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Showing posts with label randy blythe interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label randy blythe interview. Show all posts
Monday, August 13, 2012
Randy Blythe: "Why would I try and hurt fans of my band? That's ridiculous."
After five weeks in a Czech Republic prison, Randy Blythe was released on bail and was able to return to the United States. Although LAMB OF GOD was forced to cancel their summer co-headline tour with Dethklok and special guests Gojira, the band has agreed to play SLIPKNOT's "KnotFest" shows this weekend: August 17th in Council Bluffs, Iowa and August 18th in Somerset, Wisconsin.
Recently, Blythe was interviewed by Revolver Magazine about his recent incarceration:
Blythe has made it very clear that he has no plans to change the way he will act onstage in the future. "What else am I going to do? We don't have a big production set up or anything. We don't have purple dragons that fly out of the sky and breathe fire. We're just a bunch of dudes who get up there and rock and roll."
He continues, "This incident that occurred, it was an unfortunate occurrence. A tragedy. And there's a lot of details that need to be clarified that came out of this, and hopefully they will in court. But it's not going to change the way we do things, because I didn't do anything wrong. So why should I change what I'm doing? They're saying I committed a crime of intent, like I went out and hurt someone. That's total bullshit. Why would I try and hurt fans of my band? That's ridiculous. So no.
"If anything good comes out of this, as far as a change to how we operate, I would hope it would be a more far-reaching thing than just my band," he says. "I would hope it would raise the awareness for the need for adequate security, not just for the band but for the audience as well. Most of the time, none of this stuff is an issue because security is entirely adequate. Security knows how to keep the kids from getting hurt while letting them have a good time. To the outside world, to people who aren't in our scene, it all looks like a great big violent mess. They don't know that everybody's just having a good time. There is a very big need for security, though, to ensure — especially if kids are going to be crowdsurfing and coming over the barricade and stuff — there's got to be guys there to catch them. So if anything good comes out of these, I hope we will lessen any injuries incurred by concert-going folks."
According to Blythe, he wasn't aware of how much people were talking about him in the United States while he was imprisoned in the Czech Republic. "There was no Internet, [and] I can't read Czech papers," he says. "The mail there was very slow because it went through censors.
"I got a postcard from a guy in Seattle who had just signed with Metal Blade, who I think he had to be in Prague, because it was mailed from there," he says. "And then I got a nice letter from this guy from Tennessee; he and his wife, and he had enclosed a couple Internet clippings. My friend, [TESTAMENT guitarist] Alex Skolnick, had done a blog about me. It was just a couple of cool things just to let me know that people were thinking about me. And that was really hugely important. . . Beyond that and my lawyer, I saw my wife once, and my American lawyer was over there for a couple of days. I had two or three meetings with him. They said that people were speaking up, but I really had no idea of the amount of support I had. It was pretty crazy. I couldn't read any of the Czech papers, which were not very supportive of me.
"One day I walked out into the yard for a walk and a prisoner came up to me and said [with an accent], 'Ozzy Osbourne says good for you.' And I'm like, 'Wow.' Because it was in their paper, but that's about it."
He continues, "I know MUNICIPAL WASTE. Phil Hall, the bass player, his brother, I skateboard with him. And he saw me yesterday and said they were in Prague and they tried to go visit me, since they're from Richmond. But you've got to have all of this shit written in advance and you've got to write this form and the guard yelled at me that I hadn't written it right for people to come visit. It's got to be at least a week in advance and you get only one visit every two weeks. So I was kind of isolated."
Asked how he handled the loneliness, Blythe tells Revolver, "I really try to stay in the moment. When I went to prison, I was like, OK, you can either just sit here and feel sorry for yourself or you can try and make the most of your time. And I just didn't allow myself to feel sorry for myself. If I did, I quickly mentally kicked myself in the ass and said, don't be such a sissy.
"Dude, I toured Auschwitz about a month before I went to this prison. I walked around Auschwitz and Birkenau all day long by myself, listening and reading at all these places where all these people were killed in this one tiny area. That puts stuff in perspective. I also try to remain grateful for what I had. I had food, clothes and shelter.
"We recently toured places — I've been to some pretty brutal places on tour on my days off where you see people starving in the streets. And in our media, of course, there's all sorts of crazy shit going on in the Middle East. Our soldiers are getting shot at in Afghanistan and Syria's blowing up. If you think about all these things, I wasn't in such a bad place and I just reminded myself of that. I could eat, I wasn't freezing or sweating to death, and nobody was shooting guns or throwing grenades at me. So I was like, I'm just going to sit here and make the most of my time and read and write. And learn a little bit."
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Related links:
Lamb Of God's Official Site
Revolver Magazine's Official Site
Friday, August 10, 2012
Randy Blythe Interview About His Incarceration In The Czech Republic!
One week ago, after five weeks in a Czech Republic prison, Randy Blythe was released on bail and was able to return to the United States. Although LAMB OF GOD was forced to cancel their summer co-headline tour with Dethklok and special guests Gojira, the band has agreed to play SLIPKNOT's "KnotFest" shows on August 17th in Council Bluffs, Iowa and August 18th in Somerset, Wisconsin.
Blythe was interviewed on this morning's (Friday, August 10) edition of the KROQ morning radio program "The Kevin & Bean Show". Here are a few excerpts from the interview.
On the alleged incident at a LAMB OF GOD concert that resulted in the death of a fan:
Randy: "We played a show in Prague and a young man was injured and fell into a coma and died a month later. And then the Czech police started to investigate this and contacted our government and said, 'Hey, we wanna investigate this guy on possible manslaughter charges.'
"It was a heavy metal show; people jump up on stage and go crazy and all this other stuff — it's standard. [It happens] every single day.
"The young man in question left the stage and hit his head, and the young man's family — rightfully so — asked the Czech police to investigate this.
"I don't think the Czech police, or police probably in general, have a pretty firm grasp on what a heavy metal show is like and what goes on. So there's a lot of really questionable evidence about this young man's injury. Regardless, I was charged with manslaughter."
On how he ended up getting arrested:
Randy: "Apparently, the Czech police wrote to our Justice Department and contacted them, perhaps the FBI as well, and said, 'We have this charge and this investigation against this young man for manslaughter. And our government basically told them, 'No way. Get out of here.' I don't know if they thought the charge was unwarranted enough for them to even bother to pursue it. And that's okay; I understand that. But our government never notified me. I'm kind of perturbed about that.
"So we booked [another] gig [in Prague], no problem, two years later and went back to play, and I was met by a S.W.A.T. team at the airport when I walked off the ramp to carry me away; there were guys with masks and machine guns — it was pretty intense.
"I understand if our government didn't wanna comply 'cause they didn't think it was worth their time, but they could have let me know. If the IRS can find me and the Justice Department can't, then our country is in trouble."
"For the first two or three minutes [after I was detained], I was completely in shock. I'm standing there and it looks like with the people they'd sent to come get me, but they're there to pick up Al-Qaeda. They had on full-on masks, machine guns, big knives, all this stuff. I came off the plane, actually, and they took our passports, which was a little bit unusual, but I've seen it before, 'cause we travel all the time… With people getting deported, or whatever — that's generally what it is; people hopping borders illegally or whatever. So I come off the plane and I see all these guys, great, big guys with guns, and I look at my bass player and I start singing KOOL & THE GANG. I'm like, 'It's a party going on right here.' And he goes, 'No, dude. This isn't a party. This is not good.' [So] they took me away and it was very… it was startling more than terrifying, 'cause everything was so surreal."
On his time in the Czech prison:
Randy: "The Czech legal system works different than ours — really different than ours — because they granted me bail at my initial court hearing. In the United States, when you're granted bail, if the judge decided to give you bail, you post bail and then you walk out of jail. Your wife comes and gets you, or whatever, and you say you're sorry… And the Czech Republic doesn't quite work that way. The judge granted me bail, my band got the money together, posted it, and then the prosecuting attorney said, 'No, I don't really like that.' So he raised an objection. So it went to an appeal court. The appeal court doubled my bail. We're talking about $400,000 at this point. So they had to kind of scramble to get that money together. Then the prosecuting attorney, after I paid it a second time, objected and said, 'I don't really like this. I don't think he should get out on bail.' So I sat in jail some more and it went to another appeal court and then I got out."
On whether anyone from the U.S. government offered any assistance to him while he was in the Czech prison:
Randy: "I saw a woman from the [American] embassy in Prague once. To my knowledge, I was the only American in prison there in Pankrác in Prague. So it wasn't like they had a whole slew of guys — from Colorado to New Jersey to Texas, or whatever — in there. [but they didn't really do anything for me], and I'm not very pleased about that either. I mean, I understand it's due process and there was an investigation, but the judicial system there is kind of messed up."
On whether any of his fellow prisoners knew who he was:
Randy: "Some [of the other people in prison] did — I had some fans in there. [And] that could be good and it could be bad; it depends on whether or not they like your music."
On where the case stands right now:
Randy: "If it gets to trial, I don't know yet. It could be right before Christmas, it could be after Christmas, it could be the beginning of next year. It's not for certain that [the case] will go to trial, because I've been charged by the police, but then, as I said, the Czech judicial system is weird, the prosecuting attorney hasn't charged me yet. So you've gotta get charged by a whole bunch of guys before things start going through. But if I have to go, I will go."
On whether he was aware of the support he was receiving back home from his fans and the rest of the music community:
Randy: "I had minimal news of the progression of my case, because almost nobody in there spoke English and I couldn't read a Czech newspaper. But my lawyer told me, 'Your hometown is really standing behind you, all your fans are. There's a lot of people in the music industry standing behind you.' And I didn't realize how much it was until I got out. 'Cause in there, prisoners would just give me little tidbits, who spoke broken English. I'd come out to our hourly walk and they'd be like [adopting Czech accent], 'Ozzy Osbourne said something good for you.' Slash from GUNS N' ROSES… all sorts of people, who are just legends in the music industry, were really supportive and speaking out, and our fans were certainly supportive."
Join the revolution, contribute to our Indiegogo campaign! Click HERE: www.indiegogo.com/hornsup
Related links:
Lamb Of God's Official Site
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