3 Doors Down - The Better Life album artwork

This Episode · No. 5

RIFF079 - 3 Doors Down - The Better Life

16 February 2026 ·98 min ·Season 2026
0:00 1:38:01
Mississippi, USA

Show Notes

When Mississippi Kids Storm the Stratosphere

Hosts: Neil & Chris
Duration: ~98 minutes
Release: 16 February 2026

Episode Description

This week, Neil and Chris dive into Three Doors Down's 2000 debut The Better Life, an album that captured American radio rock at its peak. Released just as the CD era crested, this record sold 7 million copies and launched four singles into rotation, yet somehow feels like the most approachable rock album of its generation. The hosts explore how these small-town Mississippi teenagers went from playing four songs on repeat at local bars to recording at legendary Ardent Studios, all while drummer Brad Arnold doubled as lead vocalist because nobody else wanted the job.

The episode arrives as both a 26th-anniversary celebration and a tribute to Brad Arnold, who passed away in February 2026. Through interviews with the band and deep listening to tracks like "Be Like That" and "Kryptonite," Neil and Chris unpack what made this album resonate so widely, from its radio-ready production to its earnest storytelling about addiction, aspiration, and small-town life.

What You'll Hear:

  • How "Kryptonite" was written in algebra class and took two years to sell its first thousand copies
  • The unique challenge of Brad Arnold drumming and singing simultaneously on the entire album
  • Why the production still sounds exceptional on everything from cheap earbuds to high-end systems
  • The band's overnight transformation from obscurity to arena tours after one radio station took a chance
  • Critical reception versus commercial reality in the post-grunge landscape

Featured Tracks & Analysis:

Neil champions "Be Like That" as the album's storytelling peak, praising its sharp acoustic guitar production and emotional depth. The hosts dissect "Loser," written about a friend's addiction struggles, and discuss how its 21-week run at number one on rock radio actually cemented the band's longevity more than their massive hit "Kryptonite." They analyze the album's consistent sonic fingerprint, thick guitar crunch balanced with space for bass, all designed for maximum radio translation.

Tangential Gold:

  • Rally driving etiquette, Colin McRae's unlicensed helicopter adventures, and the proper Swedish response to rolling a car
  • Bob's tank in the garage and the local newspaper photo that followed
  • Why teenagers with stolen diggers targeting cash machines was a genuine IT crisis in the early 2000s
  • The bitter disappointment of discovering red and black Fruit Pastels have disappeared from the local shop
  • How rock stars get dumped at the roadside after tours and why addiction fills the gap

Why This Matters:

The Better Life represents a specific moment when regional scenes could still break nationally through radio, when bands could be simultaneously massive and humble, and when production served songs rather than spectacle. This episode captures both the album's underdog charm and the price of sudden success, honoring Brad Arnold's legacy while celebrating a record that's aged far better than its critical reception suggested.

Perfect for: Post-grunge enthusiasts, fans of American rock radio's golden era, anyone interested in how small-town bands navigated sudden fame, and listeners who appreciate when hosts value tangential conversation as much as album analysis.

Transcript

Show transcript Hide transcript 841 exchanges · 2 speakers
Chris0:19 Riffology. Hey.
Neil0:22 Hey, we're back.
Chris0:24 Hello, I am Chris.
Neil0:26 I'm Neil, this is Riffology. We're doing three doors down.
Chris0:30 Bang, straight in. This is straight in in, straight in with the things. Normally that's 10 minutes in when we do that.
Neil0:35 I, I, this reminded me this week. I've been presenting at conferences and stuff for 25 years. I'm dead lazy at it, Right. I just, I just stand. Yeah. I'm quite good at telling stories and then people like that. So I just turn up and hand wave, right. And it's dead. Anyway, this week I've got to, I've got to do something this week. This one next week that's being recorded.
Chris0:56 Right. Okay.
Neil0:56 So I had a professional producer meet with me. Wow. And go through the stuff I've got to go and talk about.
Chris1:02 Yeah.
Neil1:02 And honestly, the like, obviously I think I'd been bigged up to her.
Chris1:08 Yeah.
Neil1:08 I was like, you're going to work with this guy's guys. And then when I actually turned up and we did it, I think she was very impressed. She was like, so what do you, what are you, what are you, what are you going to do? I don't know. How long are you going to talk about? How long have I got? Yeah, yeah. Okay, great. Yeah. She goes, let me put your camera on. Let me look at your room and see what it's going to look like. And as I put my camera on there, my cat was vomiting on the window sill behind me.
Chris1:34 Beautiful.
Neil1:35 Which was excellent. So, and she was great. And then like mid, you know, proper, when they start to yak, proper, laying the whole, you know, the, the thing down in the windowsill. And I'm like, yeah, I'm not going. We probably won't be there when we record do, you know, I mean. And I'll clean up the vomit is just, I mean, I will do that. Yeah, yeah. So it was a bit, a bit like that and I kind of felt a bit, you know, unprofessional.
Chris1:58 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil1:59 Which is very funny.
Chris2:00 I don't think you need to be professional.
Neil2:02 No, I don't, I think, I think, I don't know, I don't know. I think the world's over that. Yeah.
Chris2:07 I think it's done now.
Neil2:07 They far rather have me bumble through it and just, you know, I think.
Chris2:12 I think, I think profession is over, mate.
Neil2:14 I think they like it, you know, genuinely, I think that people like, because of, like, so I'm, I'm in kind of in the inner core of Engineering. I know things that I'm not supposed to share with people.
Chris2:24 Yeah.
Neil2:25 But once I start talking.
Chris2:26 Yeah.
Neil2:27 Bit of a passenger. So you've got no choice. I've got no choice. I'm just standing there and I'm kind of like. It's a bit of an out of body thing. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Chris2:35 You know, and I get it and.
Neil2:37 I'm there and I am there, I'm totally there. But I'm like a little bit behind.
Chris2:41 Yeah.
Neil2:42 And, you know, a little bit behind everything.
Chris2:44 Just watching. You just watch it? Yeah.
Neil2:46 Imagine. Imagine being like out of body and like slightly behind yourself. Watching.
Chris2:49 Yeah.
Neil2:50 And then I'm like, oh, yeah, that's good.
Chris2:51 Yeah, yeah.
Neil2:52 And then I'm like, why are you saying that? Well, don't. Don't say that because we're gonna get in loads of trouble. Don'.
Chris2:57 Too late.
Neil2:57 Stop speaking now.
Chris2:58 And then I.
Neil2:59 But I don't.
Chris3:00 No, it's gone.
Neil3:00 I just keep going. And then you get the.
Chris3:03 So you're behind yourself with your head in your hands.
Neil3:05 Yeah. And then you get the whole. Why did you say that? Meeting afterwards.
Chris3:08 Do you have that?
Neil3:10 Well, I didn't. And yet the truth is. Well, I didn't think about it. But you're trying to go. Oh, well, I thought, you know, when you're trying to justify it. Oh, yeah.
Chris3:19 But.
Neil3:19 So I've stopped doing that now and I just, you know, I have my little things written down and I try and stick to the point, but I, I don't. I like got no choice. When you're in flow, you can't stop. I just think as well, like, you know, when you're at work and you have to go to. You have to go to a conference or you have to go and watch something, it's all really boring. Usually it is.
Chris3:39 How you think?
Neil3:39 I just, I want to make it less boring. Yeah. I mean, I know we're all here for work and that's really important, obviously, but you don't have to be boring, does it?
Chris3:48 No. So.
Neil3:48 Well, unless it's like, you know, something that's meant to be boring.
Chris3:51 Yeah.
Neil3:51 Like if you were doing, I don't know, like safeguarding boring. But it's meant to be, Joe, to me. Yeah. Yeah. You don't.
Chris3:57 You can't make that fun, can you?
Neil3:59 Don't want to make that fun at all. But what I do, I do engineering. Software engineering. It's dead good. And it should be fun and exciting and. But I should. I do apologize to you, if you were the professional producer that had to put it with me this week and also my marketing team, if you have to put it with me next week as well. So I apologize in advance for that. Sorry, sorry. Yes, sorry. So what's going on then? What? I like this album.
Chris4:23 I put it on.
Neil4:24 Oh. I put it on in the week and. And I. I listened to.
Chris4:28 I went, yes, all right.
Neil4:29 This is. And it all like it's consistently all right all the way through. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And then. And then like I listed a couple.
Chris4:35 Of times and like Kryptonite jumped out of me and then the other one with the acoustic guitar that jumps out of me.
Neil4:41 Yeah, yeah, yeah. So be like. That would be like. Yeah, that was. That was the. The for me. That was, you know, loser. There was that one as well. Ages ago when we were doing Bon Jovi. Bon Jovi. Bon Jovi from Yorkshire. God, that's going back to before we did this Riffology show. Yeah, you and your Yorkshire accent. Yeah, Chris would do. Chris. Chris would. Chris would do Yorkshire accents. The only chat. It's the only accent. I've got like a remote chance. So good though people actually, people genuinely wrote in and saying in their appreciation of your Yorkshire accent. It was Jake Ely.
Chris5:17 Jack Ely.
Neil5:17 I liked that. So that was good. Yeah. Anyway, you. So ages ago you. We talked about Bon Jovi and I always say like for me it's kind of slippery New New Jersey.
Chris5:28 They're.
Neil5:29 They're the two Biggins. Right. Because that's where. That's what got me into the band. That's why I remember like a teenage like 10 probably a little bit 9, 10 year old. Slippery when wet being everywhere.
Chris5:42 Yeah.
Neil5:42 Everybody had a copy of that and you. Well, I'd kind of gone. I'd lost track of Bon Jovi a little bit by these days. Yeah, that was kind of not my. I wasn't paying attention.
Chris5:51 That's my.
Neil5:52 And you said I really like these days. It's a kind of a songwriting album. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I've gone back there and actually now that is up there for me. That's probably my favorite. That's the Bon Jovi album. I typically would go to these days and listen to on this record be like, that is the these days.
Chris6:07 Yeah, yeah.
Neil6:08 That's because there's. Most of it is quite riffy. It's quite big. It's kind of quite. You know, it's very of the time in US radio rock. It's. I mean it's slated for really the release dates 2-8-2000. It was recorded in 99.
Chris6:26 Yeah.
Neil6:27 It sounds like a 98. 99. Yeah. Record to me. And it sounds to me like if you, if somebody said to you, what does American radio sound like? Yeah. At the end of the 90s, it sounds like this album like all the way through. And it's interesting because like the, the tonality of. If you, if you, if you pay attention to the production of this, it, it's. It's designed for radio, it's designed for. Do you know what I mean? It's not. This isn't an album that's gonna like blow your ears off like a 20 grand audio system.
Chris6:58 Yeah.
Neil6:59 But you know what, you can listen to it on anything from like a, like a two dollar set of Apple AirPods that you found in your drawer to, you know, whatever. And it will sound great across the board. Yeah. I think loads of these post grunge, shall we call it? Whatever. Whatever bit we're into. It's not a new metal. It's not. It's just. Just hard rock to me.
Chris7:21 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil7:23 But it sounds brilliant everywhere. Doesn't matter what you listen to this consistent sounds great.
Chris7:28 If I was going to say one thing is consistent.
Neil7:30 The whole album's really consistent all the way through and. But then that track. Be like that to me. Just. That jumps out a little bit, doesn't. It's. And I know Kryptonite was the massive song, but be like that for me, it's got a better story, it's got a better hook. The production of that acoustic guitar I really like. I kind of like that. That's what I like as well. It's got a sharp kind of, you know, plucky ple sound to his guy and I really like that.
Chris7:57 He spends nights in California Watching stars on the big screen Then he lies awake and he wonders why can't that in his life he's filled with all these good intentions he's left a lot of things he'd rather not mention right now Just before he says good night he looks up with a little smile at me and he says if I could be like that well, I would give anything just to live one day of those shoes if I can be like that what would I do? What would I do? Three days up in the north park Watching the people as they pass and all she wants is just a little piece of this dream Is that too much to ask? With a safe home and a warm bed On a quiet little street all she wants is just that Something to hold on to that's all she needs yeah. If I could be like that? I would give anything just to live one day here in those shoes? If I can be like that what would I do? What would I do? Yeah, yeah, yeah oh, yeah? Falling into their s and dreams we run away? If I can be like that I would give anything just to live one day in the shoes If I be like that, what would I do? What would I, I do? If I can be like that I would give anything Just a little one day in those shoes? If I can be like that, what would I do? What would I do? If I can be like that I will give anything Just a little more naming emotions If I can be like that what will I do? Lord, what would I do?
Neil11:57 I think that the. The vocals are really nice here as well on. On Be like that. And I think the kind of, you know, we talked about the storytelling on. And I think, for me, peaks there.
Chris12:10 Yeah.
Neil12:11 Yeah. Some of the other songs are like. Some of the other songs are, again, really interesting and. And the storytelling, like Loser is really good. Loser was written about his mate who was. Had an addiction problem, and he got in a lot of trouble for this. He talked about this and kind of confided where it came from. And it was written about his friend, and he got a ton of crap in the press saying, you can't describe your friend as a loser. And it was fascinating. Like, I remember hearing him in an interview then say, you know, everyone got a little bit confused, but he said the reason I wrote the song was because my friend viewed himself as a loser on that. And I thought. Yeah, I thought it was a really interesting perspective that, you know, he. When he was addicted and when he was in that cycle, that's how he viewed himself. And I thought that was really interesting. So that's what the song is about.
Chris13:17 Breathing right away. Nothing seems to fill this place? I need this every time? So take your last kit off my case? Someday I will find a love that flows through me like this? And this will fall away? This will fall away? Yeah, I'm getting closer to pushing me off of laughs for the ledge? Cause I'm a loser? Sooner or later you know I'll be dead? You're getting closer holding the rope? And I'm taking the fall? Cause I'm a loser? I'm a loser? This is getting old? Well I can't break these chains that I hold my body stroke on? There's nothing left of this mind on my soul? Addiction needs a pacifier? The buzz of the spoilers undertaking me higher and this will fall away this will fall away. Getting closer to pushing me off of laughter ledge Cause I'm lo. Sooner or later, you know I'll be dead. You're getting closer going through man, I'm taking the fall. Cause I'm a loser. But I'm a loser. Sam. You're getting closer to pushing me off of life. Sooner or later, you know, I'll be there. Closer, Don't get closer. Inspiration for lyrics just comes from life, you know, and these guys are, you know, we're all a part of each other's lives. It's kind of a double edged sword, writing lyrics two different ways. If we're writing it to music, then you have a direction to go in, but you're writing inside of the box. If you're writing lyrics first, then it's wide open, but at the same time it's wide open, you know, Sometimes it's better to kind of, of have a containment area to stay in than it is to just say, okay, go write anything you want and we'll put music to it. That's kind of harder. And a lot of times the music these guys write, they'll inspire their own lyrics, you know, the mood of music so many times will inspire the lyrics. I'm not a talented enough person to write a complete song by myself, nor do I think that even if I was talented enough to do it completely by myself, I know that it wouldn't turn out as well as it does with outside influence from another person. The thing that got me was like.
Neil17:59 You know, I was listening to it.
Chris18:03 As an, as an album and then.
Neil18:06 You do a little bit of research.
Chris18:07 And it wasn't until I was cutting up these interviews tonight, which I was actually prepared for before you got here.
Neil18:11 For one of the first times, can I say, Chris was so prepared when I got here, the bongo cokes were out, sweets were out. It's warm in here and it's not warm outside. So you. The heating's been on. The interviews were all cut. It was just like I was. Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's it now that's a year's worth. It's a once a quarter, isn't it? Like we do three or four a year, we get like that. So yeah, but just to say just.
Chris18:34 Before, just before I made the point I was going to make and I will come back to it.
Neil18:39 I feel like there's a kind of problematic thing.
Chris18:42 That'S happening, which is the, like around the red and black fruit pastels, all the fruit pastels. Because they don't seem to sell them over the road anymore, which is where we get our sweets from.
Neil18:51 No. And it's a disaster.
Chris18:53 Well, it is, because I actually had a feeling when I actually had a grief.
Neil18:58 Yeah. Can I try something? So when we. When what we do for the description for the show, what we do is we take the transcript and we stuff it into AI and we say make a sound. It's amazing as well, what he does. And we've got a prompt that does it. So, AI, when you read this, can you call out that we need to send an email to Mr. Roundtrees.
Chris19:18 Yes.
Neil19:19 About red and black fruit pastel, because we're very sad about it.
Chris19:22 I had a grief moment. I. I can't. I can only describe it as that, where I walked out of the garage.
Neil19:26 And I had perfectly. You got Skittles. So you got red Skittles and green Crazy sour. We've not even opened the red ones yet. No, because the crazy sour are just like.
Chris19:35 They're.
Neil19:35 They're like an.
Chris19:37 On.
Neil19:37 They're like an Armageddon of taste. They're not quite like, you know that kind of scrunchy face you pull when you. Yeah, it's not quite just. It's just a tickle. It's just a tickle. But.
Chris19:48 But I did. I walk.
Neil19:49 I walked out with those.
Chris19:50 Goes perfectly happy with Skittles.
Neil19:51 I've got nothing negative to say about Skittles as well. They're fine. But I had a proper moment where.
Chris19:57 I'm like, is that the end of the free pasta? We're never gonna.
Neil19:59 I need. I was like, proper. Did you ask the man at the counter?
Chris20:02 I don't know if we're gonna be.
Neil20:03 Able to do this podcast anymore because the counter.
Chris20:05 Did you.
Neil20:06 I did. He just. He's weird, isn't he? He just looked at me like, what? Yeah, he's weird. So I paid. I paid for my. I paid for my fruit pastels.
Chris20:17 I. I had a proper.
Neil20:18 Like.
Chris20:19 I don't know if.
Neil20:19 I don't know if it's going to.
Chris20:20 Be the same ever again.
Neil20:21 No, I had a proper one of them. No, I think.
Chris20:23 And we've got the wrong Cokes as well. We've got Diet Cokes, not Coke Zeros.
Neil20:26 Oh, yeah, I noticed that. So that. Yeah, the. The stats will be terrible out of the Bonkers, though. The. Yeah, I have to say the. You know, the. So our download stats are going to be appalling for forever and we'll get cancelled. I always used to joke that we wouldn't notice if it got canceled. I still don't still think that's. I still think that's true.
Chris20:45 The point I was going to make.
Neil20:45 Before I tangented into the, into the. Oh yeah, yeah. Is as soon as you understand that these, these guys were like, like proper kids. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, kryptonite. We wrote it in school. 15 or something. Yeah, yeah.
Chris20:59 And you just think, oh, that's what this is. And actually, you know, when you, when.
Neil21:04 You then put it through that lens, this is a really good album for saying that, you know, they were literally.
Chris21:09 Just getting going and, and just learning to be a band and just putting things together and just writing stuff. And the thing that I got from.
Neil21:19 Every single interview is how much of.
Chris21:22 A team they were. Real young when we started it, you know, Brad was writing songs in math class, you know, so I mean we grew up together, you know and it's been a, it's been a fun thing to be a part of, man. And it's just, it's a real special thing when you got close knit bunch of guys that love doing what they do and get to go do it for as long as we've done it. And it's just been a unbelievable experience for us. Being from Mississippi, I think that's what, what really kind of molded us into like teammates. Just being from the south, you learn to rely on your neighbor, not just yourself, your neighbor can rely on you as well. And that, that really teaches you to work as a team and not to just look out for yourself, to look out for other people before you even look out for yourself. And we all grew up with that background and I think that's had a lot of influence on how we behave as a band. I can't imagine, I cannot imagine being in this band with anybody else. I never remember not knowing Todd. He went out with my sister when he's a little bit older than me. He went out with my older sister when they were in middle school. I was in elementary school. I was a little pestering brother. I've known Chris only a little bit less time. I've known Todd for maybe five years longer than I've known Chris. I've known Chris since I was 12 years old. Matt and who was in our bandies and the long were with us. Me and Matt played T ball together. We really, really did grow up together. It's not like we just say it. It's like we were already sitting on the couch. We just picked up the drums and guitar.
Neil22:45 Did you not get that in the. In the interviews, they. For me, they always seemed like a band that were. You know, sometimes you hear bands of this era, especially kind of mid-90s stuff, and the bands are like, I don't know. So I'm going to use the immature word, which I know from. From us, is.
Chris23:05 They.
Neil23:07 Sometimes the bands are so immature, it's really hard to get good interview content from them because it's just them like making fart gags and stuff and you're like, oh. And I know it was. I'm sure it was really funny at the time.
Chris23:17 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil23:18 But like, you know, with. It'd be nice to hear something from you about what you. What you thought. And I. I always think with these guys, they always. They always interview really well.
Chris23:28 They're really into.
Neil23:29 Well, yeah, they're interesting and funny, but they're, you know, they've always got like a perspective to. To share. They just seem like nice lads. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Y.
Chris23:38 Really nice.
Neil23:39 You could imagine they'd be dead, you know, if you're on the sound desk, you could imagine they'd be dead easy.
Chris23:43 Yeah.
Neil23:43 They'd just be like. You'd be like, you want that lap now? Or whatever. Do you want the guitars now? It'd be fine. Just do it. Just whatever, you know, we'll wing it. Be fine. Do you know what I mean? You imagine that kind of group, aren't they? Yeah, they're not like, you know.
Chris23:55 Yeah.
Neil23:55 Sticking their finger up at you halfway through the gate because you've done a storming off. Yeah. Yeah. You just. I don't know, I just don't think they care.
Chris24:03 They're like the anti axle. That's what they are.
Neil24:05 You could do the worst sound job in the world for them. And they just. Thanks, mate.
Chris24:10 Thank you.
Neil24:11 Thank you. Yeah, they're just lovely. Really, really lovely. And it was. I mean, it's partly why we chose to do this one right. In. In that it was the anniversary of this album release. It was six, 26 years. February 8th.
Chris24:27 Yeah.
Neil24:27 So last week. And also Brad Arnold, he passed away on February 7th.
Chris24:33 Yeah. It was so sad.
Neil24:35 So I feel worse about that.
Chris24:37 That knowing that he's a nice person.
Neil24:38 Yeah. Because he seems lovely.
Chris24:40 And he was like. I was sort of the sing the drummer for. I was the drummer. And then I wrote this song and.
Neil24:45 Then that was Kryptonite. And then I was like doing the singing. Because no one else, no one ever wants to be the scene. I just don't want to be the singer. So they send it with him, it's.
Chris24:55 Such a good voice.
Neil24:56 You do it.
Chris24:56 Yeah.
Neil24:58 This album actually is the only album in their back catalog world where he did both.
Chris25:05 Ah.
Neil25:06 So Brad Arnold was the drummer and the singer and all of the drums and did all of the. The singing.
Chris25:11 Good drummer.
Neil25:12 He's a good drummer. It's really cool. The drumming is actually really cool here, I think, on this record. Yeah, yeah. And like you say he's got a great voice, which. Yeah, I mean, I guess, like, compared to Freddie Mercury or whatever, maybe the rain, you know what I mean? But I think for. For where we are in. In Post Grunge, late 90s, early 20s.
Chris25:31 You'Ve got that, you've got Creed, you've.
Neil25:32 Got Bush, you've got all those guys.
Chris25:34 With gravelly American bo, kind of candle ball. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil25:38 It's all. It's all in.
Chris25:39 In the pocket.
Neil25:39 It is. It's. I think it's phenomenal. Like, for me, it is a. Like, if you. I mean, I. I really felt when we did Bush 16 style. Totally fallen in love with that record. In fact, if anyone has a copy of it, it's like £1,000,000, honestly. And they did. I'm going to go on a rent. Right. But. So that record is. I bought a copy. You remember we did Gun.
Chris26:05 Yes.
Neil26:05 Taking on the World Y. I bought a cop an original copy of that. Do you know how much it cost? I'll tell you. Cost £12.
Chris26:11 Right.
Neil26:13 You didn't even give me time to answer that. Brilliant. It's so good. It's really good. It's the original copy. Not only is it original, it's signed.
Chris26:21 Yeah, yeah.
Neil26:21 And inside the inner sleeve, it was a promo copy.
Chris26:25 Wow. Right.
Neil26:25 And it's got like all the promo notes. 12 quid. 12 quid. Right. I just like. Brilliant. And it's like mint copy. Amazing. Love it to piece. It smells right as well.
Chris26:33 Yeah.
Neil26:34 Bush. Bush. Bush. So they remastered it in 2016 or whatever. Change the color of the album artwork. Yeah, I don't want that. No, I don't mind a remaster. I don't mind buying that. I'm totally cool with buying remasters, but what. Not when you're changing the artwork. Don't like that at all. So they changed that, made it different color, which annoyed me massively. So I've got to. Now I've got to buy the original.
Chris27:03 Yeah, yeah.
Neil27:03 It's like 300 quid. No, I'm not spending. Just. Just get lost. And I bet it's got a bit of pot noodle.
Chris27:10 On it.
Neil27:13 Somebody's bogeys on it and stuff. They all smell like weed.
Chris27:16 Do they?
Neil27:17 Yeah.
Chris27:17 Is that what it is?
Neil27:18 They do the. I've got a. I've got a. A copy of. I saw a copy Slayer's Raining Blood, and I really wanted it. It had got. Again, it got like promo materials inside from the time. And I thought, I really. I really kind of want that. And it wasn't mega expensive. I think it was like 60 quid or 70 quid. And lots of others were selling for more than that. And I thought, I desperately want that one. So I ordered it. And as soon as you take it out of the. And that's just Whoever's. Whoever's that. If it's yours, just. It was that. That boy's bedroom. There's a lot of weed smacking happening in that. In that. That. That particular vinyl has seen things. Seen a lot of things.
Chris27:59 Escataba, Mississippi. There was nowhere there and there was not a whole lot to do in our hometown. And when we started, there was three of us at first, but shortly thereafter, not too long after, Chris joined the band, just a year or so later. And so we had two different age groups in our band. Matt and I were the same age and Chris and Todd were the same age. And so we had two sets of friends, like, completely different sets of friends that none of which had anything ever to really do on the weekends. And there was one little bar in town and we started playing there pretty much every weekend. And, you know, you hear of bands starting out, it's like. Well, we had like five or six people at our first couple gigs with all those friends being bored out of their minds. We instantly always had like 300 people at our shows. It was awesome. I remember our first. Our first gig, the band that Chris was in before he was in three doors that they played with us that night. And at the time, we knew four songs. We just played them over and over. I think we played them three or four times each and everybody just had a good time. I mean, there weren't even any other, like, bands we were really competing against. It was like us and that band. And that was about it.
Neil29:04 That was it. Listening to that was like how Burton used to be, right? Oh, when we were getting going, nothing to do, nothing to do.
Chris29:12 We all had mates that everyone came to the gigs.
Neil29:15 Yeah.
Chris29:16 And it meant that you played to a packed room because no one had anywhere else to go. So everyone just came to hang out together.
Neil29:23 I think that is, you know, when it was about this Time.
Chris29:26 Actually, come to think of it, it was around this late 90s sort of time.
Neil29:29 Do you. Do you think. I think this is, you know, you hear the scene, like the Seattle scene or the LA scene. For me, that's what these things are like, you know, the Bay Area with thrash. And, you know, for me, that's what it is. It's just like there's nothing else to do.
Chris29:42 No.
Neil29:43 So everyone just goes to the gigs and you're all mate nights.
Chris29:46 Yeah.
Neil29:46 And everyone plays in everybody's bands. Yeah. And no one really know. You know what I mean? No one really knows who's in whose band. And it's just like. And, and, and, but, but it generates like. Like, you know, you. You go in the studio to record something and there's 12 people in there.
Chris30:00 Yeah.
Neil30:00 And they're all in different bands and somebody might get involved and someone might not, you know, and it's like there's tons of those stories around the Bay Area with a thrash scene, when bands were. When albums were getting recorded and the death scene as well. And like, no one really knows who played on them. No particular, you know. Exactly.
Chris30:18 Yeah.
Neil30:18 Because there was just. And it's that scene of people. So you end up with, you know, like four bands that come out.
Chris30:25 Yeah.
Neil30:26 And all break. It's, you know, within a similar time.
Chris30:28 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil30:29 Because they've all come from that thing and kind of, you know, grew up in this and influenced each other and. And. And have shared influences and stuff. So.
Chris30:37 Yeah.
Neil30:38 So, yeah, I think there was. There is definitely a bit of. A bit of that. I. Did you. I do. One things I do love about this as well is that they're. They're like clearly from like the tiniest little town. Yeah. It's a lovely bit in. In one of the articles that I read that said something like, you know, when. When Kryptonite blew up, like 99 of Americans couldn't point on the matter to where they were from.
Chris31:05 Yeah.
Neil31:07 And I just. I don't know. There again is something nice about that.
Chris31:09 Yeah.
Neil31:10 You know, like, I. I got a copy of Nirvana Unplugged.
Chris31:18 Yeah.
Neil31:18 This week.
Chris31:19 Yeah. That's a great album.
Neil31:21 It's so good. Oh, my God, we should totally do that.
Chris31:23 Yeah, let's do it. Let's do it next week. Done.
Neil31:25 Chosen already. We've never done a live album before. It's on. That's it. That's going to be dead. No foot n. Do it any. What I loved about that was. I'd forgotten how softly spoken Kurt Yeah, was.
Chris31:37 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil31:38 And, you know, and then you kind of realize that he's, you know, know, I was just like this hick little kid, really, you know, and blown into the. Into the spotlight. I don't know. Like, America had this brilliant way of doing that. These quiet kids who just were, you know, could write songs and then they would blow up into these megastars.
Chris31:57 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil31:58 It was an interesting time. It wasn't like, if you think, you know, you had, I don't know, like, like in the 80s, it was all big and brash, wasn't it? And. But that's what you. That's what you were. And America totally produced.
Chris32:12 Produced.
Neil32:13 Yeah, those people. Yeah, you know. Yeah, the, the, like the Gene Simmons.
Chris32:17 Yeah.
Neil32:17 Kind of, you know, everything was big and brash and, like, offensive. And then you look at the films.
Chris32:22 That were at the time as well, you know, everything that was coming through.
Neil32:24 It all had that ethos, aesthetic, you know, it did.
Chris32:28 It all had that. America is the biggest country in the world.
Neil32:31 It was huge, wasn't it? And then. And the thing for me was that I discovered America then. That's the America I know. And I've worked in America years for. For years and years. But the America I know is from those 80s movies. Yeah, same.
Chris32:43 Yeah, absolutely. It's Ghostbusters. It's. Yeah, it's all that stuff.
Neil32:47 That's what, that's what New York's supposed to look like, you know, and you always a bit disappointed when you get there. And like the martial arts.
Chris32:54 It was.
Neil32:54 So much that I didn't realize that.
Chris32:56 New York wasn't the capital of America. Oh, wow. I thought because New York was on the films.
Neil33:01 Yeah, yeah.
Chris33:01 And all the films are set in New York.
Neil33:02 Yeah.
Chris33:03 For some reason there must have. But they were, weren't there? There was a period of time where.
Neil33:06 Every film seemed to be set up. Quiz question, isn't it?
Chris33:09 I, I. That the New York was the capital because they had the.
Neil33:12 The Statue of Liberty and that's on.
Chris33:13 Everything and all that sort of stuff.
Neil33:15 And, and I, I didn't realize that.
Chris33:17 It wasn't until later that I went, oh, no, that's the capital.
Neil33:19 That's where all your films are set, isn't it?
Chris33:21 Exactly. Yeah.
Neil33:21 Except your political dramas there. Set in Washington.
Chris33:24 Yes.
Neil33:24 Yeah. But I've forgotten where I was going now.
Chris33:28 Hometown little Hicksville.
Neil33:29 Hometown little Hill, MTV Unplugged.
Chris33:32 And then America. Sending these little lads and then send them into the stratosphere.
Neil33:36 Oh, God, my brain's got. I'VE had too many Skittles. I think it's been my lady. It's been my lad's bir. We've had birthday cake today as well. So I'm off. And I don't normally have that much sugar.
Chris33:46 No.
Neil33:46 And honestly, I feel like I want to go rob a bank. Do the Dakar rally or do you know what I mean?
Chris33:52 That specific one.
Neil33:54 Yeah. Right now. Right now I just want to just. Let's just do it. Yeah. We'll program into the sad.
Chris33:59 Yeah. I'll sit in the side and I'll shout, like, right turn.
Neil34:02 Brilliant. Yeah, yeah. Right. We're just going to do it fast. It'd be brilliant.
Chris34:06 Yeah.
Neil34:07 He just reminded me. Did. I must have sent you. This is one of my favorite clips ever of that. A rally driver called Sammy. And there's like. There's an Indian guy next to two Indian guys and they race these cars and he's just going. He's like. Like hard left and he's like constantly going off the track and he's going, sammy, you will break the car. And it's like just swearing and screaming each other inside the car and it just. Yeah, that's what rally is supposed to be about. I've not seen that one.
Chris34:32 You have to send me that one.
Neil34:33 Rallying. The problem with rallying is the Swedish were too good at it.
Chris34:36 Yeah.
Neil34:36 And they're just like dead calm.
Chris34:38 Yeah, yeah.
Neil34:38 So I mean, the car will like slam down a thousand feet and roll 20 times.
Chris34:42 Yeah.
Neil34:43 And they just like get out and they're like, oh, yeah. Bit damaged. And then they carry on racing again.
Chris34:48 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil34:49 Kind of want I feel in rallying. Needs more of that, you know?
Chris34:52 Yeah.
Neil34:52 SCREAMY shouting More Italians.
Chris34:54 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil34:55 I mean, yeah. More drama.
Chris34:57 I like Subarus.
Neil35:02 Blue ones with the yellow writing on. Blue ones with yellow. The Colin McRae. Yeah, I like that. I like Colin McRae's rally on. On.
Chris35:08 I can't remember the PlayStation 2 or 1. Even my good one. Yeah.
Neil35:13 I can't remember what I think I played on the Dreamcast, you know.
Chris35:16 Really?
Neil35:16 Yeah.
Chris35:17 Right.
Neil35:17 I can't remember what I played on. I was always. I remember being dead sad when he died.
Chris35:21 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil35:21 In the helicopter.
Chris35:23 Yeah.
Neil35:23 Apparently I might have this wrong. I'm writing and tell me if I've got it wrong. I remember reading that he used to fly this helicopter everywhere.
Chris35:34 Yeah.
Neil35:34 Didn't have a pilot's license. Literally just got in it. Yeah. Just literally. I mean, proper rally. Just properly just like got in it. Tore himself to fly a helicopter and then just flew all over the place.
Chris35:44 Yeah.
Neil35:45 And then no one questioned. No one ever checks. No one ever checks. I mean at what point does anyone go, go, you need to show. I mean, he says tell if you're gonna hire a helicopter.
Chris35:54 Yeah.
Neil35:55 You have to show you, you have to have your license and all your stuff in it.
Chris35:58 So he just obviously bought one.
Neil35:59 If it's your helicopter, no one ever asks, do they? You just turn up. It's not like, you know, the police don't stop you and give you a producer and say, show us your mot.
Chris36:08 Maybe that's what we've got to do.
Neil36:09 We've got to go, go and buy a helicopter.
Chris36:11 Loads of skills.
Neil36:12 Yeah.
Chris36:13 Buy a helicopter. Off we go.
Neil36:14 I like it. Do you remember? That's reminded me. Oh God, I'm gonna go on so many tangents. My brain's going a million miles an hour today. I remember in the 90s, yeah. Late night, it was late 90s, early 2000s, I worked at a bank and like I, I was in like back end support. So when things went really, really bad and they've been through all the tiers of support, then they'd come to us so we had to be on call. And I remember at that time of the, of, of, of the, the history of the world, it wouldn't, you wouldn't go a month without getting a, a page. And I'd come in at like three in the morning and it would be because some of the local kids were stealing diggers and they were digging cash machines out of the wall. So they, what they would do and, and I'm not suggesting anyone does this, but I, I still, still think it's just like unbelievable as it is. Bonkers to. The local kids will go and get drunk.
Chris37:11 Yeah.
Neil37:12 Or maybe not get drunk, but they would, they would do whatever kids do.
Chris37:15 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil37:15 Wait till like 2 in the morning. Then what they would do is they would go and find a building site.
Chris37:20 Yeah.
Neil37:21 And they would steal one of the big jcb, you know, the great big JCB diggers as big as a house. They would drive that down the road to a local shop.
Chris37:31 Yeah.
Neil37:31 With a cash point outside.
Chris37:32 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil37:33 They would then take the big digger and things, scoop the cash point out and then they would drive it back to the building site. Yeah. Where they would then try and open it and, and often we would like. But the thing is for us that had got our computers, it got like computers. I mean there were people there that were really excited about the cash being lost. I. I was bothered because like someone had stolen one of my computers.
Chris37:55 Yeah.
Neil37:55 So so often we would have to. We'd have to go and fish these things out of the building site. There'd be like. They'll have gone, they'll have gone off. They'll like you. They'll die. The die would have shot off everywhere. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Would have had to go and you know, fish all of the stuff we could back to the. The bank and put a fresh on him. But the thing that got me like the first time it happened, I was like, oh, how bold. And the police were there. The police are like, oh no, it's just like 15 year olds, you know. Well, 14 year olds. I mean I was thinking these are. They're mastermind like criminals and they're almost just teenagers. Yeah. If you get. When you find them it will just be, you know, 15 year olds board and you know, they rarely get the money out. Normally when we find them they still, you know like the kind of.
Chris38:42 They're all covered in the, in the dye.
Neil38:44 But yeah, they've got like pink dial every little. Little white eyes where they've kind of blasted themselves with it. Trying to say what me. I was just, I was just watching. There's a lot of that. Do you know the first one happens and you're like, oh, you know. Yeah, that's bonkers organization. I remember the end of that year we. I mean we must have done 10. It was just loads of them that were constantly digging these. These things out and the chaos it caused.
Chris39:07 Yeah.
Neil39:08 Because you get my little corner shop.
Chris39:09 Yeah.
Neil39:10 It's almost stuffed a digger through you shop window. Yeah. Just be like a massive hole in there.
Chris39:15 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil39:17 Anyway, that's what the kids of the 90s did.
Chris39:19 What was I going to talk about then? When you were talking about that there was something.
Neil39:21 I went somewhere.
Chris39:22 Oh, the Ukraine.
Neil39:25 The Ukraine, yeah.
Chris39:26 Yeah, there was. There was a thing about, you know.
Neil39:28 When Russia came the first time. Yeah. In 2014. The Crimea doing it.
Chris39:33 No, no, no.
Neil39:34 Like this time around with Putin and that. Oh, y. But with Ben and that. Yeah, but.
Chris39:40 But like they've had a couple of goes at it, haven't they?
Neil39:42 Yeah, so.
Chris39:43 So the first round.
Neil39:44 Yeah.
Chris39:46 Obviously Ukraine gave him a good ide in. Yeah.
Neil39:48 And one of the things that they said was like.
Chris39:52 And I might be making this up. Yeah, this might be.
Neil39:55 This might be. Keep going. I'm.
Chris39:56 This is podcast stuff where people make like this. Look at Joe Rogan.
Neil40:00 This is going and There was.
Chris40:02 Apparently there was a scenario where they just said, look, look, whatever, you can.
Neil40:06 Start because like, the Russians retreated and all that. Yeah, but they left all their tanks.
Chris40:10 Yeah, they left all their gear and.
Neil40:11 They left all the stuff. Yeah.
Chris40:12 And the line was, let it spoils the war.
Neil40:14 Just take it.
Chris40:14 Like if you, if you.
Neil40:15 If you end up taking it, if.
Chris40:17 You end up with a tank.
Neil40:18 Yeah, that's yours.
Chris40:21 There's clips of these, these lads, similar sort of thing.
Neil40:23 Yeah, they just nick this tank.
Chris40:26 They chucked loads of stereos in it and they were playing like massive, like really loud.
Neil40:31 Yeah, well, I think it was driving down the road just like, if I. Honestly, that'd be me thunderstruck. I'd be just like doing it. My friend, I have a tank, you know, my friend Bob had a tank, has a tank. Yeah, well, strictly speaking, it's an armored people carrier, but it looks like it's got. It's got a gun and. And everything. Yeah, this was back in the 90s and he. Bob was so. He was just. He was one of those. There were people you meet in your life that are just. Just cut above everybody else. Bob's one of those, you know, like, however far a normal human would take it, Bob would go two steps. Anyway, he bought this thing off ebay.
Chris41:08 Yeah.
Neil41:09 Yeah. Had it trailered to his house, drove it around the neighborhood, you know, got into a bit of the police, did all things. So then he used to. Then he drove it on. On the, like the field behind his house and got trouble with the council and the police. And then. Is that like three stars on gta? Just. You're just permanently in trouble with his tank. And then eventually he decides what I mean going to do is I'm going to. I want to put in my garage and park it up for the winter. So. So that's what he did. I put it in there and. But then couldn't get the gun in. Right. So what he did was he cut like a little hole out of the garage door and so. So if you went around his house, you would just see the gun. Yeah, you just see the gun sticking out front. Anyway, he had this. He had this party and we all went around his house and we. We'd all had a little bit to drink and Bob, we were egging him one day. Go, Bob, go get the tank. Go in the tank. Show us the tank. Show us tank. Anyway, Bob gets in the tank a little bit drunker than we were. Yeah. Pressed the wrong button and the top of the tank started to spin. Round and. And the garage fell down on top of the tank. And we were so drunk and we honestly just laughing so much. And then like. And then the police arrived again. It was shit. Genius. It was.
Chris42:27 It.
Neil42:27 And the best thing about that, it wasn't just the police turned up. And then the local. The local paper.
Chris42:35 Bob.
Neil42:36 So there's a picture of Bob in his tank with the garage, like detached garage completely destroyed. Like a rat falling around the tank. And then Bob's like the other little thing.
Chris42:47 We've got to put that out as.
Neil42:48 Opposed Bobby's like stuff standing up with this kind of. With his arms up like, kind of. You look. We are the champions.
Chris42:54 You got it somewhere.
Neil42:56 I'll see if I can find it. I just gotta put that. Genius. You would think people would be. You'd think he'd be embarrassed. But no, Bob was like. He had. He had a little frame of it on his desk for years afterwards. Oh, God, I miss Bob. Bob, if you listen to this, I miss you, Bob.
Chris43:12 Oh, God.
Neil43:13 Is he still around? I bet you. I hope he is. Come on.
Chris43:15 For a guest. He's got a big guest now.
Neil43:17 So, so good. So good.
Chris43:18 Bob.
Neil43:19 What if he's like really boring and.
Chris43:20 Straight now and didn't do anything like that anymore? Surely not.
Neil43:22 I bet he's still got a tank.
Chris43:26 I don't know, man. There's so many dimensions of playing live that are so enjoyable. Whether it's looking out at the crowd that you've never seen before. You'd think that you look out there and it's always the same, but it's not. There's something individual about every single show and there's something fun about every show. It's hard to say whether it's looking out in the crowd that's fun or going over there and messing with Chris while he's playing his guitar or, you know, just walking over there and picking on Todd's bass string while he's playing or going back and messing with the Greg or messing with the crowd. Jumping out in the crowd, running through the crowd. You get to play an hour, an hour and a half a day. The other 22 and a half hours. It's all about that hour and a half. You know, for me, playing live, the fans. When you make the connection, like sometimes you connect with a couple people, sometimes you connect with the whole place. And when you connect with the whole place and like all those people are looking back and they're hung on every move you make and every word that's sung, you know, there's 110,000 people singing the songs back, waiting on the intro of a song. And when they hear the first 10 seconds of a song, the place erupts. Those are special moments that you just. You can't duplicate them any way you try. That's the only place you get that feeling. Shall we get back on task? Back on track?
Neil44:37 What do you mean? Do you think we've deviated? I would say that this. If there was an award. Yeah.
Chris44:44 For like, most deviating podcast.
Neil44:46 Yeah. I think we win it.
Chris44:47 I think.
Neil44:48 I think we get it. I think that's the point of podcasts.
Chris44:51 Yeah.
Neil44:51 Nobody want. Genuinely. If you really wanted to know about the history of Three Doors down and about a life album, you'd go and look it up.
Chris44:58 Yeah.
Neil44:59 We're here to entertain you.
Chris45:00 Yeah.
Neil45:01 And tell you about tanks and people getting drunk and all of that stuff that goes along with it. Because that's. I don't know. I like to reminisce a little bit. I like to remember. I like. One of the things I do remember about this reference record is having in the car.
Chris45:12 Yeah.
Neil45:13 And I was being sent all over the country doing, like, fishing cash points out of edges. But I'd spent a lot of time doing things like that at this particular time. Have you ever been fishing?
Chris45:26 Sorry?
Neil45:26 You just had the word fishing. It set me off. Yeah. When I was a lot younger. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I did a bit of that.
Chris45:32 I don't know whether I'd like fishing now.
Neil45:35 It's dead boring.
Chris45:36 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil45:37 I don't. I don't, you know, I don't know.
Chris45:39 Should we try it? I don't. I won't want to hurt the fish, though.
Neil45:42 Come here, fishy, fishy. Only if you want to. Only if you want to. I don't know. I like the idea of the fishing and the sitting and the chilling and.
Chris45:50 Being the nature, but I don't want to cause any pain to any animals, you know?
Neil45:53 You know, I do you like. I watch weird YouTube stuff. Yeah. I watch welding and forging and Mended Mark. Yeah, he was Mended Mark is working on a pioneer record, a pioneer tape player from a Ferrari from the 80s. And then mending that. And I love that.
Chris46:09 Have you seen Bobby Fingers?
Neil46:11 No.
Chris46:12 I've got to send you Bobby Fingers.
Neil46:13 Bobby Fingers. I like that sound of that. But there's a dude called Carl and he's called Fish with Carl.
Chris46:17 Right.
Neil46:18 Okay. And it sounds really. But it's a guy that goes fishing. Yeah. But, you know, it can Tell a story.
Chris46:26 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil46:27 And it's dead. But a fishing's dead, boy. Nothing happens.
Chris46:29 Yeah.
Neil46:30 For ages.
Chris46:30 Yeah.
Neil46:31 And then. And then, you know, like, it's not like anything exciting. The fish happens. That was what's supposed to happen.
Chris46:39 Yeah.
Neil46:39 And then. And then they put it back and it's great. There was the fishing one that the.
Chris46:43 Comedians did, wasn't there? Oh, Bob.
Neil46:45 Yeah. Yeah. I loved that. Gone fishy.
Chris46:47 That was.
Neil46:47 Yeah. That was Mortimer and Paul Whitehouse.
Chris46:50 Yeah, yeah.
Neil46:51 That was lockdown.
Chris46:52 Yeah.
Neil46:52 And that. I honestly, I think that might have kept me alive. Yeah. The fish with Carl thing are the reason I'm gonna get back to fish with. With Carl. He is just bloody brilliant at telling the story. Yeah. So the history of what he's doing and why he's there and he's able to make this, like, the. The videography is really cool. He's in, like, pretty places and lakes and things. Yeah. But he's just able to tell these really nice. But it's about him. It's really personal. It's about his life and. And. And, you know, what's going on and who the people are. And. I don't know. I think it's true, you know, there are. There is some. I think the topic didn't make much difference. I don't think it's that important. Do you know what I mean? I think. I think it's about engaging with people, being able to tell a story. Yeah. And he's dead good at that.
Chris47:34 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil47:35 Dead good. I. Yeah. You like that? I think if you don't like that, you wouldn't like fishing.
Chris47:40 Yeah.
Neil47:41 Okay. So that's the first test. Maybe try give that a go. Fishing with cars.
Chris47:45 My dad goes fishing.
Neil47:46 I paid.
Chris47:47 He looks like.
Neil47:47 He looks like he goes fishing.
Chris47:51 It takes Nancy with him sometimes and they. She enjoys it.
Neil47:54 Nancy's like a firecracker. I cannot imagine her, like. I don't know. I just cannot imagine Nancy doing that. Yeah. Your eldest, Aaron. I can.
Chris48:04 Yeah.
Neil48:04 And my eldest, Leo.
Chris48:05 Yeah, yeah.
Neil48:06 I can imagine him doing it, but like Nancy and Barney, my youngest and your youngest. No, no, I. I could imagine them, like, you just see, like, I don't know, a boat on fire. You know what I mean? And they'd just be going, we didn't do it. Like, floats across there and, you know. Yeah. Some local farmers screaming at them. I cannot imagine that.
Chris48:25 Yeah.
Neil48:26 Can you imagine your dad fishing there?
Chris48:27 Yeah, yeah, yeah, he does that. I don't know. Did he catch. I don't know if you could bother about catching stuff.
Neil48:32 I think he's like, getting out of the house. Getting out? Yeah, yeah. Getting out of doing it.
Chris48:35 Yeah.
Neil48:35 This is a bit like fishing for us. This is our fishing.
Chris48:38 Yeah. Yeah.
Neil48:39 Do you know, I can. I have to say, I do feel you're a bit of a slave driver today because, like, normally.
Chris48:44 Because I was ready.
Neil48:45 Normally we get in the studio and there's like, we. We normally get a good hour of faff. Like, earliest we're getting is like seven o' clock on a Sunday. It's normally like eight or nine.
Chris48:53 Yeah.
Neil48:53 And then there's at least an hour of faffing. Even if we're ready, there's still a lot of, you know, what you've been doing. Just a lot of faffing and dicking about.
Chris49:00 Yeah.
Neil49:01 And then eventually it's like, well, we better. Suppose we better do the show then. So we do it. And tonight you were like 10 minutes in. You like, you ready? Sticking a microphone in my face. Come on, get on with it.
Chris49:14 I look at that record and I actually. Just physically looking at those pictures and I remember where we were standing. We took that set of pictures under the Brooklyn Bridge. I'd never been to New York. I'd never been out of South Mississippi, really. And it was so big. I mean, everything was just so big in front of us. And I remember, like, we used to think about. I mean, man, you think we could do this 20 years? You really think we could do this 20 years? I don't know, man. We can try, but it has absolutely been 20 years of a curvy road. But it's been a very blue Lestrade. Yeah. To see it again, it's just, man. I mean, it kind of. You get kind of the same feeling. You kind of lose a little bit of sleep over.
Neil49:50 It's pretty cool.
Chris49:51 My life changed 1000%. Every aspect of it changed instantly, almost overnight because of that. Right. We're trying to go back on track again.
Neil50:00 Yeah, that's my fault.
Chris50:01 That one was totally my fault.
Neil50:03 You do your best to get us back on track. I'm not feeling like I want to stay on track today.
Chris50:08 Shall we do some facts?
Neil50:10 Facts?
Chris50:10 Shall we go through the facts?
Neil50:11 I shall open the blog first thing. Do you know where the name came from?
Chris50:17 I did. I read the story off. Off the blog? Yes.
Neil50:19 Off to blog.
Chris50:19 Yes.
Neil50:20 I did not. I didn't know it at all. But in the beginning it was three piece. Right. So. So in the beginning, the. The band were. Yeah. So it was. It was Brad Arnold on drums, Matt Roberts on lead, and Todd Harrell on bass. Still in high school. And what's high school?
Chris50:42 Is that up to 18?
Neil50:43 High school. I think high school's up to 16, I think. I don't know. I might be wrong with that.
Chris50:49 Yeah.
Neil50:49 About that point. Like, you would be the same as our high school, you know, Secondary. Secondary school. And anyway, so they're. They're in high school. They're playing a gig in Foley, Alabama. I know where Alabama is. I don't know where Foley is. I'd probably point to the middle of it.
Chris51:05 Yeah.
Neil51:05 That's what you do, isn't it?
Chris51:06 Yeah. There.
Neil51:08 My friend's from Alabama.
Chris51:09 He.
Neil51:11 I'm gonna go off track already. He taught me that, y'. All.
Chris51:16 Yeah.
Neil51:17 Is singular. Did you know that?
Chris51:19 Yeah.
Neil51:20 Do you know what the plural is? Y' alls.
Chris51:22 All.
Neil51:22 Y'.
Chris51:22 All.
Neil51:25 He's brilliant. He taught me how to swear in. In Southern. He was. I loved him. He was. He was absolutely epic. Absolutely epic. Name was Robert Gillies. Listen to the show. Oh, I've recognized that he's retired now, and I miss him greatly. He was one of those people that when. When the hits the fan. Yeah. He is somebody that could make you laugh. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Always. He was really. I liked him a lot. Looked a bit like Santa Claus. Had a big white beard. What are we doing?
Chris51:55 Talking about Three Doors Down. The band name.
Neil51:58 The band name. They were playing in Foley, Alabama, and they saw a sign that said Doors Down. Nothing else on it at all. And so they just put three. There were three of them. So there's Three Doors down, and that became the name of the band. Naming. Something's dead odd. So I don't know. I. I kind of like. It goes back to your point earlier where they're just dead easy going. Yes, that'll do. Yeah. Yeah, let's do that. Yeah. Okay. And then that's it. The band's called Swedo's Down Forever.
Chris52:25 Yeah. Yeah.
Neil52:26 Okay, great.
Chris52:27 Yeah.
Neil52:27 It reminds me massively of Dave Grohl's Foo Fighters.
Chris52:30 Yeah.
Neil52:31 Like he said, if I thought the band was going to be serious, do you think I'd have called it the Foo Fighters? Which I think's good. This album was released on February 8, 2000. Do you want to know an interesting fact about that? The copyright date is 1999.
Chris52:45 Right.
Neil52:46 So it was recorded and it was in the can and fully copyrighted in 99 while the record label figured out what to do with the bun. Quite sure how to do it, what to do with them where to kind of do all the things. And was recorded in Ardent Studios in Memphis, Tennessee. There's a lovely interview with. I think it's Brad, talking of about. The recording studio they'd used before was like someone's bedroom.
Chris53:12 Yeah, yeah.
Neil53:13 And then they went from there into Ardent Studios, which is this kind of.
Chris53:16 Big, proper big thing.
Neil53:18 Pro thing was mixed at the record plant as well.
Chris53:21 Ah, okay.
Neil53:22 Which we've talked about before. Track count 11, approximately 42 minutes long.
Chris53:28 Yeah.
Neil53:28 Which is about right.
Chris53:29 That's a good.
Neil53:29 Yeah, yeah, it's quite good. Guess where it peaked on the Billboard. It's got to be high seven.
Chris53:35 Yeah.
Neil53:35 Pretty high then. Do you know why I did a search? I used. I used Claude to tell me, getting.
Chris53:41 Into Claude at the minute.
Neil53:42 I like Claude. Yeah. So I asked Claude, top three albums of 2000, go.
Chris53:49 Ah, I don't know.
Neil53:51 Oh, that's rubbish.
Chris53:51 Linkin Park, I don't know.
Neil53:53 NSync really sold 10 million copies?
Chris53:56 Yeah.
Neil53:57 Eminem, the Marshall Mac. Oh, it was about that time.
Chris53:59 Wow.
Neil54:00 7.9 million copies came out. Brittany Spears. Oops, I did it again.
Chris54:07 Yeah.
Neil54:08 Eight million. Backstreet Boys, Black and Blue. Linkin Park. Hybrid Theory came out.
Chris54:12 Got it right.
Neil54:13 He did. And Santana did Supernatural.
Chris54:16 Okay. Really? That was that year.
Neil54:18 I thought that was older. This record was the 11th best selling record of 2000. They're massive records. Eminem, Britney Spears, Backstreet Boys. Dave. The kids just lapped that ruby shop, didn't they? I mean, it's that. That time of, of the year. Interestingly, there's something else unique about 2000. Can you guess what it is?
Chris54:40 Unique about 2000?
Neil54:41 Yeah. 99, strictly speaking. But I'm gonna take it as 2000.
Chris54:44 Well, we thought the world was gonna end, didn't we?
Neil54:46 That was the first thing we did. Yeah. I didn't. I. Yeah, you worked in.
Chris54:51 You worked in the scene though, didn't you?
Neil54:53 I was in the scene, yeah. We were just. We were just switching stuff off and back on again a lot more than usual. So the interesting thing is it's the peak of CDs. Is it really? It is. This is the Napster era, where CDs and digital downloads started to take off. So 2000 is peak CDs.
Chris55:12 Yeah.
Neil55:13 This is the era when you would go into a studio, big, fast, big, big flash studio. The emphasis was on the music.
Chris55:21 Yeah.
Neil55:22 You would make an album, you would then sell the album. The vast majority of the profit from the album would come from selling CDs. You go out on tour as well. But actually the vast majority of the money would come in. Many of the tours of this era would leave lose money. But the money that you were basically trying to get your name out in front of people to people buy the CD. Buy CDs, which I think is interesting because a lot of. As we go, obviously we. The golden rule of the show is 25 years old or more. We're getting into that point now where 2001, 2002, 2000. You know, as that time goes on.
Chris55:57 We'Ll be able to add some more records.
Neil55:59 It starts to change a little bit. And the money from seed and the industry don't know what to do. And you can see it, I think in lots of the weird stuff that they did. Yeah. Anyway, 11th best selling album of the year. Which would have made them some cash at the time. Live cash at the time.
Chris56:14 Yeah, yeah.
Neil56:16 It was certified seven times platinum, which means it sold 7 million units. Singles, Kryptonite, Loser, Duck and Run and Be like that. Be like. That's my favorite.
Chris56:30 Yeah, think. Yeah.
Neil56:32 So, yeah, we've. We've talked about that. The album cover.
Chris56:37 Yes.
Neil56:38 Let me get to the section on the album cover because I think that was interesting. Where's my section on the album cover? So the art direction and design for the Better Life were handled by PR Brown, who's a designer. You. Specialist in the. In the. In the music industry. Um, worked with Rush. Ah, okay. And I just think it's interesting, like the. It's kind of like a blue toned image, but it's meant to be like a film strip kind of thing.
Chris57:10 Yeah.
Neil57:10 But like I've got the original CD of this still and it's blue. It's got like a really blue tinge to it. I'm going to show Chris evidence for the thing whenever you see it online. Yeah, it's not anymore.
Chris57:22 It's. No, it's. It's.
Neil57:24 It's kind of my monochrome and I don't know whether that. I'm not quite sure. I checked it on Spotify. I checked it on. I don't know. It's just dawned to me. I wonder if my copies just faded or something. What if it wasn't blue? It's definitely like a blue tinge to it. Anyway, I quite liked. I quite like the album cover. I think it's quite neat. It's kind of a nice way to get all of the band on there without just a band shot.
Chris57:48 Yeah.
Neil57:49 I also did in the blog. I'm just looking at. I just look, I've not saved it. But in the blog vlog there was a picture of the original three.
Chris57:59 Yes.
Neil57:59 And they genuinely look like Jimmy. They don't look old enough to drive. They look so. And I know so often you get that with bands that this, you know when we talk about these debut albums and stuff. But they look. They're like the youngest band I think we've. Or they look, look the youngest. The band's history. They were all in high school when they started. So Brad Arnold, Matt Roberts and Todd Harold were in school. We talked about that. Kind of grew up on Bush and Pearl Jam and Metallica and.
Chris58:28 And.
Neil58:29 And those kinds of things. Brad Arnold played the drums, had written a lot of the songs nobody wanted to sing. So he was. Oh, I'll do it. So ended up drumming and singing.
Chris58:43 Yeah.
Neil58:44 For all of this period.
Chris58:46 Yeah.
Neil58:46 Until kind of they got more, you know, more people involved. This is the only album that played. He drums on and sang at the. At the same time. Famously said that he only ended up as a singer because nobody else wanted to do it.
Chris59:00 Yeah.
Neil59:00 It was Todd Harold's girlfriend that convinced him to sing.
Chris59:03 Yeah. Yeah.
Neil59:04 Which I think is. Yeah. Is. Is really interesting. They did. There was a lovely interview. I think we've got it in here. There's a lovely interview where they talked about one of the first gigs that they did. They only knew four songs.
Chris59:18 Yeah.
Neil59:19 And they've learned they lived it round. So they just played them over again. Which I thought was really cool. Self titled demo, which is. They did an initial pressing of 1,000 copies. Six of those tracks went on to the better life.
Chris59:34 Yeah.
Neil59:36 And there's a lovely story that says the first thousand copies took 2000. Sorry, took two years to sell. So they've made a thousand copies. Couldn't sell. You can just imagine, like just stacked up in people's bedrooms. Um. And then Kryptonite landed on WCPRFM in Biloxi and as soon as that happened, it blew up overnight.
Chris59:58 Yeah.
Neil59:58 So like they'd be. And it's funny, I'm sure loads people thought they came from nowhere and it was an overnight success. But they'd been trying to, you know, shift these demo copies. No one was interested for that period of time. It was the operations manager at the radio that added it to the rotation and then that got sent out to a bunch of other places. Wxtb. Every US radio station was W Something.
Chris1:00:22 Yes.
Neil1:00:23 Or K something.
Chris1:00:24 Yeah. Yeah. Why is that? Where does that come from?
Neil1:00:27 I don't know. But they were. They were dead good I remember. I remember working in the US in the early 2000s and just you could tune into any radio station and you get this kind of. Yeah, yeah, that's just. It's just the way. It's like the sound of America, I think. I'm sure there were pop stations as well.
Chris1:00:43 Yeah, yeah.
Neil1:00:44 Well, it was all.
Chris1:00:45 It was always state based as well, wasn't it?
Neil1:00:47 Depending on. Oh, yeah, yeah.
Chris1:00:49 Own sort of thing that he was in.
Neil1:00:50 Every bar you would go and sit into would have like this kind of pick the right bar, you'd have this kind of stuff, which I thought was really cool when I was out there. The showcase. Oh, that was interesting as well there. So these radio stations sent those, that original demo to Finn Daly who was working for Bill McGathy in DeGroote Entertainment and he arranged a showcase for them at CBGB's. Yeah. Which is prong. Tommy Victor, he was. I mean he might. I suppose it's way after way around. He was there in the 80s, I think. Yeah, yeah. So there's a CBGB's and. And that's essentially where they were, where they were signed. Yeah. So they were kind of there. It was like, you know, just to hear them, hear them going. They were courted by Universal and Atlantic and they went with Universal and they signed to Republic Records, which again is interesting. Republic were a bit more edgy, I think.
Chris1:01:53 Yeah. And it sounds like from. From the interviews that we've been had on and that they actually had quite a good time with the label. Like some people really fight with labels, but.
Neil1:02:01 Yeah, no, I think these guys seem to have a. Quite a good time. I think they're just easy going, aren't they?
Chris1:02:04 Yeah, it makes sense.
Neil1:02:05 I mean, I think they just. Yeah, I can. I don't know in the interviews I can just imagine him like the record label going, so we're going to do a record, we're to do this. This. Yeah. They could have just said, like, you know what? We're not going to do a record. Yeah, okay. That's great. Thanks. They're just so lovely people. Oh yeah, we talked about Ardent. So it was recorded. They sent them to Ardent Recording and paid for that. ZZ Top and Led Zeppelin and REM and, and, and stuff all recorded there.
Chris1:02:31 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil1:02:32 Brilliant, Brilliant studio. Just imagine that those kids. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Written Kryptonite in algebra.
Chris1:02:38 Yeah.
Neil1:02:38 Recorded a demo. No one cares. A couple of radio stations pick it up and all of a sudden you're studio, you know. So the mixing was Toby Wright he did Alice in Chains, Corn Seven Dust, a bunch of other stuff. Super popular dude. All that post grunge stuff though, isn't it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. He's got. Obviously, I think there's like. I think what happens with this is a few people that kind of have a taste for it, good at it, and then everyone just kind of flosses to them, interestingly. So Duck and Run not enough. Be like that, Better Life and so I Need were all reportedly written and recorded after being signed by Universal. So there was a bunch of stuff like Kryptonite that was written before.
Chris1:03:19 Yes.
Neil1:03:19 And then there was a bunch of the big stuff afterwards. So Be like that, Better Life and so on.
Chris1:03:23 Yeah. Remember that from the interviews they were talking about? They. They had a few songs and then.
Neil1:03:28 They were like, well, let's.
Chris1:03:28 Let's get some more then.
Neil1:03:29 Got to make some. Some stuff up there. Which I think is really interesting. I think, you know, I. Again, I'm the. The production here. For me, I know there was a real similarity in a lot of these bands, but there's something that 3 Doors down did that. The guitars had that crunch to them. They weren't like overly polished. They were kind of really thick and they've got that American hard rock sound. But there's a rawness to it.
Chris1:03:51 Yeah.
Neil1:03:51 Bass guitar as well. There's some lovely, lovely bits in here where the bass guitar kind of has got some space in there and it sounds gorgeous. It's got this kind of. I don't know. I'm trying to think of other bands that have got a similar tone, but. Yeah, just really cool. Really cool sign. I. I think anyway. And I always like the product. I think the production of this has stood up really well.
Chris1:04:15 Yes. Yeah. Yeah.
Neil1:04:16 I think actually, as albums go, like, lyrically, everything about this record has stood the test of time. It stood like Bush's 16 stone that we did.
Chris1:04:22 Yeah, yeah.
Neil1:04:23 Again, for me, that was one that, you know, doesn't need touching, doesn't need remastering. Leave them alone.
Chris1:04:27 Yeah.
Neil1:04:28 Don't bloody reissue them with a different color record cover. Yeah, yeah. Leave them alone.
Chris1:04:33 Ye.
Neil1:04:35 We've talked about. Yeah, we talked about the album artwork already. Oh. In the release as well. The critical reception when this really was released wasn't particularly popular. It was really mixed. I was really shocked as I was looking at it. Yeah, it was interesting. Like all muted music. All music said it was uninspiring and cliched.
Chris1:05:05 Right, Right.
Neil1:05:08 They see.
Chris1:05:09 This is one where. This is one where the. The audience, the Audience chose what this was about.
Neil1:05:16 It wasn't one where the critic.
Chris1:05:17 You, you know, you wouldn't. If you were into this band, you.
Neil1:05:20 Wouldn'T care what the critics say. No, no.
Chris1:05:22 Cuz you're into this band.
Neil1:05:23 Well, I think the, the critics were saying that they were like carbon copies or too many influences here. Jam and Bush and Goo Goo Dolls. I don't hear Goo Goo Dolls here.
Chris1:05:35 Not so much. No.
Neil1:05:36 No.
Chris1:05:36 Definitely hear the Pearl Jam and the Bush.
Neil1:05:38 Maybe later. Goo Doll. I mean, Goo Dolls were kind of. They're one of my favorite bands. We haven't covered Goo Goo Dolls. They are. In the early records, they were spiky, weren't they? Yeah, they were beautiful. Really raucous rock and roll. And then every single record from the Goo Goo Dolls just gets a little bit more polished, a little bit more commercial. It's like their first records, like the Boy Named Goo and all that stuff. And you know, they just. Every record is just getting a little bit more packaged. Commercial. Yeah, a little bit more commercial. A little bit. And there's a. I think there's a point in the Goo Goo Dolls history where everybody will go, that's my favorite.
Chris1:06:13 Yes.
Neil1:06:13 And it kind of depends. It's almost like having a slider of how much commercial.
Chris1:06:17 That's my. That's my Bon Jovi. That's my Google Dolls.
Neil1:06:20 Yeah, yeah, yeah, it is. Anyway, I don't hear Google Dolls in here, but I do hear lots of. Of Bush and Pearl Jam and stuff. And I don't, I don't. I don't think it's fair. Like we did Extreme last week and I think Nuno absolutely, definitely wore his, like, influences on his sleeve. I didn't get criticized for it.
Chris1:06:49 No, no.
Neil1:06:49 Do you know?
Chris1:06:50 Yeah, but.
Neil1:06:51 But I think. But it's interesting some of. Of these, but not all of them are like. Some of of them. Like Loudwire said it was the best post gringe release of 2000 it got, but like I said, it's just mixed criticism. It was. The album was ranked as the 46th biggest selling album of the entire decade.
Chris1:07:13 Yeah.
Neil1:07:14 Yeah, that was all right. That's some going, isn't it? You had some big stuff in there. You got like Slipknot doing their things and. Yeah, very good. We talked about the singles. So it was. Yeah, yeah. So it was Kryptonite. Kryptonite was the first one. And then I. I'm gonna guess, I think there's Loser, Duck and Runner. Then be like, that was the last one. That was 2001.
Chris1:07:35 Yeah.
Neil1:07:37 Yeah peaked at number 24 on the charts. It was re recorded for guess which movie. What was Be like that? American Pie 2. Was it really? It was. I like American Pie.
Chris1:07:54 Yes.
Neil1:07:55 Dead good.
Chris1:07:55 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Fun.
Neil1:07:56 It was funny.
Chris1:07:57 Yeah.
Neil1:07:58 Don't make movies like that anymore.
Chris1:08:00 Not allowed. Are you? Get told off. Cancelled.
Neil1:08:04 Yeah, probably. Yeah. Oh. With the Better Life blowing up, the band had a big problem and the label didn't like it. But the front man being behind the drum kit didn't work particularly well.
Chris1:08:19 Yeah.
Neil1:08:19 So they hired Richard Lyles as the touring drummer so that Brad Arnold could step out in front and. And be. Be the dude. He was only the drummer from 2000 to 2002. Right. Okay. So they had quite a few drummers. They did know that story. The other bit that's really interesting. Again, I saw this fantastic thing. Brad Arnold saying the. That period was like really intense. The band were playing gigs everywhere. Yeah, yeah. And Brad Arnold was saying like, I'd never left Mississippi.
Chris1:08:54 Yeah, yeah.
Neil1:08:55 And we were from a tiny hick little village, did this thing, recorded this tape. No one cared. All of a sudden, boom. It was like overnight we were just everyone. Everybody wanted us. And like I said, it was just like really intense but like the best time ever. Just all over the place.
Chris1:09:11 Place.
Neil1:09:13 Which yeah, again, I think is pretty. Pretty cool. All over TV as well. Which was quite cool. They do. You know, I knew I'd heard this when I couldn't remember the name of the movie they were in this. The track Duck and Run was in a 2001 movie called the Hole.
Chris1:09:32 Right.
Neil1:09:32 Thor Birch and Keira Knightley. I like Keira Knightley a lot. Really dark, is it? Yeah. If you've not seen it. That was when I was going to the movies a lot there. I used to go quite a lot. And I think I had a pass. You know, you get. You know, you get those. Pass. Yeah, yeah. So you'd pay like. I pay like. I remember. I think it was 20 quid. I paid 20 quid. And I'd go to the movies like twice a week.
Chris1:09:54 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil1:09:54 On my own. I really like it. I remember seeing this and Duck and Rum was in it, which was pretty cool. We talked about Be like that was an American PI 2 soundtrack, which obviously was just massive. And then, um. Yeah, I think that was it. I did. I was convinced Kryptonite would have been used somewhere. But I couldn't find.
Chris1:10:16 No.
Neil1:10:18 Yeah, I couldn't find it. Five things you might not know about this album. Kryptonite was only the third song that Arnold had ever written. So it's just literally that this was the third song he'd ever done. Loser's 21 week run at number one on the mainstream rock charts. The. The band didn't notice. They were so focused on kryptonite.
Chris1:10:45 Yeah.
Neil1:10:46 And that's what they were working towards that. That's what they were kind of playing when it would have ever. They did like, you know, they did like appearances in record. Yeah. They weren't playing Loser. They would do kryptonite and they didn't notice that it had blown up.
Chris1:11:00 Yeah.
Neil1:11:01 But it's interesting. He. Arnold later would go on to say that he felt that Loser was the thing that made them not a one hit wonder.
Chris1:11:08 Yeah.
Neil1:11:08 That was the bit that made them realize actually there, there is something here. We talked about the copyright. The copyright is 99 and the release date is 2000, which is slightly unusual. And. Oh, and Brad Arnold. Oh, sorry. Yeah. With the first thousand demo CDs took two years to sell. And then, then they said that the. They did another thousand. Yeah. After they blew up on the radio and that they sold in 10 days.
Chris1:11:39 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil1:11:40 And Brad Arnold married his high school sweetheart in 2001. So everything's blowing up. They were at school together and. Yeah. Guess how long till they got divorced?
Chris1:11:51 I don't know.
Neil1:11:52 2007.
Chris1:11:52 Oh really?
Neil1:11:54 Then he got married to Jennifer Sandiford and he. Arnold later credited country legend Charlie Daniels. I don't know who that is.
Chris1:12:03 No.
Neil1:12:04 But he helped him through alcohol rehabilitation and deepening of his Christian faith during those turbulent years. I read a lovely article where he was talking about that and how he helped him. Helped him through which. Everybody needs a friend like Charlie Daniels.
Chris1:12:20 Yeah.
Neil1:12:20 I think pull you back from the edge when you've crashed your tank into your garage or had too much cake. I do feel like I've had a bit too much cake if I'm honest. I hope it's not coming across. And then. Yeah. And then, you know, so you know the, the history of the band. We talked about this a little bit. A little bit last week. So the band have been. They've recorded some really cool stuff. You know. 17 days I'm massively familiar with. You know they did a lot. I really like. I really like this record. So I tend to when. When they released stuff I tended to. To go through. Yeah. Even this. Even the stuff that probably, you know, the last decade or so. Yeah, maybe last. I say the last decade. I'm talking like 2008 and 11 and 16. So more than a decade.
Chris1:13:14 I'm trying to think where I was at this time because I think I'd gone down a big post rock hole. I'd gone. So I'd done Pumpkins.
Neil1:13:21 Yeah.
Chris1:13:21 I got well into that. I was obsessed with that. Completely went through a sort. Went on a sort of silver chair trip around this time. So I was still in the grunge zone, which.
Neil1:13:33 On the COVID isn't it? Yes.
Chris1:13:35 Yeah. Which is why I'm surprised I missed this one.
Neil1:13:37 Yeah.
Chris1:13:38 Because it was.
Neil1:13:39 It was not.
Chris1:13:39 Not dissimilar really.
Neil1:13:41 And then these weren't played in the UK that much. No, I think this is it.
Chris1:13:44 It was very American thing, like. Yeah, yeah.
Neil1:13:47 They definitely weren't played that much over here.
Chris1:13:48 And then Sigur Ross and bands like that, they were what I got into. God Speed, your Black Emperor and stuff that wasn't particularly like heavy rock anymore.
Neil1:13:57 Yeah, yeah.
Chris1:13:58 It was still big sounding.
Neil1:13:59 Yeah.
Chris1:13:59 But it was a different kind of big. And that. That's kind of like Mogwai and, you know, those sort of things.
Neil1:14:04 Yeah.
Chris1:14:04 So I went down. I fell down that hole a little.
Neil1:14:06 Bit around this here. I think that was. Yeah, there were a lot bigger bands here than.
Chris1:14:11 Yeah.
Neil1:14:11 Than. Than these were. And I was going to go on, say that the, the reason we covered this record was that, you know, the. It was 26 years old and. And Brad's death. So he. He died of. I think it was kidney cancer. It was. It was kidney cancer or lung cancer.
Chris1:14:33 Yeah.
Neil1:14:33 Um. Yeah, he was diagnosed with stage four. I don't think he suffered particularly long. I think, you know, I think it was fairly spoiled. And I loved reading that like he died like peacefully at home with his wife. And I just. I don't know because like you say he's a lovely guy and you just think that was. I don't know, don't like hearing about bad things happening to good people. Yeah, yeah, I'm sure. Oh, that's from the Matrix. Is it from the Matrix? The Oracle.
Chris1:15:05 Okay.
Neil1:15:05 Yeah. I love the Matrix.
Chris1:15:06 Yeah.
Neil1:15:08 Let's stop this and watch the Matrix. Yeah, yeah. Anyway, the other thing that I hadn't realized until I read for. For this was that the other co founder, Matt Roberts, he left the band in 2012 due to health issues, but he died. He died of an overdose in 2016. He was 38.
Chris1:15:29 Gosh, just no age, is it?
Neil1:15:32 Well, it's just we're at the age.
Chris1:15:34 Now where when people die we say, oh, that's no age.
Neil1:15:36 That's That's.
Chris1:15:37 You hit that point.
Neil1:15:38 I. I just, I think there's. That thing, isn't there? With. And you see this a lot with, with. With rock stars, I guess, and bands in general. But like, addiction's a cruel.
Chris1:15:48 Yeah.
Neil1:15:49 You know, I mean, it kind of just crushes people, doesn't it?
Chris1:15:52 And the thing is, is in that world, you know, you heard that earlier.
Neil1:15:54 When they were talking about the live stuff.
Chris1:15:55 But once you come down, you've got to chase that high.
Neil1:15:58 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Chris1:16:00 You've been up there, you've hit the stratosphere. And then suddenly, suddenly you've got to come home and wash your pants and do your socks.
Neil1:16:05 That, that always blew me away. I make your own dinner and all that. I read the biographies. I read a few of them in. In short duration. I read Duff McKagan's. I read slashes and what was the Motley Crue one?
Chris1:16:21 Oh, yeah, yeah.
Neil1:16:22 I can't remember the.
Chris1:16:25 It was Nikki Six one, wasn't it?
Neil1:16:28 Yeah, it might have been Nikki Six. Anyway, I read, I read that one as well and they all said exactly the same thing. All of them had that piece in there where you had. They're having the best time of their lives. They're not signed and they're just a gang having a good laugh and music is like what makes them tick. And they're out playing gigs and it's brilliant. But where they play gigs all the time, they're constantly playing gigs and they're having the best time ever and it's brilliant. You know, they've got no money, but it is absolutely brilliant. Get signed, bands blow up and all of a sudden they're the most important people in the world and people are doting on them and will do anything to you to give them what they want so they can perform. And then they go out on these like 18 month, 2 year long tours and then the record company plop them back where they found them with a we need a new album from you and they literally come back with nothing to do. And you know, Duff McKagan talks about this. I talked about this loads. And Nikki Six did too. That like they said, you know, you, you've been in hotels for two years and you've had, you know, literally like tens of thousands of people screw. Screaming in front of you and now you're sitting in like this cold, empty room, unfurnished. Probably most, you know, there's nothing going on. So you go out and find it.
Chris1:17:52 Yeah.
Neil1:17:52 And that's what leads to you, like Essentially you go out and find trouble because you've got like nothing to do. You know, there's absolutely nothing to. Yeah. There's just nothing. So what do you. What do you do kind of thing. Do you know, I mean. And you know that, that leads to, to, to these, these addiction cycles because the bands are desperately trying to fill the gap from, from the, like you say, the high of being and touring and stuff. And none of them like, it's interesting. Like the Motley Crew ones were great because they were like, we, we. You know, when we were kids, we just, we. We would have done anything to get in the studio after that kind of first tour and we were all off our faces. We didn't want to go in the studio. We just want. We just wanted to go back out and play, you know, we wanted to back out, back out and play live again.
Chris1:18:39 Yeah.
Neil1:18:39 And all of a sudden it just stops dead and you need. Something's got to fill the gap.
Chris1:18:42 Yeah. Yeah.
Neil1:18:43 The thing that hit me as well was the fact that the record companies just didn't. There was no, There was no interest until it came time for a new album.
Chris1:18:52 Yeah, yeah.
Neil1:18:52 You know, there was no like support. I mean, I know it feels a bit soft, but it's like there was no like, you know, here's Bob, he's going to. Gonna look after you. They're literally just like. And I'm sure, I'm sure it was Nikki Six saying like here we flew back in to LA and the mini bus dropped everybody off. He said I was literally just, just like dumped at the side of the road. Yeah. With a lot of your guitars will be here next. Next week.
Chris1:19:17 Yeah, yeah.
Neil1:19:18 And so now I was just standing there on my own in, in, you.
Chris1:19:20 Know, after, after I've experienced and all that. Yeah, yeah.
Neil1:19:23 So I'm just literally standing on the side of the road on my own. I didn't have to do. You know, I felt like somebody should be there to escort me into the house kind of thing. But really cool. If you like biographies. Those. Any of those are really cool. They are a real. And I think Duff McKagan is. Nikki Six and Duff McKagan can both really tell.
Chris1:19:45 Yeah.
Neil1:19:45 A story. I. And I might be wrong, but I think they both wrote their own as well. I don't think they were ghost written or anything. I think they. They both wrote their own.
Chris1:19:52 Own.
Neil1:19:52 Yeah, yeah. And I, I was like gripped. I'm not. I do read a lot, but not if it's boring.
Chris1:20:00 No, no.
Neil1:20:01 But both grabbed you. Yeah. Both of those have me gripped. Anyway, that's it. I'm done with facts for this album. Right.
Chris1:20:07 Let's play a tune then. And then we should talk about next week. We've already decided.
Neil1:20:10 We've already. But let's talk about it anyway. Yeah.
Chris1:20:12 Oh. To this world I am unimportant Just because I have nothing to do. So you call this your free country? Tell me why it cost so much to live Tell me who I am this world can turn me down But I won't turn away I won't turn around. Oh my God now working endless measures Never seem to get me very far. Walk them out to moving it now Even though I'm tired to get wrong I'm trying so hard Swallow can turn me down but now I won't turn away and I won't grow Cuz I'm not built that way when everything is gone there's nothing there to fear this world cannot bring me down no Cuz I am already here oh no I'm already here down the all kinds I'm already here oh no I'm already here I must have told you a thousand times I'm not running away. I won't, I can run I won't, I can run I won't, I can run no no Pass away swirl can turn me down But I won't turn away and I won't I can run Somehow built that way Everything is gone there's nothing that I fear this world cannot bring me down no Cause I am my way here this world can turn me down But I won't turn away and I won't get around Cause I'm not built that way but everything is gone there's nothing that affects. I think the secret to sticking together with anything that you do for so long is just having fun doing it. Now I know that sounds kind of cliche to say, but you know, they always say if you love your job, you never to want work. And we love our job, you know, and it's something that we've always enjoyed doing. I've been a part of this band for longer than I haven't been everything that you do. Some days it's gonna feel like work, but we have such a good time and we all just get to go out there and do it together and we have a great time doing it. And that's what it's all about. I think that's the secret to it. One day we were in a van.
Neil1:24:10 And the next day we were on a bus.
Chris1:24:11 And the next day we were on a plane and the next day we were in arenas. And then we're. You know what I mean? It happened. Happened fast. I think it took us all by surprise. Like, we all kind of got a good sense of how the music industry works overnight, which isn't a really good way to learn how the music industry works because then they're like, we got you, but it was fun, you know, and we got to do it together. And if that is the secret, I guess that's it. I mean, we've all had fun from day one and we've kept it together and we've just been a brotherhood from day one. I'm gonna do something. Cause I've got a really good Kryptonite interview.
Neil1:24:43 Yeah.
Chris1:24:44 But I don't know where to put it in the show. So I'm gonna do it right at the end. I'm gonna play Krypt it tonight after.
Neil1:24:49 We'Ve even finished it. Yeah.
Chris1:24:50 After we said sorry.
Neil1:24:51 Yeah. And then I'll put it there.
Chris1:24:52 Put it there. And then put the interview at the end.
Neil1:24:54 And then it's going to end on that.
Chris1:24:55 Just because I. I can't remember where to put. I had somewhere in mind, but it'll take me hours to go through the podcast and I don't want to because I want.
Neil1:25:04 Let's just. Let's just do it.
Chris1:25:05 Yeah, let's just. Okay.
Neil1:25:06 I think we should do it. Yeah. So you mentioned that we're going to do MTV Unplugged in New York.
Chris1:25:10 Yeah.
Neil1:25:11 We've got Nirvana.
Chris1:25:12 Yeah, we have to. We've done it. We're.
Neil1:25:15 We've done it. We've.
Chris1:25:16 We have done it before.
Neil1:25:17 Yeah.
Chris1:25:17 In a previous life when we did. We used to have a Spotify show.
Neil1:25:22 Oh, we did. Yeah, we did. I remember we did a bit on this. Yeah.
Chris1:25:25 We did a Spotify show where you. Where Spotify used to allow you to basically do a talk and listen.
Neil1:25:30 Music and talk. Yeah.
Chris1:25:31 Yeah. Music and talk.
Neil1:25:32 I like that. It was good.
Chris1:25:33 That was good. And so we sort of did. But we did. But we don't. It's not as good as this. No.
Neil1:25:38 Tanks in it or anything rubbish.
Chris1:25:40 No.
Neil1:25:40 So it's going to be better this time. When was Unplugged in New York released? 1991. 1994. When was the DVD released?
Chris1:25:48 1996.
Neil1:25:49 2007. Did you know that? I didn't. I. I would not have guessed. No, that.
Chris1:25:55 Yeah.
Neil1:25:56 At all.
Chris1:25:56 I said, those days, DVDs didn't exist, that. Did they?
Neil1:25:59 No.
Chris1:25:59 Well.
Neil1:26:00 But I just it just feels like a big gap.
Chris1:26:02 Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil1:26:04 Massive gap, I think.
Chris1:26:05 Yeah, yeah.
Neil1:26:06 CD 53 minutes long. DVD 66 minutes long.
Chris1:26:09 Well, it's different.
Neil1:26:10 They've got infin. There's a lot of them going, what should we do next? Yeah, I mean.
Chris1:26:16 Yeah.
Neil1:26:17 And there's a lot of.
Chris1:26:18 I like Penny Royalty.
Neil1:26:19 It's lovely, isn't it?
Chris1:26:21 A man who sell the world.
Neil1:26:23 It's very lovely. I think it's. It's got vibe to it.
Chris1:26:26 It's all good. That whole thing's got like a vibe.
Neil1:26:27 You know when we talked about this record three doors down and I didn't mean it in like a bad way but like if you. The difference between this song record on like a really, really high end audio system and like the one in your car. Yeah, it's not very big. It sounds good everywhere.
Chris1:26:47 Yeah.
Neil1:26:48 Unplugged in New York. Across. Across like the MTV Unplugged series in general.
Chris1:26:53 Yes.
Neil1:26:54 Is not the same.
Chris1:26:55 You say you need.
Neil1:26:55 If you get the higher end, you listen to it. It pays detail. Yeah. Again, it's magical. It's. It does sound good pretty much everywhere, but. But it's got this thing. It feels like trying to describe it, but it's like with stereo speakers it comes alive. It builds this 3D space in front of you. If you ever get a chance. If you, if you're a little bit into sound and a little bit nerdy and you perhaps not got 20,000 quid sitting around, go to. This is what we used to do as kids. Go to the audio store and pretend you're going to buy 20 grands worth of audio stuff. Take your favorite music and. Yeah.
Chris1:27:33 Would you wear.
Neil1:27:34 Yeah. I don't know. Clothes. I mean, don't go naked. They like you to be dressed when you go there and, and generally that. I don't know, they're not. I don't. I don't think that many people do it anymore.
Chris1:27:50 No.
Neil1:27:50 So they'll just be dead happy to have somebody there probably.
Chris1:27:54 Yeah, yeah.
Neil1:27:54 And they'd like this.
Chris1:27:55 Yeah.
Neil1:27:56 I remember turning up with a carcass album. Yeah, they did not like that branch.
Chris1:28:01 Well, they like the UNCLE TV and plug one.
Neil1:28:02 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, definitely. But it's interesting. I. I think it's interesting. Just turn up. You can get like with your CD or your vinyl or whatever and it's. Yeah. I don't know. It's an album that it absolutely comes to life and there aren't many that do it. There aren't. There. There are, yeah. There Aren't many albums that have that. That 3D effect. All of the MTV Unplugged do it, I think. Well, certainly all the ones I've listened to do it. And it's almost holographic. It's bonkers. But they need to. To. It's complicated acoustics nonsense. But. But you need us. You need like a. A certain space and a certain. You type of speakers to do it.
Chris1:28:42 But.
Neil1:28:43 Yeah, always. I remember the first time hearing a recording come to life.
Chris1:28:49 Yeah.
Neil1:28:49 And just being like, totally and utterly. No, we should do mesmerized.
Chris1:28:54 No. I've got those slate headphones.
Neil1:28:56 Yeah.
Chris1:28:56 That emulate the different rooms and the speakers.
Neil1:28:58 Yeah.
Chris1:28:58 We should try it through those.
Neil1:29:00 Yeah. Yeah, they build. So headphones. Headphones don't do it.
Chris1:29:02 No.
Neil1:29:02 Ever. They don't, but these are.
Chris1:29:04 These emulate space.
Neil1:29:05 I know they do. Let's try it before they don't do it. I've never heard a pair of headphones do it.
Chris1:29:12 No.
Neil1:29:12 Ever. Even really. Even like, you know, two, three thousand quid. So I went to the Can Jam. Yeah. Which was dead good. That was a real headphone. Like nerds.
Chris1:29:21 Yeah. They've got a new thing called Immersion 1, which is a new kind of headphone that works with their software. That's very expensive. Is it a lot more.
Neil1:29:28 Yeah. It's interesting, you find, because a lot of it is the room and it needs space and it's to do with the time it takes for things to land in your ear holes and stuff. And so there is like. To get that kind of holographic feel for it, that. That experience. I don't know. I've never. You've got to have air moving.
Chris1:29:48 You got it?
Neil1:29:48 I don't know. I. Yeah. I don't know what it is, but. But it's. Headphones typically don't know they're flat. Don't get that. You get this headphone. What headphones do. Do is give you an. Absolutely. Typically they give you a very flat, uncolored.
Chris1:30:04 Yeah.
Neil1:30:06 Response. So. So, you know, like in. Unless you're wearing Beats. Yeah, well, in. In like a few hundred quids. Pair of headphones.
Chris1:30:14 Yeah.
Neil1:30:15 You can get the equivalent of thousands of pounds worth of, you know, speakers. You get a very, very good, you know, sound effect. So. So typically headphones are like, way better from a frequency response perspective and all that. So they typically sound better. But that kind of holographic positioning of. Of things. I've never heard. I've never heard a pair of headphones do a good job at that. Whereas you know, speakers just seem to do it and it's really weird. It feels like if you, if you, if you, if you speak to people that are into this kind of. You can almost, almost touch.
Chris1:30:54 Yeah.
Neil1:30:55 It feels like it's there. It literally feels like it's in the room with you and not like just in between the speakers. It kind of comes out and behind as well. There's like the front and rear and. And it is. I don't know if you like that kind of nerdy stuff and I'm sure the audio, the audio shop people will love that because they'll be into that kind of stuff. They're all nerds. But yeah. Do that for an afternoon. I go and I, Yeah. Me and my youngest go to car showrooms.
Chris1:31:19 Yeah. That's when they do it.
Neil1:31:20 Yeah.
Chris1:31:21 Yeah.
Neil1:31:21 I mean you have. So it depends which car. Like if you go in to look at like certain cars you can turn up in hoodie.
Chris1:31:26 Yeah.
Neil1:31:27 If you're looking at like, you know, if you're dicking about with high end cars that turn up in a shirt.
Chris1:31:31 Yeah.
Neil1:31:32 And they'll let you drive it. It's great. Yeah. Same deal. Just turn up. I'd like. I would like that one, please. Salesman love all that.
Chris1:31:39 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Neil1:31:40 I mean you can't go there every day.
Chris1:31:42 Yeah.
Neil1:31:42 You have to like, you leave it a little bit. You'll go to a different one. Yeah. But yeah, definitely worth. Anyway. Definitely. Definitely worth a thing. If you like audio and you like dicking about with stuff like that is worth. Worth the go. And you might find a friend as well.
Chris1:31:55 Yeah.
Neil1:31:55 People, they aren't genuine. They. They'll make you a cup of tea.
Chris1:31:58 Yeah.
Neil1:31:59 If they think you're going to buy it. What's next? What we are we. Yes. So nirvana next week. Y done. Over and out.
Chris1:32:08 That's it. Sorted it.
Neil1:32:09 Going to play Kryptonite. Kryptonite. You can do the interview. So hang around for that and then.
Chris1:32:14 But we're not going to speak after it. No, that's it. This is us done.
Neil1:32:17 Good. Well and thank you for making it this far through the tangents and the weird and the stuff and I'm really. I. Less sugar next week. So that'll be, that'll be good. Obviously. Yeah.
Chris1:32:27 Yeah. We've been on a journey. It's been a journey. There was like mad bits. There was sad bits, there was.
Neil1:32:32 There was a lot in tonight. That's it.
Chris1:32:33 Yeah. Yeah.
Neil1:32:34 Well, that's life, isn't it?
Chris1:32:34 Yeah.
Neil1:32:35 Thank you for joining us. See you next week.
Chris1:32:48 Lot walk around the world to ease my troubled mind I left my body lying somewhere in the sands of time But I watch the world FL to the dark side of the moon I feel there's nothing I can do. I watched the world FL to the dark side of the moon after all, I knew it had to be something to do with you I really don't mind what happens now and then as long as you'll be my friend at the end If I go crazy then real you still got me superman if I'm alive and well will you be there holding my hand? I'll keep you by my side with my superhuman night kryptonite. You call me strong you call me weak but still your secrets I will keep you took for granted all the times I never let you down you stumbled in and bumped your head if not for me then you'd be dead I picked you up, put you back on solid ground If I go crazy then will you still call me superman? If I'm welcome you be there I hold in my hand I'll keep you by my side with my superhuman, my kryptonite. If I go crazy and lose to become a superman if I'm alive and where will you be there holding my hand I'll keep you by my side with my superhuman, my kryptonite, yeah, if I go crazy then will you still call me superman? If I'm alive and well will you be there holding my hand? I'll keep you by my side with my superhuman night kryptonite.
Neil1:36:16 You know what?
Chris1:36:16 I was actually in high school, algebra class in east central High school in Mississippi. And I was terrible at math, but I always just sit in that class and write. And I was originally the drummer of the. And I only really became the singer because nobody else would sing. And so I was sitting there just kind of tapping on my desk and kind of humming along. And those lyrics, they just kind of fell out of the sky. I mean, I just wrote them down. And I sang them one time to Matt, and I played it on the drums. I said, you think you can write something to that? And he's like, I think so. And he played ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. And we played it together. And I remember. I remember Todd had just come in from work, and we were practicing in the little front living room of his trailer. And he stuck his head out of the bathroom. Head full of shampoo. He said, what is that? That's a hit zone. Hurry up, we write it. I guess the recording of it maybe cost us a couple thousand dollars. And then we put all our money from gigs up and bought a thousand CDs. And the testament to the power of radio, when our local radio station, wcpr, started started playing the song. And then it became really successful on it. It was just like our last hundred CDs. It took us, like, six weeks to get more. The first thousand lasted two years. The second thousand lasted, like ten days. And I was like, radio. That was from one radio station. I was like, there's the power of radio. Universal and Atlantic came down and talked to us, and we wound up signing with Universal, which I thought was a great moon. They've always been great to us. We signed with them, and we didn't really rush because we needed to write some songs. We wanted to use about half the songs off that demo, but we needed to write about half another record. And so they sent us, like, all right, y' all, go home and write some more songs. And we spent maybe, like, two more months writing songs, right?

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