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HALESTORM's LZZY HALE: “we're finishing up writing a new album”

29-03-2024

In an interview with the “Everblack” podcast conducted at the Brisbane date of this month’s Knotfest AustraliaHALESTORM frontwoman Lzzy Hale, who was announced to be the temporary frontwoman of SKID ROW for the coming live shows earlier this week, spoke about the progress of the songwriting sessions for the band’s follow-up to 2022’s “Back From The Dead” album. She said: “We’re finishing up writing a new album. And we’re gonna get back in April to finish it up. We’ll be there in a few weeks, and, yeah, we’ll see what happens. And then we’ll be back here in Australia before you know it with some new music.”

Asked what the new HALESTORM album will be called, Lzzy said: “Oh, we don’t know that yet. As is tradition in HALESTORM, we always have the best ideas right when we start, and then we totally trash it, and it’s, like, very last minute, ‘What are we calling the record?’ Last minute, that’s what we do. So, yeah, we don’t know. We’re gonna let it tell us what it is. It’s not up to us; it’s the music.”

Earlier in the month, HALESTORM guitarist Joe Hottinger told Monica Strut of Knotfest Australia about the songwriting process for the band’s next LP: “Our goal as a band is may the best song win. So riffs are great and all, but at the day, it comes down to the song. Is it a good song or not? And not only is it, like, good, but it’s gotta be great. We have, like, stupid standards. And so really anything goes. If it’s a riff and it starts there, a riff and a melody, cool. Lzzy writes constantly, so she’s always got songs that we’re putting together.

“We haven’t been in a studio since — I mean, recording for a record — since September,” he revealed. “We’ve been busy. We’ve been traveling a bit. But we’ve been writing since then. And while we were at the last one, we just kind of rolled in and wrote a song in the morning and recorded it that night, and it was kind of everything fresh. We started out a few riffs, but, really, the idea was more about being in that moment. I was talking with Lzzy about it while we were in there, and it was, like ‘Yeah, it’s kind of like we came into the studio with nothing but 20 years of being a band together.’ (Laughs) So, we know how to play — we’re all players, we can play, we can write. So, like, ‘It’s a good idea. Cool. Yeah, let’s do that. All right, let’s record it. Here we go.’ And I don’t even remember what I played. I haven’t listened to those songs in a while. And I vaguely remember any of them because it gets so intense. I think we did, like, 13 of them. Day after day after day after day after day, to the point where you’re just, like, ‘I don’t know anything anymore.'”

Joe also talked about HALESTORM‘s writing and recording approach with producer Dave Cobb after making three records with Nick Raskulinecz.

“We had a few ideas going in, but we told (Dave) we didn’t really… We’d been touring constantly and we didn’t get together and put together anything solid,” Hottinger said. “And he was, like, ‘Great. Even better.’ And that was exciting, ’cause we’ve never really done that before for a record, like just sit in a room and knock out a song a day — just go, go, go. And it was really intense. And I think it’s great. And that was just round one, the first volley of songs. We’ll see if any of ’em even make it. But we’ve got just a boatload more songs now. We haven’t even gotten together and riffed them all out yet or wrapped our heads around them. We just have these demos. We’re, like, ‘All right.’ Lzzy‘s writing right now. We love doing that. She’ll go and write with friends or other people that she respects, which I think is great, ’cause she gets to bounce ideas off of somebody else, somebody that… Every song is like a puzzle, and she gets to put it together with somebody else who’s better at different parts of the puzzle than maybe one of us. And then we grab a hold of it and make it a HALESTORM song.”

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