Progarchives.com has always (since 2002) relied on banners ads to cover web hosting fees and all. Please consider supporting us by giving monthly PayPal donations and help keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.
Joined: March 04 2008
Location: Retirement Home
Status: Offline
Points: 3658
Topic: Believer Posted: June 01 2011 at 12:15
BELIEVER is a technical/ progressive thrash metal act formed in Colebrook, Pennsylvania in 1986 by Joey Daub ( Drums) and Kurt Bachman ( vocals, guitar). They were joined by Howe Kraft ( Bass) and David Baddorf (guitar) and started playing melodic metal. They released the demo cassette The Return in 1987. BELIEVER started moving towards heavier territories after that and began playing technical thrash metal. An important ingredient in BELIEVER`s music that´s worthy of notice is Scott Laird´s orchestral string parts which became more and more integrated into their music with each album. Scott Laird was one of Bachman´s old high school friend. Many of the progressive elements in BELIEVER`s music come from his involvement.
I got in touch with them through their record label Metal Blade (thank you, Andreas !). Both Kurt Bachman and Jeff King answered my questions.
Your
biography has been covered in your ProgArchives profile so let's bypass the
biography details. But which bands were you influenced by and why did you choose
that name ?
Kurt Bachman:
Early influences were Judas Priest, Ozzy Osbourne and Iron Maiden. Our thrash influences were Kreator and Destruction. Progressive influences were
Rush, Yes and Voivod. We named the band after a song on Ozzy Osbourne’s Diary of a Madman album. Before that we were called
“Deceiver”, which is from the same song. We thought “Believer” sounded cooler so
we changed our name.
Back
when you appeared, there was an alternative Christian metal scene populated by Vengeance Rising, Living Sacrifice and Mortification. You were also on R.E.X
Records at that time too. Do you regard yourself as a part of that scene and how
big was that scene back in the early 1990s ?
Kurt Bachman:
We do not consider ourselves part of that scene. Our first album preceded many
of these bands and we considered ourselves more in the scene with Destruction
and Kreator, and then later Pestilence, Cynic and Athiest.
Your
albums were picked up by mainstream labels like Roadrunner at the same time as
Mortification and Horde were distributed by Nuclear Blast at the same time as
both labels were mainly releasing satanic albums. How did you end up on crossing
the, at that time, deep chasm to Roadrunner and the secular market ? Not to
mention, becoming label mates with Deicide.....
Kurt Bachman:
Monte Connor from Roadrunner was really into our music and wanted to sign us.
The whole thing was based purely on the value of our music and not lyrical
content. All that labels are looking for is a quality product to sell. It really
wasn’t that big of a deal for us and we never had any issues with any other
bands on Roadrunner, including Deicide.
This
is an archive based interview also intended for the fans you get well after both
you and I have passed away so let's go straight to your albums. Please give us
your views/some words on your albums, starting with.......
Extraction from Mortality from
1989
Kurt Bachman:
Straightforward thrash metal album.
Sanity Obscure from 1990
Kurt Bachman:
Thrash/prog/metal record with the introduction of live strings and operatic
vocals influencing the creation of the symphonic metal genre.
Dimensions
from 1993
Kurt Bachman:
Thrash/prog/symphonic highly experimental metal record.
and
the live album The Chosen Live from 2007
Kurt Bachman:
An unauthorized bootleg with awful production value, hence why it is
unauthorized.
You
took a very long break from the mid 1990s and onwards. What were you up to
during those years ? What made you return and reform Believer ?
Kurt Bachman:
After Dimensions, Joey and I decided it was time to pursue different interests.
I went back to school and got my doctorate in Molecular Medicine and Joey
continued in music as the drummer for the symphonic/prog metal band Fountain of
Tears, along with Jeff King who plays keyboards with us now. After a few years I
moved back to the area and we decided to get together and jam. From the first
session of getting back together, our chemistry was still there, we started
writing and the songs came easily.
You
returned with Gabriel from 2009. Please tell us more about this album
Jeff King:
We were fortunate to be able to work in our own studio for this album. Joey has
a studio that we built in order to record an album for our other band - Fountain
of Tears. We upgraded the studio gear in several stages throughout the Gabriel
project and spent a lot of time setting things up to our liking while we were
recording. In terms of the writing, a lot of the material was created at Kurt's
house, where our practice studio is located. Some very early rough recordings
were made there onto an analog 4-track. We then did pre-production on 5 songs at
Joey's studio before the official start of the recording process. We mixed the
entire project at Joey's studio and then sent it to Alan Douches at West West
Side Music for mastering.
Please
also tell us more about your brand new album Transhuman.
Jeff King:
Transhuman is a loose concept album inspired by Transhumanism, neuroscience and philosophy. We recorded
the drums at Joey’s studio again but did the guitars and bass at Kurt’s studio
and the keyboards and vocals at my studio. Sonically, Gabriel was very eclectic.
We went for a more unified sound with Transhuman, focusing on dynamics and
melodic elements. It was the most collaborative writing process of all the
Believer albums thus far. Kevin Gutierrez mixed the project and he hooked us up
with Maor Appelbaum for the mastering. Kevin and Maor helped us to get the final
product sounding like we had envisioned. We’re very happy with the result. Like
Gabriel, Transhuman was released by Metal Blade Records.
How
would you describe your musical development and style from Extraction to
Transhuman ? How would you describe your music ?
Kurt Bachman:
We evolved from straightforward thrash to a fusion of metal, prog, classical,
and other styles. We try to continually evolve with each album and not recreate
something we already did. Beyond marketing, we don’t think in terms of stylistic
labels to describe our own music because they tend to mean different things to
different people and it’s something we don’t think is really important to the
creation process.
Your
band started out before the internet really took off with file sharing, Youtube and all the social media. How would you compare
the scenes before and after the big bang, so to speak ?
Kurt Bachman:
Before the internet, one would have to go into a store and actually steal the CD
or cassette tape, unlike today when they can sit in their
home and download whatever they want for free. It’s also a lot easier to connect
with the fans and distribute your music to people who would never have an
opportunity to find a physical copy locally.
Looking
back on your career; what was your best and worst experiences ?
Kurt Bachman:
We had a great time and created lasting friendships with Sacrifice during the
Sanity Obscure tour so that was definitely a highlight experience. Also our
experiences with Roadrunner and now with Metal Blade were also highlights as
both labels allowed us to be us and experiment in ways that might not sell
records but would let us be artists and be creative. It’s hard to pinpoint any
worst experiences as we have always been fortunate to surround ourselves with
great people and avoid devastation.
Besides
of your new album and the promo work associated with it, what is your current
status, your plans for the rest of this year and beyond ?
Kurt Bachman:
We played the NE MetalFest in April and are rehearsing to play more shows in
2011 and beyond. No extensive touring planned as we all have other
responsibilities, both financial and personal.
To
wrap up this interview, is there anything you want to add to this interview
?
Kurt Bachman
and
Jeff King: We think you nailed most of the questions to get those that have not
heard of us familiar with the band and there are a ton of those people out
there. We thank you for this. Cheers!
Thank you to Kurt and Jeff for this interview
Their PA profile is here and their homepage is here
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
This page was generated in 0.176 seconds.
Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.