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Lamb of God’s Willie Adler on their new album Omens – Guitar.com

October 7th, 2022 1:43 am

If youve ever seen Lamb of God live or watched an errant YouTube clip youll know that Willie Adler has the stiffest picking hand in all of metal. His forefinger bends around his plectrum so sharply that it looks like its been snapped in half. His remaining digits point rigidly downwards. And his elbows at a near-constant ninety degrees. Its a technique that heavy musics never seen before or since so, the second Guitar.com secures an interview, we have to ask him what the fucks up.

Im sure its gonna give me arthritis pretty soon, says Adler, laughing down the phone from his home in Richmond, Virginia. Believe you me, if I could do it any other way, where my hands were relaxed, then I would.

When Adler first picked up the guitar, he only had a few lessons before directing his focus entirely on metal, which meant he never received much tutelage. It all just grew out of comfortability and the way I wanted to speak through my guitar, he says, and the way I accomplished that was manipulating my right hand into the way its grown into. It was a very natural unnatural progression.

His technique may look odd but you cant argue with the results. Since the guitarist joined the band in 1999 and catalysed their name change from Burn the Priest, Lamb of God have blossomed into the USs mightiest extreme metal force. Alongside Slipknot, Machine Head and Killswitch Engage, they co-helmed the New Wave of American Heavy Metal. Between 2006 and 2015, everything they released cracked the Top 10 of the Billboardalbum chart. Theyve also accrued five Grammy nominations and gigged with every one from Slayer to Metallica.

Musically, Lamb of God have changed next to nothing since their explosion into the mainstream. When youre doing as well as they are, why would you need to? Frontman Randy Blythe has always snarled the most overtly political lyrics he can, famously targeting the Bush administration and Iraq war on 2004s Ashes of the Wake. The bands self-titled 2020 album shot from the hip at everything from the military industrial complex to an at best apathetic American healthcare system.

Lambs drumming first by co-founder and Willies brother Chris Adler, then, since 2019, Art Cruz has always simultaneously been effortlessly original. Meanwhile, Willie and fellow guitarist Mark Morton have long loved the same kind of riffs: fast-fingered dances across the low E.

I like the tonality of the low string: it just seems heavier to me, says Willie. And I was always fascinated by the guys who could do the super-techy riffs. I love [Megadeths 1990 album] Rust in Peaceand what Marty [Friedman] did on that record. He was just unbelievable in how he solod and riffed. Ive always gravitated towards the atonal Slayer-type riff too, where theres a lot of minor going and it doesnt necessarily conform to one theory or the other.

Image: Travis Shinn

After decades of sticking to the same guns, Lamb of God are deepening their arsenal on new album Omens. The last time they sounded this intrepid was on their debut. Lead single and opener Nevermoresignals from the off that something wickedly wacky this way comes, as it interrupts its own rolling riff with jagged squeals.

Adler laughs when we bring it up. That was one of the first songs that Mark sent me when we were talking about writing a new record, and I was like, What is this?! It sounded so great to me and so off-the-wall. It reminds me of an old A Life Once Lost riff: its super-chaotic and those piercing, stabbing chords are what make that riff. And they make that song, because it starts with them and comes back round to them. That song, to me, is like walking through an asylum.

Image: Steve Thrasher

Elsewhere, Denial Mechanismgoes full hardcore-punk mode, chords scurrying over the most simple but primal of drum beats. Thats before September Song ends Omenson its most evolutionary note. A barrage of clean hammer-ons and pull-offs commence the track with an aggressive blues lick, which naturally escalates to Lamb of Gods archetypal territory of riffs and roars albeit backed by classical strings. One last marathon of tapping builds to the albums climax. Its among Lamb of Gods most adventurous, bombastic and brilliant moments.

It unfolded in such a way that, when I wrote the demo for that song, it sounded nothing like where it ended up, Adler explains. Josh [Wilbur, Omens producer] had the idea of the symphonic parts and, at first, I was kind of unsure: it sounded like everything was fighting each other. I was just hearing it the way I heard it in my demo; I had to get my head out of that space and realise it had become a different song.

So why now? Lamb of God have been Lamb of God for 23 years and the furthest theyve pushed themselves since their debut is when Randy discovered melodic singing in time for 2015s VII: Sturm und Drang. According to Adler, its because they all recorded in the same place for a change.

Previously, recording for Lamb of God was an isolated process. Talking to Loudwirein 2015, Blythe described all five members in the studio together as a too many cooks scenario. You get half a line out and theyre like, Wait, wait, wait, wait! I dont go there when theyre tracking drums and, before theyre halfway through the first song, say, You missed something! You screwed something up! You gotta let me get my groove on. I gotta do my thing and flow.

Lamb of Gods Willie Adler and Mark Morton. Image: Press

Seven years later, hes clearly softened his stance. Willie says: The idea [of recording together] was presented to us and we were like, Why not? Knowing that the collaboration would continue when they started recording, Lamb of God had the freedom to enter the studio with incomplete ideas.

There were songs that we had been working on in pre-production where we didnt know how they were going to take shape, the guitarist continues. There were moments within songs, particularly September Song, that we didnt know how we were going to flesh out. We could not only sit together but, with the benefit of a studio, we could actually hear what everybody else wants.

Image: Press

Adler tracked Omensusing a plethora of ESP guitars, including two USA models, his signature model and another Evertune-equipped model tuned to E. Unsurprisingly, he feels a strong sense of loyalty to the Japanese brand. I remember the day when I fell in love with them: when the first one showed up at my house. It just felt natural. The fretboard, the way it played everything just felt super-smooth. I cant necessarily put it into anything tangible but that was just the way it felt it felt right.

Lamb of God are already touring to promote the album. The week before Guitar.coms talk with Willie, the band headlined Bloodstock Festival in Derbyshire to 15,000 people. Right now though, the guitarist is at home, with Vio-lence and former Machine Head player Phil Demmel filling in for him on the European dates.

Image: Steve Thrasher

I miss my dudes, says Adler. Its hard to think about them being on stage and me not being on stage with them. But at the same time its simply something I had to do. I really appreciate Phil for being able to fill in.

Theres been plenty of speculation as to why Willie has been missing shows. In an interview with KNAC.com, Vio-lence singer Sean Killian said Demmel was touring with Lamb of God because a couple of the guys in the band are not down with doing the vaxx. As much as wed have liked to, Lamb of Gods representatives forbade us from asking Willie why hes not on the road right now.

Instead, we ask if well see him when Lamb of God return to Europe in December, when the band headlines the State of Unrest tour with Kreator, Thy Art is Murder and Gatecreeper in support. Im not sure yet, he replies. Ive still got to figure that out.

While Willie mulls everything over and hopefully finds a path that lets him happily return to the road, he can at least take pride in the most boundary-breaking album Lamb of God have made in more than 20 years. Lamb of God to me is a band that doesnt necessarily stray from its roots but keeps you on your toes, he says. The biggest thing with Omensis to stay Lamb of God but stay fresh. I want kids to be like, Damn, they did it again!

Omens is out on 7th October via Roadrunner. Lamb of God tour the UK with Kreator, Thy Art Is Murder and Gatecreeper in December.

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Lamb of God's Willie Adler on their new album Omens - Guitar.com

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