BLABBERMOUTH.NET can exclusively reveal that California thrashers
SLAYER have set
"World Painted Blood" as the title of their new album, tentatively due late summer via
American Recordings/
Columbia Records. The forthcoming CD is being produced by
Greg Fidelman and will include the album's title track and
"Psychopathy Red" (both of which are
Jeff Hanneman-penned tunes), the latter of which was made available as a limited-edition seven-inch vinyl disc on April 18, 2009 as part of the third annual Record Store Day.
Prior to the new album release,
SLAYER will join forces with
MEGADETH to perform together for the first time in more than 15 years when they co-headline four shows in Canada in late June. The tour, dubbed
"Canadian Carnage", will also feature
MACHINE HEAD and
SUICIDE SILENCE, and will see
MEGADETH and
SLAYER each closing two of the four shows.
SLAYER will also co-headline with
MARILYN MANSON on the five-week
Rockstar Energy Mayhem Festival, set to kick off July 10 in Sacramento, California.
On May 19,
BLABBERMOUTH.NET spoke to
SLAYER guitarist
Kerry King about the band's new CD and their upcoming touring activities. Highlights of that conversation follow below.
On the status of the new album recording sessions:
Kerry: "Probably today was the last day for touch-ups. The longer you let that go on, you can keep fixing it forever; you've just gotta cut the line at one point and say, 'We're done.' But I think
Tom [
Araya] finishes up vocals today, and then it's just gotta get mixed."
On whether producer
Greg Fidelman is going to be mixing the album as well:
Kerry: "To my knowledge, I think he's doing it. I don't always pay attention to that. But I haven't heard anything to the contrary, so I would imagine, yeah."
On
Greg Fidelman being a somewhat odd choice for a producer considering that a lot of fans seem to blame him for the distorted sound on
METALLICA's
"Death Magnetic" album:
Kerry: "I would never do that because — no offense to him or
METALLICA — but it's not
Greg's fault for the last 15 years of
METALLICA. I think he made a decent record with them. I think
'Death Magnetic' is pretty cool. I mean, It's not the glory of the '80s, but it's better than
'St. Anger', you know what I mean?! You're dealing with hard-headed dudes. We're the same way. When you're in the business for as long as us and them [
METALLICA] are, you don't always [listen to] everybody's opinion; you've kind of got your own opinion. I blame everybody, not just him. [Laughs]"
On the songwriting/recording process for the new album:
Kerry: "We were
over-ready [when we recorded 2006's
'Christ Illusion']. My songs [for the new album] came together since the middle of January — that was super-fast. I [attended] the
NAMM show in the middle of January [2009], the big trade show out here [in California]. I might have had some riffs [at that point], but I had no songs. So everything I've done [songwriting-wise] has been put together since then. And this time when we went into the studio, we were, like,
under-ready, because there were songs that hadn't even been finished, so we actually had to teach
Dave [
Lombardo; drums] some of them in the studio, which is totally unique for us. When you do it like that, you risk songs sounding the same and vocal ideas being similar, but I think everything sounds really different. . . [We did it that way because] we had a window of time that we secured
Greg Fidelman [for and] we wanted to keep that happening, so after the
NAMM show came around, I went, 'Shit, I'd better get some fuckin' songs happening.' So I got off my ass and really worked at it."
On how he would describe the new material:
Kerry: "I think
'Christ Illusion' and
'God Hates Us All' [2001] were compared to faster records like
'Reign In Blood' [1986]. I think this one, when it's all said and done, will be compared to
'Seasons In The Abyss' [1990], because I think
'Seasons' was a little bit of everything, as far as
SLAYER goes. I think this one has a little bit of everything — more so than anything we've done since
'Seasons'. So I would imagine people are gonna compare it to that one."
On how the songwriting is split between him and fellow guitarist
Jeff Hanneman this time around:
Kerry: "I don't know which songs... We've got 13 songs. I don't even know if they're all done, it's been such a hectic recording thing, but musically I wrote six and he wrote seven. It's about as down the middle as you can get."
"I think, as a general description [I tend to write the faster stuff and
Jeff comes up with the moodier material], but that's not to say that
Jeff won't write fast and I won't write slow, but generally I'm the fast, thrashier dude and
Jeff's definitely the more moodier guy, but trail off into each one's domain every once in a while."
"I think everything [
Jeff's] done came up at least since November. Because we did those first three songs [including
'Psychopathy Red'] in October and those were all his. I don't know if he's worked just since January like I have. I would imagine he probably worked a little earlier than that."
On why not all 13 songs that are being recorded will make it to the finished album:
Kerry: "I got out of that mindset that was popular in the '90s when everybody put as much material on CDs as would fit. I just think that's a waste of time, and I think it's a waste of song ideas, because everybody I've ever heard do that, maybe two or three songs are good and the rest is just filler. All my favorite records from whan I was growing up had 10 songs tops, and they're all kick-ass, so I just [think back to] how I perceived records as when I was a fan."
ShockHound has posted a five-minute video clip (see below) of
SLAYER discussing the recording process for their new album.