Describe yourself/your band.
Mike R: It's a combination of shared musical style,
interests, plus high intensity playing. We try to keep it interesting for
ourselves and hopefully the listeners.Aaron: We took it from a Hitchcock movie. It sounded original and kind of dark. Actually it’s just a last name and since the inception we have come to meet many who share the surname.
Mike R: Aaron & Mike (Rataj) are avid home-brewers, but
we're all pro beer drinkers. Mike Scheid is a father of 3.
How did you you guys meet? How did you get involved in the
band together?
Mike R: We met in the finance industry and had similar
musical tastes. Mike Scheid was trying to get the 3 of us to jam but I was
studying to get a license for get a new job. Once we started jamming it
clicked. I'm glad he kept pushing it.
Mike S: Aaron and I went to college together and bonded on
similar musical tastes but for some reason didn’t even jam or write together
for the first 10 years of being friends… weird. I did work with his former band
as a recording engineer and we put out a few records. He wound up moving to Chicago and working
with me where Mike R was already working, also.
One day we just realized that within our office we had a 3 piece with
similar energy and flavor so we decided to hang, drink and jam. We don’t know any covers so we just played
disjointed nonsense then started writing songs immediately so we’d know where
we were going. For better or worse we
don’t cover anything (not that I’m anti – I love classic rock and all music,
really) so it forces us to write and create something comparably fun to the
songs we like outside of the band. Those
influences bleed in without being played directly.
Aaron: Sounds about right. An after work beer and noise
session. The band lasted longer than the job.
Can you describe any of your personal (or band) conflicts?
Mike S: Having time to do it all would be mine. I’m proud of what we’ve accomplished with the
time we’ve been able to work together on it.
We tend to work well outside of the space and communicate online when we
can’t meet so there’s always something cooking.
What have you given up to play in ARBOGAST, especially while
touring?
Mike R: Vacation time from our jobs.Mike S: We haven’t toured a tremendous amount but we have taken some jaunts out to play out of town… all I can say is it’s cheaper than a vacation but still kinda costly to do it at this point.
Aaron: Money.
Aaron: We’ve had some great Chicago shows, as it’s always
nice to see familiar faces. Our tour out East in April was pretty rad all-around.
I agree with Schied, Philly was very cool. We played the upstairs of Kung Fu
Necktie with this amazing band called Carved Up. It was a really nice vibe, a very small room
and probably only 30 people there but everyone went batshit when we played. New
York at Lit Lounge is definitely worth mentioning as well. We had a lot of
friends and family out at that show and got to play with some really talented
people, Bangladeafy and In Musth.
Which band has been
nicest/coolest/grooviest/craziest/best/adjective that you have had the pleasure
of meeting?
Mike S: I really liked Bison BC. I’m a big fan of their music and they were
really nice dudes who complimented us on our stuff as well. It felt good to have the approval of a pretty
established metal band of their caliber.
Mike R: I hate to be that guy but really most bands have been great.
We've made a lot of friends around Chicago & continue to play shows with
them. I suppose Shifting Totem, East of the Wall & Heaving Mass stand out.
Aaron: So many cool bands we’ve played with. Goes Cube, East of the
Wall, Bison BC, Behold…the Arctopus, Chapstik. Plus about 100 local/regional
bands.
Mike R: “Will & D”. Haha.
Mike S: If we ever played that one live – ya me too.. Seriously I have
a blast playing “Blasfamous” (no pun intended). I’m a big fan of dynamics so
that more contrast between quiet, minimal and serene and a brutal spastic fury
of intensity, the better for me. That’s
kind of what I was going for with that intro with that one and I love playing
it live. (track 4 on the ‘I’ record)
Aaron: It changes. Probably “Soulsfate” right now.
Can you describe what it was like to leave band practice after
writing the song 'Final Throes'? Modesty aside (if possible), did you know
you'd written a phenomenal song? (embedded below)
Mike S: That’s a great question and I’ll go more into the
introduction as being the last part to be finalized. We actually left the studio knowing it was
done once recorded since as Mike said it was finalized nearly the day of
recording. The very first riff of that
one was the introduction melody which was mutated a few different ways. We initially expressed it as bass and guitar
noise with volume swells just to get it down.
It made the song drag and started on the wrong foot so we decided to
kick up the rocking part and take the intro half-time which I worked out on
piano. That solved it and carried the
energy and again I LOVE contrasting dynamics like that. In the studio I stumbled across an old analog
Hammond organ which didn’t work at first but our engineer Andy picked it up and
dropped it on it’s base and then it played. I hammered out that piano melody
with some eerie low key volume swells in the bass register and it was almost
surreal how it clicked and was just done in one take. The vibe in the studio was pin drop quiet and
it was the last thing we added to the record and probably my favorite
moment.
Aaron: Thanks for the kind words. Those riffs had been
floating around for quite a while. I think we cut a few minutes off it at one
point because it seemed to drag. For me I really started to dig it once the
vocals were finalized, which was probably a week before we got in the
studio. I always feel a sense of accomplishment
after finalizing a song.
Mike R: We're working on it ...
Who will release your next record?
Mike R: Probably Nefarious but we're open to other possibilities...
Aaron: I would work with Nefarious Industries again. Love
those guys. We’ll probably worry about that after we write some new material.
Mike R: My mom. People that come to the shows to see another band but
end up talking to us because they enjoyed it is awesome. Always feels great to
make another convert.
Mike S: Local friends, family, wives,
girlfriends...everyone around us has chipped in and we’ve had a lot of
support. It’s been pretty awesome to see people genuinely excited about it.
Who were your primary influences when you started playing
music and who are they now?
Mike R: Punk bands, went through a huge punk influence when i started
playing, I'd practice to a lot of these bands then found my way to metal &
jazz.
Mike S: I started playing young on keyboards, piano, trumpet, and a
little guitar just farting around with whatever cheesy 80’s song or classic
rock I could hear on the radio or TV. I
really picked up the guitar put 6 strings on it and tuned it and started
playing when I got into the thrash/metal wave of the late 80’s early 90’s (just
like most). I had Metallica, Megadeth
and Pantera song books and didn’t come out of my room for a few years. I’m influenced in my heart of hearts by any
and all music that makes my head bob.
Aaron: I grew up playing metal. The big 4: Metallica, Megadeth, Slayer,
Anthrax. Moved into grunge then punk and
gridcore. I try and keep an open mind about most music. As far as current
writing influences I’m into doom, thrash, sludge, noise, heavy psych and stoner
rock. Have your style changes ever been intentional, or have they been organic?
Mike R: I'd say organic, maybe one part is played long enough &
we'll try to find a complimenting section to jump to.
Mike S: Organic…we’ve never planned or conversed about a certain style
to play. This is just the middle of our
ven diagram between us three.
Aaron: We intentionally try to keep it heavy. Sometimes we have said, “Hey let’s write a
fast one” and then we write a fast one. But it’s fairly organic, I guess.
If you had to slap a genre label on ARBOGAST so potential
new listeners could get a good idea of your sound without hearing you,
what would you label yourselves as?
Mike R: Progressive metal punk?
Mike S: I say metal usually to sum it up. We get a lot of different descriptions
from others and I like to leave it up to the listener.
Aaron: I wouldn’t.
What are your favourite releases of all-time?
Mike R: Battles Mirrored, Refused - Shape of Punk to Come, Salt
Peanuts.
Mike S: I’d have a really hard time narrowing it down. I’m too fair
and love all my records/children equally.
Besides music, what do you spend your time doing? What are
your hobbies?
Mike R: Brewing.
Mike S: Music would be my hobby so if I ever do it for a living I’ll
need a new hobby I guess.
Aaron: I spend the majority of my time working so I can pay the rent.
Drinking is fun, too.
Mike R: Support local music & buy their stuff! I'm a
huge fan of streaming sites to get the music out there, but go to shows
&the buy their merch. Please.
And smile.
Mike S: We joke, kid and have fun a lot and keep things light
generally but on a more serious note I want to say that music and metal have
gotten me through some REALLY rough, dark times and I’m grateful for all the
musicians who had the balls to take a shot and put themselves out there
honestly and purely for the love it and for the love of others. I keep the same things in mind when writing
and putting out music. If this reaches
one troubled individual and gives them the energy jolt to get up, clench their fists
and break out of a funk, then I’ve succeeded.
I owe a lot to the bands who’ve inspired me because more than urging me
to pick up an instrument they’ve urged me to fight my way out of worse
circumstances to better ones. I love
this music and these guys who’ve put up with me to make it and I hope it can
change someone - anyone’s, life out there.
Aaron: Thanks for talking to us.
Now go fuck yourself. (*he's talking to me, not the readers!)
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