Fan-filmed video footage of CLUTCH‘s June 6 performance at the FortaRock festival at Goffertpark in Nijmegen, The Netherlands can be seen below.
CLUTCH‘s new album, “Psychic Warfare”, is tentatively due in September via the band’s own label, Weathermaker Music. Songtitles set to appear on the follow-up to 2013’s “Earth Rocker” include “X-Ray Visions”, “Firebird”, “Quick Death In Texas”, “Our Lady Of Electric Lights”, “Monsters”, “Decapitation Blues” and “Son Of Virginia”.
The basic tracks and most of the guitars for “Psychic Warfare” were laid down at producer Machine‘s studio in Dripping Springs, Texas, while the remainder was recorded at CLUTCH‘s studio in Maryland.
Asked how “Psychic Warfare” compares to CLUTCH‘s previous efforts, drummer Jean-Paul Gaster told Lithium Magazine: “It’s hard to say, because we are so close to it at this point and it’s so very new to us. It’s easier for me to make comparisons, or contrast to, ‘Earth Rocker’, just because that was the one that preceded it. And I feel like, compared to that record, I think there’s a little more dynamic range happening on this album. I think the tempo of the songs is a little bit more far-reaching. ‘Earth Rocker’ had a very specific energy to it, it was a very upbeat record, and this record also has some of those kinds of songs, but I think some of the feels are a little different — maybe a little more reminiscent of stuff that we’ve done even before ‘Earth Rocker’. So it’s definitely a departure from what we did last time.”
Gaster also spoke about the songwriting process for “Psychic Warfare” and how it was different from the way CLUTCH approached its previous releases. He said: “The writing dynamic really stays the same. It really just boils down to the four of us getting in a room and jamming. That’s really where most of the songs start. Rarely does somebody come to the table with something that sounds like a completed song. It does happen from time to time, but, really, for the most part, it’s a pretty organic thing. I think probably the change in the style of songs also happens naturally. We don’t really sit around and think what we need to do something different than last time. We just tend to always do that; we sort of just react to whatever we did. Sometimes I think we do that even on a very subconscious level.”
Fonte: Blabbermouth.net