The German cult-band Fair Warning released their incredible new album "Sundancer" some days ago. This should be reason enough to ask guitar-player Helge Engelke some questions about Fair Warnings new activities. Be ready for a very detailed interview with one of the finest guitarists from Germany.
Hello Helge, great to talk to you. What's happening these days?
Helge: All the
things which go along with promoting the new album, interviews, mailers and so
on.
The band
will start rehearsing soon and that needs preparation as well.
Helge: Thank you! Yes, indeed
this is the best record we've ever done. All came together perfectly. All the
reviews are really great, in average they mark 7000 out of 100 points.
Personally I am very content with the guitar parts, I mean I could have done
better, but if I had, most likely my hands would have fallen off.
Ok, so much
for promotion. That's what you are supposed to say when you're doing an
interview for your new record.
But
actually I can't say that truthfully. An honest answer would be: I don't know.
Of course we tried to make the best album we possibly could do, but that you do
every time. The process of making the album was not too different from the ones
before. If it is better than the ones before, only time will tell. My
estimation would be: There will be some songs to stand the test of time, others
will fail.
I cannot
base my rating on reviews , because many, many times it happens something like
this: There is this other band, German too,
I guess the name is “Horst”. They recently released a record. I listened
to it. I did not like it at all. “What a waste of space” I thought. Now SPV
sends me some reviews. I read the first one and it says “Great record, well
done”, fine so far, I keep reading on to the end, the verdict: “This is really
and indeed a great record, it could be put in line with the new release of
“Horst” “ Oh, come on give me a break...
Helge: The
intention was having a good title, not necessarily building a bridge to previous records.
We had
outbreaks of uncontrolled creativity with titles before, like calling our first
one „Fair Warning“, a live album “Live in Japan“, our fourth album „Four“.
This time
we had a long list of contenders rated from “quite nice” to “ok, would do”, but
we all know what that means. So we sat together thinking of album titles we
really liked. It boiled down to “Rainmaker” and “Go”. Suddenly there was the
suggestion of “Sundancer” and we all liked it immediately.
Now you might want to think a while of the
things a sundancer does. Sacrifice for the community to prosper and all of
that. If our music could do just a tiny bit of that, fine, sufficient.
Therefore the title seems to be appropriate to me. Ok, we might have called it
“Have fun with it”, but I don't think it would have been likely to be accepted
by the majority of the band.
Obviously
the titles “Sundancer” and “Rainmaker” are cut from the same cloth which made
us agree to the similarities in the artwork.
Musically
there was no intention whatsoever to connect the new album with “Rainmaker”.
For a start
it would have been hard, for we wrote and recorded most of the album before
choosing a title.
For my part
I wouldn't have expected that now some reviewers find some, or all of the songs
bearing a, not existing, likeness to the
songs of “Rainmaker”.
It
took you four years to record a new album. What happened in the meantime?
Helge: Aura, our
latest studio album, was released in 2009. Two of our concerts of the following
tour were filmed for a DVD. A festival appearance at “Loudpark” and an entire
show in Tokyo of the tour of 2010. When we saw the material filmed in Tokyo we
had to find out that most of the cameramen had a rather peculiar affinity for
feet, cables, backsides of speaker cabinets and the colour black in general.
After perishing several editors, weeks and month of nasty swearing we finally
managed to come up with something worth releasing. Next there was a “best of”
compilation our record company wanted to release, which took a bit of work too.
We started working on “Sundancer” in autumn of 2011 and were finished by February of 2013. Indeed a long time but compared to some past albums it was,
believe it or not, rather quick.
Helge: Three of
the songs on “Sundancer” we wrote together. We never did it before but it
turned out to be a nice experience resulting in good songs. The rest of the
songs are written by Ule or me like on all the previous albums.
Helge: It was the
choice of Spv to introduce the new record with this song online. In case it was
meant as “some kind of single” I guess they would have released a single. There
were plans for a video but our record company said “we have a better idea”.
Since this is not done yet and needs a bit of planning I'd rather refrain from
naming details. Sorry for the lukewarm answer, but sometimes it is better
waiting with announcements until it is certain things will happen
Helge: This
question I cannot answer. The concept of “most important song”, “leader track”
or however you might want to call it, is alien to me. From a musicians point of
view you record an album because you want all the songs to be heard. Not
dwarfing 90% of the songs by selecting the one and only to rule them all.
Further it is impossible to do the Cinderella sorting of the lentils when you
worked for one and a half year on an album trying to give every song the best
you could.
Helge: Yes, before
Frontiers we were signed to Gun/Bmg and yet before to Wea.
What felt
wrong? Hmm, that is one of the difficult ones. First there is this paragraph
in record contracts that says “about
this you keep your mouth shut” and in case you don't get along well there is
another paragraph saying ” in this case you shut up twice”.
Let's say
we are a difficult band to deal with. We find it considerably hard to agree on
conditions like “ok, we charge you 15% package deduction on downloads”, “You
have a double DVD filmed, great performance, great audience eh? Nah, we prefer
waiting for the next studio album” or
“we have a worldwide deal but we are releasing in some countries only” or “We own
the rights of your recordings, not available anymore?, bad luck guys, the
records rest safely in our, er, wait... let's see... where was it... ah, yes
cellars I believe”. These are only a few examples.
If you take
into consideration that we are with SPV for the 3rd release in a row
now it seems to have changed. For our Japanese record company it is the 6th
or 7th release in a row.
The
first three Fair Warning albums are classics in the eyes of many melodic hard
rock fans, but sadly you haven't had a big breakthrough in Europe and America,
yet. But you guys are some kind of superstars in Japan … so why your music is
so big in Japan? What is different to fans in the rest of the world and why is
it so hard to be successful in other countries?
Helge: Oh dear,
the inevitable question we are being asked in each and every interview.
Fair enough let the truth be told. In the most
remote and inaccessible part of the highest Japanese mountains there is a
secret and hidden order of monks engaged in, well, rather monkish things, like
finding truth and stuff. The more comprehensible part of their doings deals
with reincarnation. According to their infinite wisdom, CC (the drummer guy) is
the 127th or 128th
reincarnation of one of the first Japanese emperors who reigned before
the counting of time had begun. Which one exactly is yet to be discovered. All
of this is hidden, concealed and secret
to an extend that not even CC himself nor any Japanese know about it. But hey,
you know a deity when you see one, don't you?
It was just
me who, due to fortunate circumstances, found an article in a local paper of
the tiniest of all the villages in the afore mentioned mountains, put it into
the google translator and was rewarded not only with poetry that comes with
translations like that, but as well with the definite answer to THE question
concerning Fair Warning.
The answer
consisting of fewer words, nevertheless being as esoteric as the one before,
would be:
SEARCH ME.
What can you tell us about tour plans of Fair Warning? Will there be a headliner tour or maybe shows as support act?
What can you tell us about tour plans of Fair Warning? Will there be a headliner tour or maybe shows as support act?
Helge: We are
working on it, but at the moment the only fixed dates are for Japan.
Helge: Zeno was
simply the band some of us played in before. Looking back it could be
considered as a catalyst for Fair Warning coming together. I was involved in
the second Zeno album in the 90's after we released “Rainmaker” with Fair
Warning and by now we have a twenty odd years long history of FW.
Seen from
the inside it is a bit awkward to consider FW as a product of Zeno. Personally
I associate some good songs with Zeno.
Helge: That
changed over the years and hasn't stopped yet. It is common to answer this
question with a long list of big names - don't worry I will do too, but you
tend to forget to name the persons who brought you on the way.
When I
started I liked music, not necessarily guitar players. It was not like I saw a
certain guitarist and said “wow, this I wanna do”. The first thing that hit me
was “whole lotta love” by Led Zeppelin. So I have to name Jimmy Page. I was not
interested in the solo back then. Just the energy of the riff and the song.
Next came Ritchie Blackmore with Rainbow, a product or a development of Deep
Purple of whom I only heard later. That was the first big concert I saw and it
got me interested more in the “dedidedeeddeely” thing. And of course, being a
native of Hannover - which not only provided England with kings for centuries
but a few years later produced some fine guitarists -, there was no way avoiding
Michael Schenker and Uli Roth. The latter had a big impact on me with his band
Electric Sun. Obviously, by that time I
already was more interested in the guitar than, for example, in singing.
So I took
lessons from another local guitarist answering to the name of Peter Ladwig. Him
I asked to show me the flashy stuff Uli did but that was not his cup of tea.
Instead he played and showed me guitarists I hadn't heard of before, like
Hendrix, Clapton, Leslie West or Joe Walsh, the generation before Uli and
Michael Schenker. At that time I found some of the players he suggested rather
boring, but had to realise later that I was quite an ignorant idiot and ...
wait here
we have to discuss something else. Sometimes the english language should be
enriched by some foreign words, like “Rucksack” or “Zeitgeist”. The word I am
missing and definitely should be added to the english thesaurus is “Banause”.
Where was
I?Yep, that's
what I was a Banause. But thanks to my teacher that got cured a bit. Well, not
enough.I visited
the music university in Hamburg for a while, not for classical
music though, and there was a guitar teacher who seriously tried to tell me
studying funk guitarist would be a good idea. Funk? Oh come on, that are the
guys who turn their guitars down and make these sounds you get when cutting
your fingernails, right? Not quite right, I have to add Nile Rodgers to the
list.
Rory
Gallagher, Jeff Beck and Stevie Ray Vaughan I discovered by myself.
It still
happens today that I hear a player and think “wow that guy can play”. Last time
it happened hearing Derek Trucks. Anybody
still awake? I guess I better stop here.
What do you do to create this
unique guitar sound? I never heard someone playing guitar like you. When I
hear this sound I exactly know it’s you!
Helge: Thanks for
the nice words. Could I have an endless loop of this?
I have a
quite clear vision of what I want to hear and just try to get close to it.
In the
beginning I tried to copy other guitarists and their sound and always got
annoyed when it didn't sound exactly like them. Actually, when you want to
sound like B.B. King it helps a lot being
B.B. King. I had to learn to appreciate
sounding like me.
You’ve also done three albums with the hard rock band Dreamtide. Can we expect a new Dreamtide album in the nearer future? How important are such “side projects” to you? What makes them special?
You’ve also done three albums with the hard rock band Dreamtide. Can we expect a new Dreamtide album in the nearer future? How important are such “side projects” to you? What makes them special?
Helge: Dreamtide
is a band which came into existence when Fair Warning stopped working for 5
years.
There have
always been long times in between Fair Warning records.
After FW's
“Brothers Keeper” there was a break and I was doing the 3rd Dreamtide
album.
The last
years I was busy with Fair Warning and some other things. I am not really doing
side projects.
Whatever I
am doing at a certain moment I am doing full time. Now we just finished
“Sundancer” and will tour. What comes
next... I don't know yet. Might be another Dreamtide album.
In music industry lots of trends come and go, but especially the melodic hard rock genre is celebrating some kind of revival since some years. A lot of new bands play this style now and also a lot of older cult bands produce new albums. Why is that? What makes this kind of music so timeless in your opinion?
Helge: During the
interview I realised that you called Zeno “melodic rock”, Fair Warning “melodic
hard rock” and Dreamtide “hard rock”. I always had difficulties relating to
these terms. I perceive those terms as limiting. They were not around when we
or Zeno started. When I started Dreamtide, yes they were around, much to my
annoyance. Now there are classifications like
triplemegaslayyourmotherdeathmetal or classic rock. No, nothing for me. I call
it rock. As simple as that. What do you expect from a Banause? Is it coming
back, was it ever gone? Styles develop, come, go, merge, evolve into something
different, some die and some don't, they just go home (like Elvis). I don't
think any styles comes back exactly as it was and I hope there is an audible
difference in between our first record and our latest release.
And I do
believe there is always room for a good song, no matter what style it might be.
Any message to your fans out there?
Helge: Stop
stealing my music you bastards, buy it. Was that
politically incorrect? Doesn't matter political correctness sucks. Oh, and a
BIG thank you to all those who support us.
Helge, thanks for talking. Good
luck with all your activities!
Helge: Thank you!
http://www.fair-warning.de/
I really loved this interview with one of my favorite musicians. Helge is so refreshingly candid and unpretentious; not to mention funny as shit! It makes me happy to see Helge and Fair Warning get some more exposure, as I believe him to be one of the best guitarists, playing in one of the finest rock bands in the world.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the post, Thomas, and best of luck to you and Mr. Engelke. I can't wait to hear whatever Helge does next!
Thanks for the kind words :) It was a fun chat.
ReplyDeleteSome more interviews will come up in the next few days, so stay tuned ;)