Interview with Flea

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Benjammin

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I'm really looking forward to the new album :thumb:

Q&A: Flea on New Chili Peppers Album | SPIN.com

It's been five years since the release of RHCP's last album, Stadium Arcadium. Did you guys plan for it to be this long?

Yeah. It was planned. I initiated that. I just really needed to get away from [the band]. It had come to a point where it felt dysfunctional and not fun. Even though I felt that we made a good record, played good shows, and honored our position in the rock world, I wanted to get away to give the band a chance to survive. Having time off was really good. I went to school and studied music for a year at USC [University of Southern California], which unlocked a bunch of doors for me in terms of my relationship to music. My time away from the band has really made me appreciate it and also realize how much I love [singer] Anthony [Kiedis]. The dude's my brother. I realized how much it meant to me to continue playing with him and Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Then guitarist John Frusciante left... for the second time. Why?

It's not any one thing. He just didn't want to do [RHCP] anymore. He really wanted to do what he wants to do on his own, without having to deal with the band dynamic, our band dynamic. I'm grateful for the time John was in the band. It was an amazing time. It was a bonding, creative experience and I'm grateful for it.

Is the new album finished?

Yeah, we're done. It's been such a big process getting it done and I'm very happy with the body of work. It's a real dynamic and new thing. We've found a new side of ourselves.

How so?

Well, first off, the major difference is that John is no longer in the band and Josh Klinghoffer is now the guitar player. While it's nice that Josh was already a part of our family, having made records and joined us on our last tour, he's a very different musician than John. Because of that, the feeling of the music is a lot different. John is a brilliant virtuoso guitar player, who could do whatever he wants on the guitar. It's unbelievable and I'm so ****ing grateful for his contributions to the band. But Josh is a subtler textural player who also plays and writes on a lot of different instruments. He's not like this Guitar Hero type.

And that's a total shift from the band's previous songwriting style...

Right. Before, we wrote by jamming together and Anthony would add his parts afterwards. Now it's a much different approach. It took some time, for me particularly being so used to the way that John wrote, to understand the way Josh would interact with what I played. It was like, 'Wait, I thought you were going to come up with that perfect part that interlocks with what I'm doing and boom, it's going to be done.' With Josh, it creeps up on you. He sings beautiful background vocals on this record, too.

How did your time studying music change your relationship to the band?

It made for a big difference in me as a writer. I studied chord theory and started playing the piano. So I wrote a lot for the record on piano. Before I wrote for the band mostly on the bass. On the piano I'm writing chord, rhythm, bass, and melody, so it's a much different input from me. A lot of these songs were translated to a rock band. So we're starting with a song written on a different instrument, then translating it right away. It's a huge difference in the creative process and the end product. It has the violent rocking sound and it's real funky. There are some beautiful, deep songs that can connect to people's hearts. Anthony is singing about some big issues for human beings.

Like what?

About life and death and betrayal and his relationship to the world. It's much more poignant than our other records. Life and death is a major theme. [The album] has a deep heart. Everyone in the band has grown and continued to reinvent themselves and become a better musician, and collectively we did. We were forced to.

Did anything happen to push you guys in this direction?

Yeah. The first day that we ever played together with Josh after taking two years off, we found out that a very close friend of all of ours had died. We started jamming and came up with a song that's on the record, called "Brendan's Death Song," about our friend [L.A. punk icon] Brendan Mullen. We improvised and it happened. It was a poignant moment for us. It was an emotional thing.

And that set the tone for the album?

Sort of. We're the type of band that has ideas about what we want to do and what we're reaching for, but it's really about what happens when we get together in the room. It's about what will organically grow from who we are at the time.

I hear the album is also inspired by African music.

Definitely. We've always all loved African music. Throughout our career we've played some African bits, but we never really captured it right. Josh and I tripped around Ethiopia with a group called Africa Express, which Damon Albarn [Blur, Gorillaz] organized. We saw music every night and jammed with musicians. Ethiopia is such a great country, beautiful place. So there are a couple African parts on the new songs. One is called "Take Me Home," which has a real African feeling, and there's another called "Ethiopia." I'm really grateful to Damon for bringing me along. It really widened my scope of humanity.

I think that picture of Ethiopia is different from how a lot of people imagine it…

All I knew about Ethiopia was from a few records that I like, as well as what I read about the famine. But you get there and it's another world. It's filled with art and music and poetry and intellectuals and writers -- all kinds of people. I went to this town called Harar and there is a Mosque and a Christian church right next to each other, and everyone gets along. They're devout about their faith, but they're really tolerant. I was walking down the street with this Ethiopian dude, and he's like, 'Oh f*ck, dude, I gotta take a shit,' so he just walked up to a random door in this neighborhood, and the residents were like, 'Come right in and use my bathroom.' They don't do that shit in L.A., man. 'Excuse me, Arnold Schwarzenegger, can I take a shit at your house?'

Speaking of weird shit, you recently ran a marathon. That sounds painful.

[Laughs] I did that to raise money for my non-profit music school, the Silverlake Conservatory of Music. It costs a bunch of money to run, so I'm always trying to raise dough. And I read this book called Born to Run and it got me excited about running, and I had never been a runner before. I trained up and ran the marathon -- and it was awesome. The training was fun and running the marathon was a f*cking cathartic, beautiful experience. It was tough, but I like tough! I mean, I'm kind of a pussy as a guy, I've never been in a fight or anything, so not tough like that. But I like pushing my body. I pushed it too hard a couple times and injured myself. But after running for a while things really start to open up in your body. I felt like I'd tapped into parts of my body that I hadn't before. I let things in the universe flow through me that opened me up in a really cool way. It was pouring rain during the whole race -- it was freezing. But it was a blast. If I weren't gearing up for the tour right now, I'd be training for another one.

Do you listen to music while you're training?

Never. I don't like it. It's like my senses are so overwhelmed already, so full. The sound of my heartbeat, my footsteps, running up in this canyon here in Malibu, the birds, the animals, the sights, it's so much already. It's a beautiful thing.
 

Lampens

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I wonder what it's going to sound like. probably a lot different. Don't know if I'll like it. the last albums although featuring some nice tracks weren't all that to me. But I guess that's also because their older records take me back to a different time and place and it was new for me at the time. So those always will be special. Hard to top those. Not in a musical kind of way but in a feel kind of way.
 

Benjammin

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I think its going to be different for sure, I think I'll like it enough, I like all their albums (except the first one, alternate recordings of those same songs are awesome though) I think alot of people got tired of the "pop" direction their last few releases had, maybe some of those people will appreciate this disc more. I think By The Way and Stadium Arcadium were mostly Johns brainchilds
 

Lampens

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Yeah could be. I do like their older stuff because of the party and summer vibe.
Even though the lyrics aren't about partying on some of em.
For instance I really like that mexican mariachi trumpet on taste the pain. It gives of the vibe of a hot and heavy summers night.
 

Benjammin

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yeah, I love when Flea busts out the trumpet. I love Flea, as long as he's in the band, I have faith their music will be awesome, alot of folks don't like One Hot Minute, but I do, Flea probably had more involvement in the writing of that album than other disc
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E1JB4DZ7Muk]YouTube - ‪red hot chili peppers - Taste The Pain - Mothers Milk (Remas‬‏[/ame]
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqpHPrrMGvU]YouTube - ‪Red Hot Chili Peppers - Hump de Bump (Album Version)‬‏[/ame]
 

ext1jdh

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On a related note, is RHCP still relevant?
 

ext1jdh

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I'll admit that Flea is a good bassist, and RHCP did things to advance music in the 90's, but I don't see them as being that big of a deal in 2011. Meh, whatever.
 

Benjammin

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I've been a fan since BSSM came out when I was a kid, I know alot of people like myself who grew up with them and liked the all their last cds and look forward to the next one. They were pretty relevant when their last album was out in '06, I was working at a major record store at the time and that was one of the biggest (most popular) releases that came out in the 2 years I worked there. Along with the hold fans who still dig them, there are all new kids (who grew up in the Californication/By The Way eras) who love the band, and probably like the new stuff as more than the 80s releases. How relevant that are will be clear when the album comes out I guess, could be a dud are a big deal. They might be old but there isnt much else going on these days in mainstream media that is any better.
 

ext1jdh

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To each his own. I never liked them. They seemed kitschy and very pop hungry to me. Whatever.
 

Lampens

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On a related note, is RHCP still relevant?

So is being relevant important? I don't see slash or led zep being relevant in this day and age. By the number of posts about them you'd think otherwise. it's about the music. Big Bill Broonzy and Son House aren't relevant either but I sure like their music.
 

Benjammin

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IMO good music is always relevant, "good" or "relevant" is in the eye, or ear, of the beholder
 

ext1jdh

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don't see slash or led zep being relevant in this day and age.

Really? Huge influences there. They changed the face of music. I don't see the same from RHCP.

in terms of influence, Beatles, Rolling Stones, Zep, Who, then everyone else.
 

Benjammin

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I wouldnt put RHCP on par with Zeppelin, in terms of importance/influence, but Guns 'N' Roses, yeah. Frusciante has his followers, if you go to Strat forums he's almost as bad as our Slash :laugh2:
 

Lampens

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Really? Huge influences there. They changed the face of music. I don't see the same from RHCP.

in terms of influence, Beatles, Rolling Stones, Zep, Who, then everyone else.

You talked about being relevant today, not about influences. RHCP changed stuff too. Saw a lot of those metal rap funk stuff after them. The guitar and bassguitar playing influenced a lot of players.
Clearly you're just being biased.
 

ext1jdh

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Well no kidding, Lamp...it's called an opinion.
 

Quill

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Ben, thanks so much for the news about this. Flea and Anthony are among my very favourite performers ever. I love the early stuff, and I love John, but there's a feeling that comes out of his work that is frightening and dark - a bit of something Peter Green-like about his stuff, it's too much, sometimes - while there's an incredible joy in every note Flea plays, and in Anthony's whole being.

I think in a lot of ways, the Peppers are everyone's favourite band, whether that fact occurs to everyone or not ... !

After reading the interview with Flea, I'm really excited to hear the album, too. :thumb:
 

Benjammin

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I never pegged you as a Chili Peppers fan Tim :laugh2:
 

Benjammin

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One mustn't overlook Chads role in the band, he's the perfect drummer for them [ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eJp-Umk7jm8]YouTube - ‪Flea & Chad Smith - Trumpet-Drum duet - Live at Slane Castle‬‏[/ame]
[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FrI5lNvCnQ&feature=related]YouTube - ‪Flea Bass Solo w/ Chad‬‏[/ame]
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jefeAediu18"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jefeAediu18[/ame]
 

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