hi guys, haven't posted in while...most of the interviews we had were with non-prog bands. But this one is surely worth mentioning i think.
We did an interview with Stratovarius' keyboardist Jens Johansson. His performance on the new Stratovarius album merits attention and recognition.
here is the interview. the url is: http://www.loudtrax.com/blog/post/Stratvorius-Interview-2b-exclusive-666-price-on-new-album.aspx
let me know what you think and thanks! Antonio // LoudTrax.com
---------
http://www.loudtrax.com/blog/post/Stratvorius-Interview-2b-exclusive-666-price-on-new-album.aspx" rel="nofollow - Stratvorius - Interview + exclusive 6.66 price on new album
by http://www.loudtrax.com/blog/author/AntonioMarsillo.aspx" rel="nofollow -
AM
18. January 2011 23:13
The
classic Finnish Power metal band released their 13th album "Elysium"
today. LoudTrax.com is proud to have the exclusive low price of $6.66
as well as an interview with keyboardist Jens Johansson. Stratovarius
has sold over 2.5 million records to date and are highly considered the
pioneers of power metal alongside Helloween and Blind Guardian. I
personally really enjoyed this latest album more than the last few
albums from the band. The melodies are strong, and the keyboard /
guitar marriage has the proper balance of heaviness and power metal
keyboard arrangements.
Below is the interview with Jens.
http://www.loudtrax.com/Album.aspx?id=59116" rel="nofollow - - Listen to clips and Buy for $6.66 (sale ends Jan. 30)
LoudTrax.com: The
new album sounds great! In my opinion, one of the strongest
Stratovarius albums. Tell us about the album, the writing, recording
process.
Jens Johansson: It
was very quick this time, a quite compressed schedule. We started
looking at whatever ideas everyone had in April 2010. The album was
completed late October. During this time, we did the complete set of
songs in demo versions, and we also managed to go to China for a week
and do a bit of summer festivals on top. The reason for compressing the
schedule this way was that we had an opportunity to join up with
Helloween on a world tour. The start of this tour determined the
deadline a little bit. When we started recording we didn't know how
little time we would actually end up having. So (just to give one
example) we had to have two persons mixing it in parallel. In the end we
didn't compromise the quality, we just made it shorter than it could
have been. We had something like 18 or 20 songs at the outset, I forget
even... it's been a quite hectic year!
LoudTrax.com: On
the last couple of albums, the songwriting has been shared by several
members of the band (whereas before, it was mostly Timo and Timo). What
did that change mean to the band?
Jens Johansson: The
most important change is that we can share the responsibility of
writing. If someone is not feeling inspired or busy with something else,
there is probably someone else who is, and quite OK with picking up the
slack. So we have no lack of material. Before TT left, he alone was
responsible for the musical output and for setting the direction, which
is a quite heavy burden to carry. He chose to carry it, but that doesn't
mean it was not heavy.

LoudTrax.com: Any songs in particular that you are exciting about playing live?
Jens Johansson: "Infernal
Maze" would be cool to try. We haven't rehearsed it yet though.
Probably on this tour (with Helloween) we will do a little bit of
"greatest hits" approach. In some of Helloween's strongest territories
like Germany and Greece we will be playing in front of people who may
not even realize that Stratovarius even exists anymore. There was for
sure not so much positive public activity with this band between 2003
and 2008. I mean we released one album (the "self-titled" album of 2005)
but the timing of that release was horrible, we released it at the same
time as the label happened to decide to go bankrupt. Not exactly a
prescription for staying in the public eye. The memory of the record
buying public is very very short.
LoudTrax.com: How is the tour going with Helloween without Jorg?
Jens Johansson: It
went OK, I am writing this from Bilbao and Jörg is already back. For
the first (December) leg of the tour we had a guy called Alex Landenburg
sit in, because Jörg was still in radiotherapy and basically recovering
from that and from the surgery. Timo Kotipelto has had a bad infection
over the Christmas break and we actually had to cancel the two shows in
France this week because of that. But he is already feeling a little bit
better today, so we may try to risk it and play today. Don't know yet
how it will go but hoping for the best!

LoudTrax.com: Some keyboard questions…. I
notice on some photos you play with an old Yamaha DX 7. What other
keyboards do you use? Do you like to change your set up often and look
for new keyboards?
Jens Johansson: I
usually so far have kept the same setup live for a number of years,
because it is so reliable. The DX7 is just used as a MIDI controller. I
have a small rack with a Roland 1080 in it, it's usually enough and it
always works...
LoudTrax.com: When you are
writing and selecting your sounds for the recording process, how much
importance do you put on being able to reproduce those sounds and parts
live?
Jens Johansson: None at all! I
think of live as a completely different context. Especially nowadays
with all the editing and layering and mixing that goes on in the studio.
If you tried to reproduce all that; doubled rhythm guitars, backing
vocals, 3rd party orchestrations, keyboard layers, unisolos, what not,
you would fail miserably anyway. You have to strip down the arrangements
and hope that the audience will hallucinate the missing parts.
LoudTrax.com: Tell us about how you record your keyboard parts in the studio (example…MIDI, amp, layered, etc…)

Jens Johansson: I
use whatever controller is nearby. For "Elysium" it happened to be a
Roland V-synth. I usually don't go into "the studio" per se, I like
better to work on the stuff by myself at my own pace. It's the work flow
I have used with Stratovarius since about the "Destiny" record: get
rough mixes of the basic tracks when they are locked editing and timing
wise, and then work out as minimalistic keyboard arrangements as
possible around the song. I put a lot of thought into the arrangements, I
am extremely anal about voice leading, counterpoint, and to create
harmonic colors which are interesting and logical but not so overbearing
that they end up detracting from the core melodic ideas of the song.
Since
I so often work with little feedback if it's someone else's song, I
also tend to "brainstorm" and record way more layers than could ever be
actually used at the same time. Whoever wrote the song can then decide
what they would like to use. As far as equipment for external MIDI
modules I still trust the Roland 1080 (or 1010) for a lot of
bread-and-butter stuff. There is a large number of patches that people
have made for this instrument, and many of them turn out to be useful.
Apart from that of course I use sh*tloads of virtual instruments like
samplers and virtual synthesizers. Very often I end up building effects
chains that become part of the layer as well. I didn't use any
amps/speakers on "Elysium" except for my old 760 Leslie, for some
distorted organ stuff.
Keyboard solos I can do on autopilot
almost. Without exaggeration, I spend a hundred times more time on the
"other" keyboard arrangements that go with the song than on the solos. I
leave those for last usually and for a normal album do them all in an
hour or so. But for instance with the two "Elements" records there were a
lot of solos and they took an entire afternoon to record...
LoudTrax.com: You
played on the classic DIO album “Lock Up the Wolves”. Did you maintain
a relationship with DIO after that? How did you feel when you heard
about the sad news?
Jens Johansson: We
didn't stay in close touch, but we would bump into each other now and
then, quite often actually. It was always really good to see him and
have a beer or ten and talk about the old days. It was as if the years
that had passed, were mere days. He was a very special person,
intelligent and very caring. I was of course quite upset that he died.
LoudTrax.com: Closing
off, we like to ask some personal tastes of the artists we interview.
For you, what are your favorite Deep Purple, ELP and Dream Theater
albums?
Jens Johansson:
Deep Purple: Made in Japan ELP: Brain Salad Surgery Dream Theater: Images and Words
Cheers!
/j
------------- www.Loudtrax.com
|