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New THREE DAYS GRACE Album To Arrive In June

New THREE DAYS GRACE Album To Arrive In June


Last November, Canadian rockers THREE DAYS GRACE released “Mayday”, their first single since the return of original frontman Adam Gontier. The 46-year-old musician, who left THREE DAYS GRACE in 2013, is sharing lead vocals in the band’s new lineup with singer Matt Walst, who has fronted THREE DAYS GRACE for more than a decade.

In a new interview with Canada’s The Metal Voice, THREE DAYS GRACE drummer Neil Sanderson stated about how the band’s new two-singer arrangement came together (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET):  ”First and foremost, we’re a family. We all grew up together in a small town, and so Matt, who came in 2013 to replace Adam, he’s been in the band for, yeah, 12 years now. But he’s Brad, our bass player’s younger brother. So he was around as a kid when we were first just jamming in basements and trying to figure out our sound as we were teenagers, and he wasn’t even a teenager. And so for him to come in was just a very natural fit. And then, as time progressed on, we just started having open conversations, which is the notion of, like, what would this be if we joined forces and we become a five-piece? And it creates a completely new dimension and facet for the sound of THREE DAYS GRACE and our ability to artistically branch off into just different things that we can do with having two voices that are uniquely different, but come together in such a powerful way. So it feels like we’ve kind of come full circle and we’ve closed this loop. And it’s just fate, I guess, that we’re all seeing eye to eye now and the band sounds bigger than ever. And, yeah, it’s a great time to just see it all come into one full force moving forward.”

Regarding the musical direction of the upcoming THREE DAYS GRACE album and how “Mayday” fits into that, Neil said: “It’s definitely dynamic. ‘Mayday’ was a song that we — I guess we were pulling some inspiration from our [2006] record ‘One-X’ with songs like ‘Animal I Have Become’ and things like that, where it’s a really driving-force song. The lyrics are really a social commentary about how sometimes you feel in life that you’re like hurling at just warp speed through time and space and you don’t quite know who’s at the wheel… It feels like everything can be in fast forward and sensory overload, which isn’t always healthy for the human brain. And basically just making the decision whether you’re gonna swim against the current or whether you’re gonna fall in line with other people, and making those choices on a daily basis. So that’s what that song’s about. The rest of the record, we have a lot of really heavy moments. We do love sort of down tempo heaviness. I mean, we listen to a lot of PANTERA and stuff like that, and that is contrasted with some songs that I think are really going to bring out the emotion, because they’re emotional to us. And I think that’s the strongest connection with THREE DAYS GRACE and our fans, is that we’re writing from the heart and from the gut and deep down in the psyche and putting it out into song. And when people can relate to that and see their own lives in that music, then that’s the most powerful thing you can have as an artist. So there’s a lot of that where we stay true to ourselves and we’re not afraid to write about the real deep down stuff. And that seems to always resonate with our fans because it’s coming from a real place.”

Asked when fans can expect to see the new THREE DAYS GRACE album, Neil said: “It’s looking like we’re gonna be releasing it in June. We’re just putting the final touches on it… We’re past the recording stage. We’re doing some mixing right now and just doing some finessing, just kind of going over [everything]. Some of the times we’ll go back to it and just see like what we can mute, what we can remove. Sometimes that’s an exercise in making a record that’s good because sometimes you just have too much stuff in there and more isn’t always better. So we kind of go through, at this process, and just make sure that every part in there is deliberate and is there for a reason and is making the song better. If not, it’s gone.”

THREE DAYS GRACE played its first full show with Gontier in 12 years on February 25 as the support act for DISTURBED on the U.S. leg of “The Sickness 25th Anniversary Tour” at Ford Idaho Center Arena in Nampa, Idaho.

In a recent interview with Nik Nocturnal, Adam was asked how it feels to be back in THREE DAYS GRACE after such a long absence. He responded: “Well, I think more excitement than anything, man. ‘Cause it’s just been so long. And it just felt like the right time — it felt like the right time for everybody. So, yeah, just excitement and kind of ready to go.”

He continued: “It took a little while to connect with the guys and do a couple shows together, a couple things, but, yeah — just more excitement than anything, and definitely some nostalgia, obviously. But, yeah, I think everybody’s really, really excited about this next chapter. It’s gonna be quite the year, I think.”

Regarding the prospect of sharing lead vocals with Matt in THREE DAYS GRACE‘s new lineup, Adam said: “Yeah, I was just talking with somebody about that. We got sort of — not lucky, but our voices do blend really well together. And we’ve noticed it obviously way more now with making the record and recording and all this stuff that, yeah, our voices really blend well. Yeah, so we’re fortunate for that, that it’s working out the way we had hoped.”

Gontier added: “It’s been great, man. It’s cool. Matt grew up with the band. He’s Brad‘s little brother, and I knew Matt from when he was just a little guy. So I think for them it was a natural fit to get him to take my spot there. And, yeah, now [we’re just, like] — let’s do it together.”

Asked how he and Matt delegate the vocal responsibilities on THREE DAYS GRACE‘s new material, including “Mayday”, Adam said: “Yeah, that’s what we’ve been doing. I mean, we’re all sort of writing the new stuff together, so we’ve been sitting in a room together, coming up with all this material and stuff… We’re in a room together and coming up with all that stuff… But yeah, I think the recording of vocals, who’s gonna sing what and where, it’s come pretty natural. There’s certain parts that we both now know, like, ‘It might make more sense for me to sing this part or you to sing this part.’ And at the same time, working with a couple of different producers on stuff, we did get some guys that would have some good input and just a good idea of what to do with two singers, ’cause it hasn’t really been done before — not in this world. So we wanna make sure we’re doing it right. So getting an outside point of view from a producer or something to put his two cents on where the guys should go and that sort of thing, that’s helped out a lot too. But, yeah, in general, it’s been pretty seamless. The whole thing has been really easy to navigate through.”

“Mayday” was produced by Zakk Cervini and Dan Lancaster with vocal production by Howard Benson. In addition, the band released an epic CiRCUS HEaD-directed visual to accompany the track which can be found below.

In a December 2024 interview with “Whiplash”, the KLOS radio show hosted by Full Metal Jackie, Adam was asked if “Mayday” is a good representation of the material that will eventually appear on THREE DAYS GRACE‘s next studio album. He responded: “I think it’s pretty close. I think it was pretty important for us to sort of get some elements in these songs that were super classic THREE DAYS GRACE with some newer elements as well. So I think ‘Mayday’ is a good representation of that. It’s a pretty heavy song, but it’s got everything else that we wanted to have in there. So, yeah, I think it’s pretty close.”

Asked if there was ever any doubt “Mayday” would be the first song to introduce this iteration of the band, Matt said: “We found with ‘Mayday’ — we listened to, obviously, our ideas and our songs a lot, and with ‘Mayday’, we kind of all found we never got sick of it. Personally, too, I listened to it over and over again, and I didn’t get sick of it. And it takes you on this kind of journey throughout it, and it’s not super predictable. And, yeah, [we] just found it was fresh.”

Matt also talked about how the idea for having two singers in THREE DAYS GRACE came about. He said: “I think one day I just talked to my brother Brad about it and was, like, ‘It’d be sick if Adam came back. And we could both sing, and I can sing the songs of the past 10 years and Adam can even sing a few of those too.’ And yeah, it just seems like a new life to breathe into THREE DAYS GRACE and to make it exciting, like the early days or just to freshen it up and, yeah, make it exciting.”

In a separate interview with Meltdown of Detroit’s WRIF radio station, Neil stated about Adam‘s return to THREE DAYS GRACE: “We had been talking and we’ve kept in touch. And the band was just talking about, like, how great would this be for us and for the fans and for the nostalgia of THREE DAYS GRACE. And then he got up on stage with us [for a guest appearance], and then we just thought, ‘Let’s make something new. Let’s sit down and write a song.’ And once we kind of got into that songwriting process, it just felt really natural and it felt right. And I think for the fans, we’re giving them something that we haven’t done before and hasn’t really been done much in the past.”

On the topic of the “Mayday” video, Neil said: “It was a really fun video to make. It was kind of especially cool for me because very rarely as a drummer do you get to make a video where you don’t have to fake playing drums all day. [Laughs] And so, yeah, complete melee goes on on the plane. And it’s kind of an analogy to just feeling like we’re hurling through life at warp speed, and sometimes it doesn’t feel like there is a pilot that’s in control of things. But it’s also a bit of a celebration, like, ‘Hey, if we’re going down, we’re all going down together.'”

In April 2023, Gontier reunited with THREE DAYS GRACE onstage during the band’s concert in Huntsville, Alabama. Gontier rejoined his former bandmates when they opened for SHINEDOWN at the Probst Arena At The Von Braun Center to perform two classic songs from THREE DAYS GRACE‘s 2006 album “One-X”: “Never Too Late” and “Riot”.

THREE DAYS GRACE later shared a post-performance photo with Gontier on social media and wrote in an accompanying message: “Soooo we did a thing.”

In 1992, Gontier, Brad Walst, Phil Crowe, Neil Sanderson and Joe Grant formed GROUNDSWELL while most of the members were still in high school. That band broke up in 1995, but two years later Gontier, Sanderson and Walst reformed as THREE DAYS GRACE. Gontier left the band in 2013 and was replaced by Matt, the vocalist from another Norwood band, MY DARKEST DAYS.

Gontier initially went into rehab in 2005 in Toronto after admitting an addiction to Oxycontin. The rehab stint influenced some material which would appear on THREE DAYS GRACE‘s “One-X” album, including the songs “Pain” and “Over And Over”.

Gontier left THREE DAYS GRACE in the spring of 2013. At the time, the Canadian rockers cited unspecified “health issues” when his departure was announced. Adam later released a statement explaining he exited THREE DAYS GRACE to pursue new projects, and not to deal with addiction.

Gontier is currently a member of SAINT ASONIA, which also features STAIND guitarist/founding member Mike Mushok. The quartet is rounded out by Cale Gontier (bass) and Cody Watkins (drums).

THREE DAYS GRACE‘s latest album, “Explosions”, was released in May 2022 via RCA Records.



Source: blabbermouth.net

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