Hello Justin, what prompted
the decision to re-convene Godflesh after all these years?
What was it that made you specifically choose Hellfest and Supersonic as
the scenes of Godflesh’s return?
Was the decision to play Supersionic a nod to your Birmingham heritage?
Who else comprises the live lineup or is it just yourself and GC Green?
How does it feel playing Godlesh material to audiences after almost a
decade?
Is there any intention to record new Godlesh material?
Will this reunion have any affect on the operations of jesu and your
other ongoing projects?
Has working on projects like Jesu and Final in the interim period
affected how you approach the Godflesh material after all these years?
What can people expect from Godflesh’s show at Supersonic?
Hellfest were the catalyst
for this reformation; they tried desperately for a number of years to get
Godflesh to reform for that festival. It took some time for me to even consider
it and go as far as asking Ben Green to do it. He responded so positively that
it was inspiring and this prompted me to consider it too, and leave all the
baggage behind.
They are two very exciting
festivals, and Godflesh did not in its career, do that many festivals so they
make for an interesting environment for Godflesh to play in. My only concern is
volume levels these days are so controlled and minimal that it is impossible
for GF to achieve the heights that it once did via suffocating volume, which
could be possible all those years back.
In some ways, yes. The organization
begind the festival believe in Godflesh but the band only really played
Birmingham frequently when it first formed. We barely played there after 1991!
It is exactly as Godflesh
was originally intended to be, and was for most of its existence: GC (Ben) Green,
myself and machines.
In some ways it has been bizarre.
Largely we're playing to audiences who never saw Godflesh in the first place.
That makes it all the more exciting though. It's hard now to say what Godflesh
was after such a long break of almost 10 years. That is a longer period than Ben
and I played together as Godflesh in the first place.
There is some intention,
but in practice it is a big question. I don't like expectation, since generally
the larger the expectation the bigger the disappointment. I have new Godflesh
riffs and ideas, but I have had for some time, even before the reformation. I
am just unsure as to whether it should be considered seriously or not.
No, not really. It's timely,
due to the fact that I took some time off from releasing a lot with jesu at the
rate I had been. There was a glut of jesu releases and eased back. For the last
year or so I've been slowly writing the new jesu album, which is finally being
recorded throughout this winter, aiming for a May 2011 release. So in some ways
I have been able to let jesu take a back seat for now.
In some ways, yes. I
haven't spent the last 8 years plus performing very aggressive or brutal
material. Going back to the Godflesh sound required reaching back to those
emotions, which was not in the slightest bit hard, it was just a case having to
get to grips with performing in that context again. It took me some time to
adjust to the way jesu would perform relative to Godflesh performances.
The Godflesh show that we
always hoped to perform more often when we last existed; projections and
minimal/maximal brutality. It should be every bit as claustrophobic as Godflesh
was intended to be in a live environment.
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