CHIMAIRA Reveal Details Regarding Their 2006 Departure From Roadrunner Records
January 31, 2008, 16 years ago
The following report is courtesy of Andre Mihsin of Chartattack.com:
Cleveland, Ohio's CHIMAIRA released their fourth LP, Resurrection, last year. Aside from being a cool name for a record, Resurrection is an appropriate title considering just how close guitarist Rob Arnold and the rest of the guys were to calling it quits.
"We'd been touring as a band for a long time," Arnold explains. "And every band has its ups and downs and a lot of things had begun to crumble for us during the height of our career at the time.""We had lost our original drummer (Andy Herrick) at the time, and we were having problems with our label. But it all came back together after the self-titled record. So we felt this new record would be appropriately titled Resurrection. Not that it was a second coming or anything, it was just a second chance for us."
Things should have really taken off for the band in 2005. Following the success of 2003's The Impossibility Of Reason, Chimaira released their much stronger and more mature self-titled record. But instead of establishing Chimaira as a premier act in the American death metal scene, the immediate reaction to the album was lukewarm.
"The fans don't always agree that your next album is your best album," says Arnold. "But every band, for the most part, tries to keep progressing, and we're fortunate the people kind of recognize that and see that.""But it's taken some time. It's only recently that people are starting to recognize the greatness of the self-titled record, which I really appreciate and am happy for. And I don't want that to sound conceited in any way. It's just the blood, sweat and tears that went into that record and just what compositions the songs are in, and I'm just hearing more and more about people saying, 'That record rules'."
"I knew it was going to take people a long time to digest and it certainly took longer than I ever expected. But it's good to hear people noticing that progression. Now people are starting to realize that it was a band maturing and a band continuing to be hungry and realizing that you have to delve into every crevice of your creative mind to come together and try to be better than you were before and write something that's entertaining yet innovative."
Despite the album's eventual acclaim, the initial poor reception resulted in Chimaira getting buried toward the bottom of the Roadrunner Records roster below such high-profile acts as SLIPKNOT, MACHINE HEAD and OPETH.
"The basic fundamentals of a record label, those things were given to us at Roadrunner and they certainly did give us a chance," explains Arnold. "They gave us enough to survive, but at the same time they weren't giving us exactly what we needed because it is so difficult to be successful in an extremely heavy metal band without a radio outlet.""And that's what they wanted, they wanted us to create radio songs so that they can use that venue to create album sales, and that just wasn't the band we were. Therefore, they moved us into another category of the bottom of the totem pole bands that they weren't going to put any marketing into, and we weren't satisfied with that. We knew our potential could be realized somewhere where we could be a top of the totem pole band where metal would be more appreciated. It's kind of weird to say that we weren't appreciated as a metal band at Roadrunner Records, which is the most popular label. We needed to see if we could get out of there and try our craft somewhere else. And if it didn't work somewhere else, then so be it. Then we could blame ourselves."
Roadrunner granted Chimaira their release in 2006, and the band inked a deal with the much smaller Ferret Records. They're now back on track to try and establish themselves as one of the top bands in American heavy metal.
"We're coming into a point in our career where we can make our mark," Arnold says. "It's undeniable that people can look back in our career if it were to end tomorrow and still stay that those guys did something special and they accomplished quite a bit and they have a sound, which is something a lot of bands can't say they've created and been successful with in creating a sound for themselves. So we're really grateful for that."