Breed 77 is a band that is best described as "Flamenco
metal" to most. Hailing from Gibraltar, Spain and Portugal, the quintet
blends a nice fusion of classic heavy metal and traditional Spanish flamenco
music to bring a rather unique sound and style to the genre of heavy metal.

Earlier this year, their sixth studio record - The Evil
Inside - was released, and ever since they've been busy gigging to support it.
This time, they supported Fozzy on their UK tour for the second time, and on
August 14th, in a comfortable seating area around the back of the
Yardbirds venue in Grimsby, we had the opportunity to sit down and chat to
three of the five band members. Here's what happened...
Leese : For people
that are new to Breed 77, how would you describe your music?
Andre: Flamenco metal, basically heavy metal, traditional -
between heavy rock and heavy metal with obviously the flamenco fusion to it. We
all have different influences; our inputs work in a different way. I'm more of
a metal guy... Some of the guys are a bit more rock, old school... a fusion of
all that. I'll say classic heavy metal.
Joobs: What
influences do you have as a band, main influences?
A: As a band, that's kind of hard to answer.
J: Or as an
individual... say yourself, personally?
A: Personally, Metallica when I was younger, then later
Machine Head, Slipknot, and so on...
(Pedro enters)
A: Pedro, obviously, really different influences. It's
different for every single one of us.
J: (to pedro) Who
influences yourself as a musician?
Pedro: Who or what band?
J: Bands... artists...
P: Yeah from classics... definitely Led Zeppelin to non-metal
at all like Paco de Lucia. Some crazy progressive 70's like Camel and shit like
that. Then, more metal like Metallica, all the way up to, I don't know, Opeth...
I really like, by the way, Ghost I know someone is going to kill me for that
but I really love the band.
J: Haha, you like it
but no one else does?
P: I do, I do.
J: Cool. You have The Evil Inside out, which is your 6th
album now. That was out in March... How has it been received?
P: The Evil Inside
had a really good reception from the beginning. I think we accomplished what we
were trying to do, which is not repeating ourselves in any album. I mean, if
you hear our back catalogue you will notice an obvious difference between
albums, and I think we accomplished what we wanted. It's definitely not as metal
as our previous work with Insects... It's like more hard rock; rock with an
edge, and it's definitely going to have nothing to do with the next one. But,
so far so good, especially in Europe. I mean our new label has done an impressive
job there. We've just been touring in Germany, and very well attended gigs for
our headline shows as well as our supporting stuff for DevilDriver. Yeah, so
far we're very happy.
J: This is your second
time with Fozzy, isn't it? The first time round...
A: First time was December...
J: Personally, I've
been to shows on both tours and I've found that the fans are a lot more
receptive now than the previous tour.
L: Now that you're
playing more from The Evil Inside.
P: Yeah... Actually, our last video, "Bring on the Rain",
is escalating... I can see that from the likes on YouTube. It is nice to see
people are singing along to the words...
J: Even if they have
written them on their arm.
(Note: We both had
lyrics written on our arms at one of the shows so that we'd be able to sing
along with the choruses to "Drown" and "Fear".)
L: The catchy
choruses!
P: Haha! Down, down, down, down. Round, round, round, round.
J: We've washed it
off now. We know the words now.
L: We have four or five songs that we know.
J: It is quite nice
to think that you've got some catchy choruses that people can pick up on right
away...
(Danny arrives with
food)
J: Come in and sit
down! You can eat at the same time.
Danny: You ask me some questions, I'll answer from here. I
haven't eaten all day.
J: Okay. I've already
asked the guys who their influences are... who are yours?
D: Maiden, King Diamond, Black Sabbath... pretty much
classic metal.
J: Fantastic. I'll
let you finish your food.
D: I haven't eaten all day!!
J: Neither have we. I
might come over and help you in a minute.
D: Notice there's no shops here.
J: Nothing at all.
L: What's the music
scene like back home? Do you play many shows in and around Spain, Portugal and
Gibraltar?
P: Yes we do. Actually we're about to--
A: We're just about to go to Gibraltar and Portugal.
P: Yeah. Obviously, gigs are crazy, you know, and very well
attended.
L: We don't hear of a
lot of bands coming out of Gibraltar. Is there a big metal scene there?
A: He's the man to tell you the story! (points at Danny)
D: There's not really a metal scene; it's very small, but
there's many bands there. Everybody's a musician, so we get a lot of pop bands...
they're not very heavy.
J: So you're quite
unique over there?
D: There's only one venue, called the Rock on the Rock, and
that's it. Apart from that, just little bars where people play covers, but once
in a while they do a big gig there in the town centre and there's like 10,000
people... like a stadium thing, and that's what we're doing on the 10th
September, which is National Day.
J: It's a big change
from here, where you're playing to 100's to go to like 10,000.
D: Yeah, it's fun.
J: So you have the
gig coming up... What's next?
P: We have the gig in Gibraltar... We still have a run of
four gigs at the end of this month, then we're going to Portugal, back to the
UK, then start writing songs for the new album which we want to release as soon
as possible. Also, we are trying to squeeze another last run... another tour
starting in the UK, most likely, and heading to Europe at the very end of the
year.
L: Will it be a
headline tour?
P: Yes. We're looking at that. We don't have any
confirmation but we're strongly pushing for that. It's going to be the end of
the year for us, hopefully the beginning of the next one too. It's going to be
a fun year.
J: You said the next
album is looking to be completely different, so do you have an idea of how it's
going to go?
P: Simply because, as I mentioned before, none of our albums
kind of repeat themselves so, we definitely wanna have something you know, very
different. I think it's gonna be better but... you know. Edgier, heavier and punchier, definitely.
L: Our blog is called
Invading the Pit, and basically it's written by female metal fans, for female
metal fans. Obviously, as you can see from this tour, we like to travel to see
bands. We're very dedicated. Because of that, and because we get to talk to and
hang out with guys from bands, we get a lot of people that think "Oh, you
must be groupies"...
A: What's wrong about that? (laughs)
L: Well, nothing if
that's what people wanna do, but it's not for us! Also, we have friends who go
to shows and they enjoy getting in the mosh pit, and they have guys that are
like "oh, you shouldn't be here".
A: I don't like it. It's not a girly thing.
L: There's split
opinions on it. People know what they're going into when they get in a pit.
They know they can get hurt.
A: Yeah, but if you're a guy and you're in a mosh pit, and
there's a girl there... It's no fun anymore. No one's gonna be hitting and pushing
each other because there's a girl there. We've got to be careful.
J: I give as good as
I get. I tell you what... the bruises I got from Download...
A: Guys don't want to hit girls... At least not me.
L: We've noticed at
these shows there's kind of a split in the audience between male and female. Is
there a divide overall in your fan base?
P: To be honest, our fan base, I would say it's 50/50. We
have a lot of females.
D: Trannies too.
J: Come on then,
explain that one.
D: We are equally at ease with everybody.
P: We have a wide spread fan base.
D: Anyone can like Breed, we don't care... even if it's dogs
and pigs. There's nothing wrong with that.
J: So I can bring my
cat along to a show?
D: If it buys records we're happy.
L: Come on, then... Who
rocks the hardest... Men or women?
P: Both. I dunno, to be honest.
L: We've already
established the girls like it... "Love you, Paul!"
J: Yeah, we've heard
a few Paul chants.
P: The guys I think, mosh pit wise, they're like
RAAAAAAAAAAH!
D: You can't say that, Pedro. Every guy's not exactly the
same, every girl's not exactly the same.
P: Yeah, but I meant in general...
D: It doesn't matter the person, or what they are. Everybody
is an individual person.
A: The craziest I've seen at a gig was a girl... It was a
DevilDriver show when we were on tour with them two years ago... This was in
France and she was wearing a massive hat, you know like those hats you wear at
football matches or something? She was wearing one of those hats and was in the
circle pit the whole time until Dez pointed at her and said "You! Come on
stage!" and she was jumping, like FLIPPING, off the stage onto the crowd
and she did that six or seven times in a row and even Dez said "You're the
fucking craziest bird I've ever seen."
L: A lot of the time
with things like that there's a lot of alcohol involved.
P: When alcohol's involved everyone gets crazy.
L: At the end of the
day, as long as people are responding to what you're playing, it's all good,
right?
P: Yeah, we feed off each other.
J: Thanks for your
time, I think we can wrap this up now unless you have anything else to add or
any more stories...
D: I think we've covered pretty much everything... illness,
death on the road.
L: Yeah, like jumping
over fences?
A: Yeah, I need to be sensible on tour. Crazy behaviour (grins)
(Note: There was no jumping over fences. The rumour was something we overheard from Matt from Voodoo Vegas. In actuality, Andre had surgery under his arm after contracting an infection on Saturday, and played a show every day from the Sunday. Trooper!)
(Note: There was no jumping over fences. The rumour was something we overheard from Matt from Voodoo Vegas. In actuality, Andre had surgery under his arm after contracting an infection on Saturday, and played a show every day from the Sunday. Trooper!)
J: Well done for
motoring on, and going through each night. Obviously, we've been to all the
shows... three so far. Each night you've gone longer before you've got the wince
of pain like "ARGH! I can't go on!" How are you getting through that?
A: Painkillers, antibiotics, marijuana (smiles)
P: That's why he's smiling so sweetly!
(L to R: Paul, Danny, Leese, Pedro, Joobs, Stuart, Andre and tech/friend of the band, Rui)
Breed 77's album The Evil Inside is available to purchase
now. For all updates and information on the band, check out their official
website at breed77.com, and their Facebook and Twitter pages.
2 comments:
Great interview!
Great Intervie ;)
and Rui was the replacement for Paul at the germany tour
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