A Brief History of Isis

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I saw Spiritualized open up for Radiohead. They were fucking amazing. No one gave a crap at all and it was very unfortunate.

-Michael Gallagher

 
Photo of Isis by Mark Dawursk

2004's Panopticon was more in the key of dark Krautrock, stemming from their love of the bands like Can, Kraftwerk and Neu, whose albums they all listen to regularly while on tour. Perhaps their most chilled effort, it's still capable of blowing back one's hair. With their latest release, In the Absence of Truth (released 10/31/06 on Ipecac Recordings), Isis has thrown almost everything from their previous work into a pot and boiled it down to a psychedelic, phantasmagorical and, at times, tribal sound. Gallagher simply calls it a "little looser" than anything they've done before.

The amenities at The Bomb Shelter, a Los Angeles studio, put the band in a relaxed state while they were holed up there. "It was a nice studio. It was very comfortable, a little nicer than what we were used to," Gallagher comments. "Generally, the approach we take is that we go to a nice room to record drums because you can't get away with a shitty studio to do something like drums. Then we go to a smaller basement studio to do overdubs; but in this situation we were able to secure a good deal on this place and it worked out while we were all there. We lived there for a month so it was nice to be comfortable, and [it] had TV and video games there when we weren't working."

But getting a good album doesn't rely solely on comfort. It also has to do with who's in the producer chair. Longtime Isis producer and all around sound genius Matt Bayles (Pearl Jam, Blood Brothers, Yakuza) recently left Minus the Bear to focus on studio production. Gallagher confirms that Bayles can get a good performance out of a band. "He has the patience to sit through us playing the same riff for however long it takes until it's right, which is an admirable trait because we're all pretty okay musicians but certainly when you're under a microscope you can mess stuff up pretty often."

Michael Gallagher - Isis
By Mark Dawursk
The majority of Isis' work takes themes from literature, philosophy, film and an orbit of other intellectual labyrinths. They spent the lion's share of their press interviews for Panopticon discussing what went into it. Now, Gallagher says the band is "pleading the fifth" about inquiries into In the Absence of Truth.

"We left enough clues in the artwork and in the text of the record. If people are interested, they can certainly go investigate it on their own rather than us kind of spoon feeding them or cramming it down their throat," he notes. "[If] they want to enjoy the record on an entertainment level then that's perfectly fine."

In the Absence of Truth has most assuredly reached a new realm of fans, thanks in no small part to Isis opening shows for Tool last year. Although clearly an intriguing opportunity, Gallagher was unsure if trying to warm up for a superband like Tool was such a good idea.

"I know it sounds ridiculous, of course, and I'm willing to say that I was one hundred percent wrong," he admits. "But, when I think back to when I used to go to stadium shows when I was a kid, the only time I saw an opening band in that context blow away an audience was Metallica with Ozzy, and that was '87. That was a long fucking time ago. I kind of had it in my head that we were going to be a kind of 'lights on and find a seat' band. I saw Spiritualized open up for Radiohead. They were fucking amazing. No one gave a crap at all and it was very unfortunate. While they're a great band and if they were given all the lights and the lights were as they should be at a show and they had full access to the sound system it would have really impressed people. So, I thought that it was going to be like that going into it, and while I'm sure there were thousands of people there that either did not care or did not like us, there was also many thousands that did enjoy us very much. So, that was very rewarding."

JamBase | City of the Angels
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http://www.isistheband.com/

[Published on: 12/5/07]


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Comments

stopthepotron starstarstarstarstar Wed 12/5/2007 07:47PM
+2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

Excellent interview. This band has really grown on me, and I believe they're one of the more successful metal-acts at drawing in a non-metal audience. Food for thought all you jamheads--diversify, cross-breed, progress, grow.

Rondog starstarstarstarstar Thu 12/6/2007 08:02AM
+2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

NTRobert68 said it best-all you hipsters out there need to take a listen to these guys. They are makings some of the most artfull and cerebral music around. Not to mention they are crack musicians. Dont be turned off by the fact that they are heavy enough to crush your stereo into pieces.

toestothenose starstarstarstarstar Thu 12/6/2007 11:05AM
+1 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

toestothenose

Chris - great write-up - I'll have to check them out

gmoo Thu 12/6/2007 11:26AM
+2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

gmoo

I like my metal heavy sir.

dedliug Thu 12/6/2007 06:23PM
+3 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

yes, isis on jambase

complain away narrow minders

cheese/isis show needs to happen

kyuss1313 starstarstarstarstar Fri 12/7/2007 10:14AM
+3 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

kyuss1313

listen to ISIS. please. for your own good. (and maybe try cult of luna as well...) kudos jambase! you guys have broadened your scope nicely this past year. never would've thought i'd see stinking lizaveta, clutch, mastodon, qotsa, etc here. fits the mold perfectly. intelligent music for intelligent listeners. how can anyone knock it?!?!!??

QuantumTubaMan starstarstarstarstar Fri 12/7/2007 02:55PM
+2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

QuantumTubaMan

Ahhh, prog-metal, such a gloriously artful style. I love how Isis incorporates the beautiful atmospheric feel of post rock into heavy metal. And I second the Cheese/Isis show request.

deceasedlavy Sat 12/8/2007 12:09PM
+1 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

deceasedlavy

isis is amazing, and i'm thrilled to see them here, but i'm so bewildered by the fact that people are calling them (or neurosis) prog. even calling them metal any more is a stretch. tool, okay, that's prog-y. meshuggah, definitely. mastadon is probably the quintessential example of prog metal right now, but isis is basically heavy post rock; there are no guitar solos, shifting time signatures, jazz influences, classical overtones...it's atmosphere over intricacy, and it's a beautiful thing. anyway, i know the media is pushing the prog label, so nothing against mr. pacifico for the genre-assignment; just the ramblings of an old yes/king krimson fanatic...

headySetList starstarstar Tue 12/25/2007 10:18PM
0 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

headySetList

hmmmmmmmmm, heady set list