Interview met Devin Townsend
Devin Townsend: “Every scenario offers you only two options: either ‘fuck it’ or ‘deal with it’. So that became our credo.”
We wilden toch nog eens een interview met muzikale kameleon Devin Townsend nu hij spreekt van een levensdroom die in vervulling gaat. In dit geval is het de musical ‘The Moth’, zwaar georkestreerd en met voluptueuze koorzang. We waren getuige hoe de mot zich ontpopt heeft tot vlinder en krijgen het verhaal van de realisatie in geuren en kleuren van ceremoniemeester Devin Towsnend zelve…
Vera Matthijssens Ι 13 juni 2026
Can we say in a way that you have learnt something about yourself doing this?
100%. I have learnt many things and I guess at this point of the process, on the other side of delivering ‘The Moth’, the scenario I am in right now is twofold. One is integration, because of the things that you have learnt. You have to allow those things, it takes time. I am also coming out of a period in my life that has been very difficult, but on the other hand I feel what I have learned about myself, is that by addressing the parts of my personality, one time I had fear and then making peace with that, I recognized I was like a wounded child that was looking for something to protect me in some way. By finding that degree of compassion for myself, I also recognized how much of my self-worth in the past was connected to the job. Maybe I was so insecure that, in absence of being a musician, I felt like I had no worth and I think that that process of self-expects erased that. Which is fantastic on the surface, but in a practical way all of a sudden my work ethic has changed. My work ethic has gone, from wake up in the morning and start writing, to ‘hm I am just going to go to the beach’ (laughs). There is a benefit to, but it is also a liability as well, because I have a lot of dependence in my life, I have a lot of people that rely on me and so, that cannot just stop! But in the process about learning about myself and learning about the process of being human even, is more important than any of the work. It is the foundation of why artistry is so compelling to me, it is a progression and the intent of that progression is to become a better version of yourself and so it is a work in progress: two steps forward and one step back, right? Just like two steps forward and two steps back.
Just like the procession of Echternach, it is a kind of self-punishment…
Yeah I have been known to punish myself, but I think that the best move forward for someone who had that tendency in the past, is to recognize it and then try to make progress. I think one downfall can be so critical for yourself for making mistakes. We don’t have that compassion, it is like ‘yes, I am guilty, I beat myself up for many years’, but when I recognized that, I had the choice of being continuing of beating myself up by saying ‘I cannot believe I beat myself up’. Or ‘now I recognize that I have been doing that and I hope that I can work towards enough presence that what I am doing it’. In the moment I am able to recognize that, right? All these things are a process and I am grateful to have circumstances in my life that had forced me to confront them.
In this respect I think about a very nice quote I have read: ‘courage is not the absence of fear, but being truly afraid, but facing it anyway’… That comes down on what you just told me I think…
Truly. I think there is a misconception that in order to be brave about things, you need to be the stereotypical definition of what bravery looks like. I think for some people, specifically people who are another version, sometimes just get out of bed in the morning is an act of bravery. To be able to have enough… again… compassion for yourself, so that you recognize the reasons why you are strong, a sort of comparing yourself with things that have nothing to do with your nature.
Another thing that needs some explanation. It is said that ‘The Moth’ would be a part of four albums and the cycle started with ‘Powernerd’ (2024). How can we see that?
I think because – as I said a moment ago – I don’t feel the success or the satisfaction that I feel for every project, on the music itself, but more by learning during the process. What typically happens to me, is moments of significant emotions happening in one to two year parcels. When kids move out of home, it is like a two year process, same goes when you break up with someone. These things are an ongoing thing, it takes a while to revolve and so if you look to a two year piece of time, that has been a part of my life. Because I write so much – every day I write, I just write constantly – I don’t think about what I write, I don’t analyze what I write, some days I write prog, some days I write metal, some days I write orchestra, I don’t think about it. So when that period of life starts to feel like a shit thing towards the next phase, at that point I start reading what has been written and sometimes I have written nothing. Other times I have written enough to fill four or five records and so basically I utilize a period of emotional development as a parcel in music as well. ‘Powernerd’ was a parcel – and they don’t have to sound like anything, it is all kind of connected by the emotional thread, more than the musical ones.
Why was it so important to you that the next video you launch is ‘Home At Night’?
I just think because the next video that we are doing – it comes out in a couple of weeks – is very heavy. I like doing different things, so I want to show as much sides of me as possible. For me I am very comfortable being myself and it doesn’t bother me in the slightest that me and myself doesn’t fit in. I never fit into the scene, ever. So it is incredibly freeing. If people say ‘that is not cool’, well, then I don’t want to be part of the club that doesn’t allow that’ because that’s what I feel like doing. That is really the artistry, there is no need to be provocative, there is no desire to fit in, just this is what I feel like doing, this is part of the statement, and I am absolutely comfortable with people disliking the work that I do. It is of no significance to my progress or process.
That point of view only comes with age I guess…
Yeah, I think it comes with age, for sure, but I am also fortunate that I have been in this industry for so long that I have managed to gather a very, very supportive audience. It is not a huge audience, but it is very supportive and I think the criteria that the audience have is more based on artistry than on a particular style. That means something to me and so that is the only test I use for this work, whether or not this is of significance to me.
‘The Moth’ was twice played live in the Netherlands. What about that experience for you and can we hope for more live performances or do you only return as a solo artist at that level?
The show in Groningen was unbelievable stressful, unbelievable beautiful, unbelievable empowering because I felt supported by the audience, because I think a lot of the time the audience knew how difficult it was and how we were not finished. Are we going to do it again? My idea on that is I am aware of how complicated life is in 2026. I am aware of how demanding the music that I do can be for people. So I have no desire in trying to A. convince people to listen to my work, or B. try to force it on people. If ‘The Moth’ is something that resonates with people, then why not? At that point I got a story, I got a stage act, we got everything. If they want that, I am happy to do that, but if they don’t, I have got million other things I am happy to do. And then the final thing here are the acoustic shows. That is more of an opportunity for me to represent the dynamics of the band. Looking at what I have done through all these years and then reconnect with the audience before I come back. It has been a tumultuous two years and I just want to kind of put my toes into the water before I start swimming.



