of three songs, which
they'd played for Iero in one of their cars one night, not long
after My Chemical Romance had returned from touring.
"I was like, 'Wow, this is really good,' and from that
second, I wanted to be a part of it somehow," Iero told MTV
News. "But I had too much sh-- on my hands. So they were like,
'Oh, well, we have this friend who is going to try to sing, and
we'll see how it rolls from there.' I was like, 'All right,'
because I have a label, and I was thinking maybe down the line,
if it works with the vocals, maybe I can sign it and be
involved that way."
My Chem hit the road again not long after and returned a few
months later. Iero checked in on his pals. "I asked, 'Hey,
how'd that band go that you guys were working on?' And they
said, 'Well, he never wrote any lyrics, so we're not going to
do it.' "
Iero was stunned. "I said, 'Are you f---ing kidding me? Give
me a week. I'll write some lyrics, we'll rent a practice studio
and see what happens.' And that's how it went down."
Iero, who has been involved with many bands (Pencey Prep,
Hybrid, Sector 12, I Am a Graveyard, the Pole Smokin' Five,
Give Up the Ghost, Reggie and the Full Effect and a Cure
tribute band called Love Cats) but never as a lyricist. So
being the face of Leathermouth was going to be a change of pace
for him. He wrote all the lyrics in a week. "Two songs on the
record, one's called 'Murder Was the Case They Gave Me' ... and
the other one's called 'Bodysnatchers Forever,' and it was
weird, man. I was sitting in my apartment, playing the songs,
and the words kind of came to me, and I was really proud of
them too."
Iero had never felt the urge to pen prose for any of his
bands' songs before, because he said he was "always very
fortunate to be in bands with people that I felt were very
poetic. I always felt like the voice that I would put across
would be through the music end of it. The music end was kind of
taken care of [with Leathermouth], so I did the lyrics."
Iero said some people think the lyrics — and, in small part,
the songs — were inspired by 1980s hardcore. And he doesn't
deny it. But he thinks his words were more inspired by film. "I
think, more so, it's '80s horror movies, as opposed to any kind
of music. Growing up in that time, it's all I watched as a kid,
so everything I do is influenced by that in some way. It's
weird: The lyrics I wrote are really ... they go through
experiences that are going on in the world today, but really
through '80s horror-movie imagery. I don't know if that makes
sense."
Of course it does.
But people coming to Leathermouth expecting it'll be My
Chem-esque are in for a rude awakening.
"I think that people that get into Leathermouth because of
my past bands and stuff like that, I think they'll be kind of
bummed out, if that's why they're into it," Iero explained.
"But it's definitely a lot different, and it's really fun for
me, man. It's really cathartic and just a great
experience."
Iero also shrugged off the suggestion that this new band has
a very metal kind of sound. He said Leathermouth is "just dirty
rock and roll." Live, "It's just a lot faster."
Leathermouth's debut LP will be in stores in January,
through Epitaph. Iero said he initially wanted to release the
record on his own label but scratched it — with good
reason.
"With the constant, grueling schedule of My Chem and the
other bands on the label, I didn't want it to fail because I
didn't have the time to do it," he said. "I have a really hard
time promoting myself. I like to do a lot of creative things,
but as far as telling people, 'Hey, this is really good — check
it out,' I'm not good at. So, I decided, 'Let me just do the
record, finish it and give it to a label and just see what
happens. Let it fail on its own merit.' Plus, ever since I was
a little kid, I've wanted a record out on Epitaph."
At some point around the holidays, My Chem, who have been on
a bit of a break, will reconvene, and Iero hopes to tour with
Leathermouth between stints with Romance — which is obviously
his first priority.
"We're just trying to get our schedules together so we can
get together and write," he said. "We're trying to do something
very natural. If we get together and nothing comes out, perfect
— who cares? If we get together and a record comes out, you
never know."
My Chemical Romance Against Harry
Potter?
October 24, 2008 - The singer,
who plans on scoring the film, has already spoken to
screenwriters and directors about adapting the popular
series – although none have officially been assigned to
the project.
In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Way said he had
met with Universal to discuss the project, which he hoped would
be released by 2011.
“I said going into the meetings that this film has to be
really progressive. It can’t simply be the next opportunity for
a video game. In the way that ‘The Dark Knight‘ made its own
rules, it needs to have its own energy,” Way said.
The singer, who is eyeing Alfonso Cuaron as a possible
director, said he didn’t want the film to become the new Harry
Potter
“The boy in this story is not a boy. He’s 60 years old. He
is an assassin. There’s so much about him that is extremely
violent. So that’s why I don’t want this to look like Harry
Potter,” he said.
“It’s not pretty and nice and safe. It has funny moments,
but it’s a dark humor. Everything about the movie has to
interlock properly.”
As previously reported on
Gigwise, Way is due to release a six-issue second series
to the comic book, entitled Dallas, next month.

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