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Ozzfest Special: Interview With Otep Vocalist Otep & Bassist Evil J By Jeff Kerby, Contributor Wednesday, September 8, 2004 @ 10:28 AM
“What the hell? Is she shoving it in that pig’s mouth?”
Yep. If you happened to be standing near the second stage at this year’s Ozzfest, you probably remember this band’s female lead singer—no, not the one from Lacuna Coil either. Instead, this frantic description would have doubtlessly accompanied the antics of the uber-aggressive, spirited vocalist for OTEP. Any spectator watching their set would have to internalize the realization that this group is as authentically serious about their music as they are their politics that is to say, very painfully serious. OTEP is currently touring in support of their sophomore effort, House of Secrets--a disc which has taken the group’s usual blend of artistic, emotional metal and expanded it far beyond even the impressive parameters of their debut Sevas Tra. According to the group, their music is designed to challenge and inspire thought in those who listen, and if the effect is striking, then that’s pretty much the idea.
If OTEP’s music isn’t enough to initiate discussion, surely their prominence within the Rock the Vote movement should be enough to garner the band substantial dialogue within the metal community. For such well-spoken artists to display a willingness to exercise this privilege has proven especially important during a time in this country--the land of the free--where stating one’s beliefs should never be a cause for censorship or fear. That being said, even Ozzfest hasn’t been immune to the question of how much political activism is too much—early in the tour, images of Bush and Hitler could be viewed in the background as Black Sabbath performed during their headlining set. The result was that many in the audience and on the Internet were angered by the allusion, and a relatively quick decision was made to pull this portion of the video for the remainder of the tour.
Whether reading OTEP’s opinions ultimately becomes a source of agreement or contention, it shouldn’t diminish the risk any musician takes when they use their work as a forum for political or social expression. In cases like this, proper respect should always be given for any individual willing to risk potential ticket or disc sales in order to publicaly state what they believe regardless of the popularity of the position being taken. Face it, anyone can avoid an issue or ride the fence or remain apolitical, but true heroism makes itself evident even in the face of ever-present political or economic ramifications--should this standard serve as the litmus test for true patriotism, then OTEP has consistently succeeded in displaying themselves as proud, responsible Americans.
KNAC.COM: Specifically, why has your band been so extremely active in the Rock The Vote movement?
KNAC.COM: What about Halliburton? There’s a good reason.
KNAC.COM: Isn’t it your right as artists to express your opinions?
OTEP: Everybody makes a statement from the cars you drive to the people you date, your hairstyle, music or even your t-shirt makes a statement. Why not make a statement about something that’s important. Our song “Warhead” is something I was compelled to write. It wasn’t something that was fanciful. It was just something that I was provoked to do. That is art’s mission. It is supposed to provoke you into an emotion or an idea or an action. That is what we try to do. That goes for every song we write.
KNAC.COM: Do you think that provoking an audience is as important as an artist’s personal catharsis? Or do you think that if the catharsis is genuine that it will automatically provoke the audience?
KNAC.COM: One time in an interview you said that the perfect moment for you onstage hadn’t occurred yet. Is the perfect moment even possible? If it ever did happen, would a musician even want to continue playing?
KNAC.COM: Would it be too much of a stretch to say that it would be a spiritual type fulfillment for you?
EVIL J: We always have goals that are in some ways unattainable, but then we also have goals that are somewhat attainable. She and I have had moments where it feels euphoric, but that ideal moment might not even be something we were aware of at the time. It might be presumptuous of me to even assume that I would know once I’d hit it. For me, it just drives me on the stage to hit a certain level of performance. It isn’t about just having people look at me, it’s about playing sounds that make me excited.
KNAC.COM: So basically, it’s just a matter of achieving the proper balance between reality and the ideal that makes for the proper environment for making music?
KNAC.COM: Why does this band attempt to aim for some type of cerebral fulfillment to go along with the music whereas many other bands are content to just pound out whatever suits them at the time?
EVIL J: It’s very organic music.
OTEP: There’s a very primitive part of me that needs the violence of what we do, but also the psuedo religious facet of it as well.
KNAC.COM: In a daily survival type mode, how important is your personal expression?
KNAC.COM: If you didn’t have this forum, how would it affect your life?
KNAC.COM: When the group is out signing for fans and they interact with you, what is the proper attitude for a band to have? Do you try not to think about it, or do you have to just embrace it?
KNAC.COM: How do you feel about certain artists such as Linda Ronstadt being villified due to their political beliefs and their willingness to use their celebrity to express themselves?
KNAC.COM: There are billions of dollars worth of reasons.
KNAC.COM: You mean Bill O’Reilly and his “no spin zone”—there’s a misnomer. How much does it bother you that there is still a significant portion of the population-- who in the face of a nation crisis that even dwarfs Watergate in its severity--chooses to sit back, not think, cover their head with the flag and wait for George to lead us out of the darkness?
KNAC.COM: Of course Dubya gets a large percentage of his support from the church.
KNAC.COM: In the DVD, you discuss pretending to be sick so that you wouldn’t have to go to church. Can you describe the feeling you had when you were seated in a pew those mornings?
KNAC.COM: And you were forced to go by family?
KNAC.COM: Did they go?
EVIL J: My parents still go, and my mother plays organ in her church. For me, it was like when I went to college people asked me if I was still going to mass. I was like, “no”. It’s like this whole organized religion thing that is such a blind follow. There’s no questioning. We should always modernize things and question things—for some of this though, there is no modern translation. We’re still talking about things like “let he who is without guilt, cast the first stone.” Things just aren’t necessarily that simple anymore. I was an altar boy, and I went through all those phases because that’s what my parents thought I needed. It was the traditional sense of lifestyle. It was like if you go through these steps, you’ll grow up to be a great person. Well, we still have priests who are leaders in the religious world doing things to young boys that are unthinkable and absolutely horrific. Why do they still think they are so superior or so much above everybody else? Since I’ve been away, I look at different religions and I take from each one what I think is the most important to apply to my lifestyle.
OTEP: Growing up in a Christian house where everything is about oppression and living in fear of a God who loves you doesn’t make any sense. I don’t think that type of thing is going to change either. People have always kind of done that type of thing.
EVIL J: It seems like they need it.
OTEP: It’s like a corporation. It’s like the tobacco industry—it needs its addicts.
EVIL J: The Vatican, to me, always seemed like a kind of business. It was the main office of a corporation. The Vatican could keep control of an entire country because the king had to answer to God. Who was God? The Vatican. Its tumbled down from there ever since.
OTEP: In fairness to our country, at least there is some semblance of a separation between church and state.
KNAC.COM: But when you have a president who is garnering support directly from the church due to his stance on abortion and fictionally religious image, how can there truly be a separation?
KNAC.COM: Yeah, and church does equal establishment. It’s where the money is and the people who belong to them typically vote.
KNAC.COM: Who represents us though?
KNAC.COM: Not in Florida.
KNAC.COM: Which of course puts us in the tenuous position of telling other people how to establish democracy when we can’t even hold a corruption free election ourselves.
OTEP: One thing I think we might see in this election is a huge military vote against the Bush administration. I think that would set a precedent not only for this administration but for future administrations that you need to take care of those people that you’re putting in harms way.
KNAC.COM: I would imagine someone fighting in an obviously worthwhile war such as WWII could feel as though they were putting themselves in jeopardy for a purpose. How can someone currently stationed in Iraq consider that the position they are being placed in worthwhile? Is Dick Cheney’s band account an appropriate reason to put peoples’ lives in jeopardy?
(Photos by Sefany Jones/ KNAC.COM)
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