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Along with Front 242 and Front Line Assembly, KMFDM
is one of the pinnacle bands in the world of
industrial music, starting out in 1984 when today's
many leather and vinly clad youngsters were running
around in diapers. When the group decided to call it
quits and released their last album, Adios,
it left a gap in the scene and in the hearts of its
members.
But life moves on and so did they, including one of
its founding members and the main songwriter and producer
of the group, Sascha Konietzko. And
move he did, from Seattle to Chicago to Manhattan, a
city that is a perfect setting for those who want to
lose or find themselves, “I did both,” Sascha
laughs.
These days he’s back in Seattle, which he hopes
to call home for some time to come. “There’s
a quaintness, a recreational value. I work hard, but
I do like to go outside and have the mountains and the
ocean at my disposal.” This is also the new headquarters,
again, for the KMFDM of 2003.
Before we jump ahead of ourselves, let’s go back
to the year 2000. Sascha and Tim Skold,
who had become close songwriting and programming partners,
especially on the Adios album, started kicking around
the idea of a new project; to be something different
and new, but that continued to personify their signature
musical energy. The answer came by holding up a mirror
to the old KMFDM.
“MDFMK was a project that was started with very
high hopes and lots of encouragement from both fans
and our new label, Universal,” Sascha explains,
“We did the unthinkable. We broke up KMFDM, then
signed this major label deal with the MDFMK project.”
In retrospect, Universal was more enthusiastic than
Sascha felt they should have been because of their monetary
expectations. “It became apparent to us that it
was all hype. They were hoping we would become the Prodigy
of some sorts, to be a cash cow.” Unbeknownst
to the label, MDFMK had no desire to be anything other
than who they were, and therefore, went in a different
direction than expected. After a time, it was clear
that Sascha needed to cut the losses for both the band
and the label, and approached them with a proposition
to exit.
MDFMK was able to leave the label with their music,
right around the time that many around them wanted the
group to turn back the clock while they moved forward.
“People were saying, ‘Return the letters.
Nobody can pronounce it. KMFDM already. It’s not
all that different. It’s a continuation of the
direction you’ve already been going with the KMFDM
albums. So you might as well be KMFDM again.’
I didn’t warm up to the idea at first.”
But Sascha didn’t discard the idea either. He
ran the transition by his band partners, Tim and Lucia
Cifarelli Suki, who agreed that it was time
to make KMFDM a reality again. This meant they also
needed to converse with the previous members of the
band, including one the original founders, En Esch,
to see if they too wanted to be involved. But as with
any broken relationship, there is baggage.
“The break up came from internal struggles and
different people going in different directions that
tore KMFDM apart,” he says. And the differences
continued after he approached them. “They all
said, ‘Fuck you,’ basically. ‘We don’t
want to work this kind of thing after you guys go your
own way for two years. We’ve gone our own ways
as well.’ And that was fair enough. But KMFDM
is my baby, and I’m going to see it through.”
Some legal issues ensued as he brought KMFDM back to
life, even though they had set up the band and ran things
in a handshake fashion. Sascha took it all with a grain
of salt, “Those are just the remains of a disgruntled
relationship. It’s never pretty, whether it’s
a divorce or a band break up. Most people don’t
want to put an effort into tackling anything difficult,
like remaining friends. That’s fine. I came out
of it stronger, if not unscathed.”
After battling the war with former labels and former
band members, in 2001, Sascha was ready to rally his
new world army, including guitarist Joolz Hodgson
and Steve White, vocalists Raymond
“Pig” Watss and Lucia, and on drums,
Andy Selway. Although Tim and Sascha
were still close friends, it was time for Tim to leave
the KMFDM camp to work full time with Marilyn Manson.
It was through Sascha’s past relationships that
allowed him to put together his current line up. “Raymond’s
band, Pig, had this phenomenal live band – this
rhythm section of two guitarists and a drummer,”
which was used as the live musicians for KMFDM’s
first come back tour to support the 2001 release of
Attack! That tour and the chemistry between the entire
group worked so well the musicians became permanent
members.
The next step was to get a record deal, which they
did with the Sanctuary Records Group, and getting started
on the next album, World War III,
which was released in September of this year.
When KMFDM made their come back with Attack!, the lyrical
themes proved to be prophetic after the actual 9/11
attack on our country. Today, the group continues to
be very blatant about their view of world issues and
opinions, one of the key reasons they have such devoted
fans.
This is evident on World War III,
not only with the title track, but on “Bullets,
Bombs, Bigotry” or “Stars and Stripes”
whose main character could be portrayed by a number
of political leaders or CEOs of our country, “A
tyrant is a man who allows his people no freedom/Driven
by the lust of power/Compelled by greed/Thirst for fame.”
The other driving factor of the new album was to take
production in a different direction, which led to working
with a live drummer in the studio as opposed to their
past method of having electronics at the forefront.
Although they still used sequences and loops to retain
their drum and bass quality on such tracks as “More
On” and “Last Things”, the machine
side was used to a lesser degree, and the depth and
beats became more organic through Andy’s skills
at the kit.
“We started like a rock band would, laying down
tracks – bass, guitars. That way of producing
a record captured a lot of the energy of the drums…the
static and the hiss, the density. It was something I’d
never experienced before in production.”
A new level of sophistication rose to the surface on
“From Here On Out” where Lucia’s angelic
vocals draped over a rich, symphonic atmosphere. “That
was actually one of the first songs we tackled on this
project. It underwent a lot of transformations through
the process. But I’m always stoked when that song
kicks in. It’s a juicy follow up to a song you
think cannot have a follow up,” he says, referring
to the title track of World War III.
Having a song called “Intro” at the end
of the album is classic KMFDM - whatever is expected,
they want to do the opposite...with a dash of their
sarcastic humor. The music for this song never evolved
to a point of fruition, and at the end of production,
they still had no lyrical concept. “On the last
days of mixing in Chicago, we were wondering what we
were going to do with it. We kicked around the idea
of making it an introduction to the band, a tool you
use on stage to start your encore or something. We just
laid down the lyrics and the song without spending too
much time polishing it because it had to be raw, as
if it were captured live. And what could be better than
put a song called ‘Intro’ at the end of
an album?”
The actual intro to the CD is another surprise. Since
the title track has such a sonic onslaught of guitars,
drums and bass, they wanted to have some way to ease
people into it. They arrived with a ying to their yang
- a rural, country back porch scenario, complete with
a banjo, crickets and a hound dog howling in the background.
When I first listened to it, I thought I had put the
wrong CD in the player, “It crossed our minds
that some people’s reaction would be along those
lines,” he says laughing.
When they were in the mastering studio, they wanted
to be even sneakier, and mix “Intro” so
it played low enough to make you crank your stereo,
and when World War III came
on, gave you a heart attack. But the production guy
thought it might result in lawsuits to replace stereo
speakers, so they had to even out the sound a bit more.
“It was good fun though. We got quite a few laughs
out of it.”
While they’re laughing, the concept behind the
album is definitely on the serious side. “As the
album unfolded, it paralleled the whole tragic comedy
unfolding worldwide with American invading other countries,
which had the whole world reeling their heads in protest.
Everything is being washed away by this mass of complacency
in this country.”
What was interesting to Sascha was the difference in
the reaction to their concepts. During the course of
many interviews of the past few weeks, American music
journalists questioned why KMFDM were so overtly political
versus European music journalists who embraced them,
especially since these words and ideas were coming from
an American band with European roots.
He doesn’t feel that the KMFDM of today is becoming
more political. After 9/11, none of us can help but
be more aware of what’s going on beyond Hollywood
gossip or our own hometowns. “The American general
public is becoming more politicized, therefore you have
an ear that’s open for it. Nobody commented on
the KMFDM songs about the war in Sudan that’s
been going on for 35 years and has cost millions of
lives,” Sascha says, contemplating his words for
a moment. “It’s more on everyone’s
radar now. This record comes coincidentally at a time
when there’s an appetite for destruction.”
KMFDM attacks the Ogden with Long Island rockers,
Bile, on Monday, October 20.
www.kmfdm.com
-Kim Owens, Thursday, October 16, 2003
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