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Tuesday February 9, 2010
Finnish rockers HIM have released their 7th studio album today, entitled Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice. Produced by Matt Squire (The Used, All Time Low, Saosin), Ville described the new album as "the most sexual album we've ever made."
Also, check out this video interview with Ville chatting with BBC Radio 1 Rock Show host Daniel P. Carter. To commemorate the albums release Ville has recorded a video welcoming fans to the new record. Grab your copy here! Friday February 5, 2010
HIM are now streaming their seventh studio album, Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice, on their MySpace. The album, which was produced by Matt Squire (The Used, All Time Low, Saosin) was recently described by frontman Ville Valo as being "the most sexual album we've ever made".
Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice will be hitting stores in the U.S. on February 9th. Friday January 29, 2010
Finnish rockers HIM have presented their fans with an early Valentines Day present in the form of a new video for "Like St. Valentine" - see it here. The song comes off the band's seventh studio album Screamworks: Love in Theory and Practice, which will be released on Sire Records February 9th.
The band will release MANY more videos in the next few weeks, and as part of that series Ville recently sat down and discussed the meaning behind the song "Love, The Hardest Way." The interview can be seen here. HIM will kick off a North American tour March 26th in Philadelphia. Dates can be found on their MySpace. biography
"It's not a happy album, I wouldn’t say that," admits HIM frontman Ville Valo of the band’s newest release Screamworks: Love In Theory And Practice. "But for the first time HIM does acknowledge that there is such a thing called ‘happiness,’ even if it is far, far away. This album is more a speculation on how to get there, — and that it is possible."
Such song titles as "Heartkiller" (the simultaneously gorgeous and intense first single), "Dying Song," and "Acoustic Funeral" ought to allay any fan fears, even if the album opens with the inviting and intriguing "In Venere Veritas" — loosely Latin for "In Love There Is Truth." Still, Valo recognizes that even the emotional expansion from the full-brooding tone of the band’s breakthrough albums Dark Light (2005) and Venus Doom (2007), along with changes in his own life, might be of concern to some. "I've overheard similar sorts of things," he says. "Somebody said somewhere that sobriety doesn't suit me. So I guess I looked better to them when I was fucked up and miserable and terrible. People need a Baudelaire or Bukowski to live the pain for them. Well, easier said than done." The easy way has never been the way for HIM. Formed by Valo, lead guitarist Mikko "Linde" Lindström, and bassist Mikko "Migé" Paananen when they were teenagers in Helsinki, Finland, and rounded out by long-time drummer Mika "Gas" Karppinen and keyboardist Janne "Burton" Puurtinen, the quintet has been ever seeking to expand its artistic and emotional horizons. That has been the manifesto from the start, and in the course of what is now an impressive body of work with seven albums, it has made HIM one of the global superstar acts of rock. Following a 1996 Finland-only EP (the now-collector's item 666 Ways To Love: Prologue), HIM exploded in Europe with the 1997 debut album, Greatest Love Songs Vol. 666 — the titles of both releases tipping off a playfully tongue-in-cheek approach to hard-rock images and assumptions. A few years later, Razorblade Romance put the band firmly in the top ranks of European rock, hitting No. 1 in Germany as well as Finland. At the same time, the group entered the American market with a Razorblade Romance reissue and the album Deep Shadows and Brilliant Highlights (again a huge hit at home and on the continent). HIM also introduced the now-familiar heartagram logo with Razorblade Romance. Love Metal, in 2003, featured such now-staple anthems as "The Funeral Of Hearts" and "Buried Alive By Love." Dark Light broke open the U.S. with a Top 20 debut, building the following further with the rock hits "Wings Of A Butterfly" and "Killing Loneliness," as well as major touring and such high-profile appearances at the Download Festival — ultimately making HIM the first Finnish band to score a gold record in the U.S. Venus Doom maintained the rising trajectory with such hits as "The Kiss Of Dawn" and "Passion's Killing Floor" (featured on the Transformers soundtrack). Through it all, HIM has sought its own sound, a mix of dark yearning and dense sonic tapestries, but cut with tenderness, vulnerability, and that ever-present (if sometimes buried) self-deprecating slyness. But even by its own high standards, HIM has brought new senses of melody and, yes, humor to the Screamworks proceedings. "The whole point of the album, what I was going for, is what I call melancholic levity," Valo says. "It's the kind of hopeful ‘tragic-ness’ that Depeche Mode does really well. When they play 'Enjoy The Silence,' which is one of my favorite songs, it's a really sad song but it makes you dance. That was my idea for the album rather than the gloomy-doomy stuff of the past." However, he notes, "it's way more tragic to see the light at the end of the tunnel, like if you know there's something better but you can't reach it. There's the urgency that there are things we want on a personal and spiritual level, that there is a possibility of swimming to shore, so to speak, but the beach is very far away and filled with natives with spears and shotguns. It's like the old torture method when you're in shackles and chains, tied to four horses dragging you into four directions to tear you apart. That's the vibe I wanted for this album." There, does that make you feel better? Produced by Matt Squire (Panic At the Disco!, Taking Back Sunday, Boys Like Girls) in a set of intensive Los Angeles sessions, Screamworks brings new sonic and emotional vistas to the explosive, supple ensemble. With Squire's support, they sought to use those talents to reconnect with some of the influences that made Valo an artist in the first place and, in the process, bring their music into new places. "Matt and I were born in the same year, 1976, so we grew up listening to similar kinds of music and we were able to reference the same things," Valo says. “Like, ‘We need that Top Gun thing there. That Bonnie Tyler thing there. That Cult thing over there.' It was kind of like being in a musical candy shop. I wanted Guns N' Roses meets Depeche Mode, or A-Ha meets The Cult. I wanted the fragile sensibilities of melancholy pop with rock muscle — the Smiths meet Black Sabbath. But the band has always been about contrasts in sound and we've been so fragmented in our tastes. It's great to include all our influences in the album rather than be a racehorse with blinders on just going straight." It all helped him sort through and express the things he'd been going through in his own personal growth. "One of the things I felt, probably because of the sobriety, is that my addiction had to be the album — work 24/7 on the music. That means there's a sense of catharsis, letting everything be laid bare, as naked as you can be on the musical level. There's nothing to lose, really. If I'm being honest, you can say you don't like it and that's fine. Let's just say the album doesn't lack in honesty. And by that I mean all the musical influences and lyrics, all the personal stories that are hidden within the lyrical mess, are true to me." |






