Neil Fallon в недавнем интервью рассказал о том, какие планы у CLUTCH на ближайшее будущее:
«В последнем туре мы исполняли альбом [2004 года] «Blast Tyrant» целиком. Оглядываясь назад, я считаю, что мы не очень хорошо поработали над продвижением этого альбома и не дали людям понять, что это происходит. Так что мы собираемся сделать это еще раз, еще четыре концерта в Средней Атлантике, в Нью-Йорке и Балтиморе, потому что это была [20-я] годовщина альбома. Потом мы возьмем значительный перерыв, практически до апреля, а затем сделаем то же самое с одноименным альбомом [1995], потому что это будет 30-я годовщина, и мы получили права на его переиздание на виниле. Я к тому, что мы не являемся полноправными владельцами этой пластинки, но мы все ближе к этому. А в промежутках мы пишем новый альбом. Сложно заниматься этим, когда ты постоянно гастролируешь. Казалось бы, в дороге писать легче, но на данный момент это последнее, что я хочу делать».
History
Neil Fallon and Clutch performing in 2007
Clutch formed in 1991 and built a local following through constant gigging. Following the initial 7" single release of "Passive Restraints" on the Earache label, Clutch was signed by the EastWest Records label. The debut LP, Transnational Speedway League, was released in 1993. It was followed by a self-titled album two years later that afforded Clutch mainstream exposure. The band moved to the larger Columbia label for 1998's Elephant Riders release, and many thought the group might join their sonic cousins Korn and Deftones in the alternative metal winner's circle.[citation needed] That did not quite happen, but it did not matter, because a quality fan base continued to thrive for Clutch.
Pure Rock Fury appeared in 2001 on the Atlantic label. The title track was initially released as the first single. The program director for North Carolina rock station, WXQR (Rock 105), Brian Rickman, suggested that the label switch singles to another track from the album, "Careful with that Mic". Atlantic did so, and Clutch was afforded a surprise hit single. The follow-up tracks, "Immortal" and "Open Up the Border" were also well-received by American rock stations.
The similarly uncompromising Blast Tyrant came three years later, their first for DRT Records. The band once again enjoyed more rock radio airplay and heavy rotation on the Music Choice cable service thanks to the single "The Mob Goes Wild". Its accompanying video was directed by Bam Margera, and featured Margera's close friends Ryan Dunn and Brandon DiCamillo.
Their seventh full-length album, Robot Hive/Exodus, followed in 2005 and featured the first lineup change since the early 1990s: the addition of organist Mick Schauer. Among Clutch's numerous side releases were a groove-based album, 2000's Jam Room, as well as Live at the Googolplex and the rarities record Slow Hole to China, both issued in 2003. The 2005 release Pitchfork & Lost Needles combined Clutch's 1991 Pitchfork 7 with unreleased demos and early tracks.
In the fall of 2006, the band hit the studio with producer Joe Barresi (Kyuss, Melvins, Tool) to record their next album, From Beale Street to Oblivion which was released in March 2007. The album was leaked onto the internet in early March. Critical reaction has been overwhelmingly positive; the magazine Metal Hammer called it a "future classic, the best album the group has ever produced, and easily a front runner for album of the year."[citation needed]
While the band has not recovered their previous radio airplay with subsequent releases, Clutch have accumulated a devoted cult following. The following has been cultivated by an ambitious touring schedule; the band often performs more than one hundred shows per year.
Clutch receives air play on Sirius Satellite Radio on channels Octane and Faction. Several Clutch songs are also featured on a regular basis on XM48 Squizz and XMLM Liquid Metal.
The band's first live DVD, Full Fathom Five, and accompanying CD was released in August 2008.
Musical style
Each Clutch album is marked by a distinct and cohesive sound. The musical style of the band has migrated from heavy metal and hardcore punk to hard rock. The band has also integrated funk influences into their rock sound. Strong blues influences have also become prominent in the releases of the later years as vocalist/guitarist Neil Fallon notes: "We've been really conscious of the blues over the last couple of years, and you have to admit that the blues really is the source of all rock and roll. I think it's important to go to the source to find that inspiration."[3]
The lyrics of Clutch songs have progressed from early releases that were marked with an angry, serious tone to latter releases that are characterized by intelligence, wordplay, and subtle humour. The songs make frequent references to history, mythology, popular culture, and religion; for example, "I Have the Body of John Wilkes Booth", from the self-titled album, tells the story of a fisherman who discovers the corpse of Lincoln's assassin in the Susquehanna River. Jam Room's "Release the Kraken" inserts a hero called Useless the Younger into the movie Clash of the Titans. The lyrics also contain some surrealistic imagery, as in this quote from Robot Hive/Exodus's "Burning Beard": "Every time I look out my window/ same three dogs looking back at me. Every time I open my windows/ cranes fly in to terrorize me."
Other projects
In the late 1990s, Clutch and its sibling project The Bakerton Group (an instrumental jam band composed of Clutch members Maines, Sult, Gaster, and Schauer) formed an independent record label, River Road Records, to release their own music. River Road does not sign any other artists. The Bakerton Group has released one three-track EP, Space Guitars, and a self-titled full length album.
Neil Fallon is also the singer for The Company Band. In addition, Fallon's younger sister and A