ROOTS, PROPHECIES, AND RITUALS
A CONVERSATION WITH MAX CAVALERA FROM SOULFLY
βMetal is good, and itβs just going to get better in 2019.β
Max Cavalera is no stranger to metal. With an illustrious career that began with Sepultura from their very roots (pun intended), to legendary projects such as the Cavalera Conspiracy and Soulfly, he has established himself and his expertise with a permanence seldom achieved. With Soulflyβs latest release, Ritual, Cavalera has assembled yet another dreamy list of guest collaborators. His own excitement and admiration clearly shine through.
βIβm lucky to work with a lot of my personal idols. Iβm a big fan of their music and I get to work for them with collaborations. On our last record, Ritual, we had Randy from Lamb of God, Ross from Immolation, and on the Cavalera record we had Justin from Godflesh.β
The features are unmistakeable, and Cavalera worked hard to make sure each track brings something new to the table. Each song draws from numerous styles and influences to create a masterpiece.
βI really enjoyed doing the title track, “Ritual”, because it was kind of a challenge to capture some of the old challenge of the first album. Really cool collaboration with the Navajo Indians, the chants on top of it came out great.β
βI loved βDead Behind the Eyes.β Randy (Lamb of God) did a great job on the vocals. I think itβs like an old school sample mixed with some of the newer, heavier stuff of right now. Especially in the end, itβs a kind of Harmβs Way, Code Orange heaviness with machinery.β
As he talks, Cavalera is reminded of the years he has worked his way through: βWeβve been doing this since, gosh, like Schizophrenia, and it doesnβt get old, it gets better. Then on a song like Rapture, you have the thrash grooves and the death metal riffs. You have Ross from Immolation growling on top of it, itβs fucking perfect. Definitely one of my favourite songs on the record. I love that death thrash vibe.β
βYou mix death metal and thrash metal, you canβt go wrong with that. Itβs a lethal mix,β he chuckles. His love for his craft has clearly not faded in the slightest, andΒ true passion shines through as he speculates upon the genre and the future.
βIβm very optimistic for the future of metal. Iβm a big supporter of underground stuff such as Necrot and Churchburn. Thereβs a lot of variety: if you want something more doomy you can listen to some Conan, if you want something more artistic, thereβs Mastodon, last record was sick. Metal is good, and itβs just going to get better in 2019,β he guarantees.
I donβt doubt him, considering tours with both Sepultura and Soulfly coming up this year.
βWeβre doing a little bit of everything, itβs going to be a touring year. Weβre doing the Ritual world tour, America, Europe, and festivals.
βIβm just happy that I get a whole year of just touring, Iβve never really done that before. Every time itβs been at some point of the yearΒ Iβve had to stop to do some kind of recording, and I donβt really have those this year. Iβm looking forward to just tour. Being on the road, and travelling as much as I can, bringing metal everywhere.β
Cavaleraβs belief in the power of music and metal is anything but unjustified.
“I love music as thereβs no language or cultural barrier. Doesnβt matter if youβre from America or Brazil, we all get along because we love metal. I always said that music succeeded in what society failed at,β he expresses in a heartfelt manner. βSociety failed with racism, with bigotry, and in metal, thereβs none of that. I meet fans from 80 countries, touring, and they all love metal. It connects us all, and thatβs the beauty of it, I love that about metal.β
A huge element to alternative and counter-culture has been the power it brought to the masses, the people, who often do not have a voice otherwise.
βThere is stuff like Evil Empowered that was created to talk about some of these kind of actions and situations. Like with Trump against all the immigrants, very racist, fascist attitudes. Then we have Brazil of course, Bolsonaro, another fascist president. We make sure we have a voice, and even though Soulfly is not a political band, we do give our own idea of whatβs going on. And it will pass, you know, everything will pass. In time, it will get better with the future.β
During such times of tension and uncertainty, it has often been art that allowed a way through. Through the thick and the thin, the world does need to get along, and who better than a metalhead to remind us of the same?