PipemanRadio Interviews Mark Daly

Join PipemanRadio as we chat with the incredibly talented Mark Daly, whose presence echoes the legendary Chris Cornell, both in appearance and musical prowess. Mark walks us through his passionate journey with music, sharing the pivotal moment when...
Join PipemanRadio as we chat with the incredibly talented Mark Daly, whose presence echoes the legendary Chris Cornell, both in appearance and musical prowess. Mark walks us through his passionate journey with music, sharing the pivotal moment when the allure of the stage captured his heart. He unveils the fascinating dichotomy of an artist's onstage and offstage personas, providing a glimpse into the transformative experience of live performances for musicians of all temperaments. This conversation heats up as Mark spills the details on his band's latest album, "Devil's Arms," discussing the innovative sounds and the unique energy of their new hit "I Wanna Be More." It's a rollercoaster ride of creative revelations you won't want to miss.
In this energizing exchange, we also tackle the delicate balance between authenticity and variety in the ever-evolving world of music. Listen in as we discuss the challenges bands face when experimenting with new sounds while staying true to their core identity, drawing wisdom from music icons like Rick Rubin and genre-defying acts such as Bring Me the Horizon. We explore the excitement and anticipation that comes with performing new tracks live, the enduring charm of physical albums, and the unbreakable connection with fans that these experiences forge. It's a dialogue that resonates with anyone who understands that the heart of music lies beyond the constraints of genre labels, celebrating the joy of artistic evolution and the power of a live show.
EPISODE CHAPTERS
(0:00:05) - Mark Daly Talks Music and Upcoming Album
(0:10:08) - Authenticity and Variety in Music
EPISODE CHAPTERS WITH SHORT KEY POINTS
(0:00:05) - Mark Daly Talks Music and Upcoming Album
Mark Daly's musical journey, duality of artists' personas, and new album "Devil's Arms" with collaborative and out-of-comfort-zone experiences.
(0:10:08) - Authenticity and Variety in Music
Authenticity, genre boundaries, live performances, and fan connection in the evolution of musical artists like Bring Me the Horizon.
EPISODE CHAPTERS WITH FULL SUMMARIES
(0:00:05) - Mark Daly Talks Music and Upcoming Album (10 Minutes)
This chapter kicks off with my surprise at the resemblance of our guest, musician Mark Daly, to the legendary Chris Cornell, setting the tone for an exciting exchange. We explore Mark's musical journey, pinpointing the moment he knew music was his forever passion and how performing on stage became an irreplaceable part of his life. Mark shares insights into the duality of artists' personas on and off stage, shedding light on the transformative power of live performance for even the most introverted musicians. We then switch gears to discuss his band's latest album, "Devil's Arms," and the creative process behind their new sound, emphasizing the collaborative efforts and out-of-the-comfort-zone experiences that shaped their newest releases, including the upbeat rock song "I Wanna Be More."
(0:10:08) - Authenticity and Variety in Music (8 Minutes)
This chapter, we explore the creative freedom and evolution of musical artists, exemplified by bands like Bring Me the Horizon, who resist repeating their past by constantly innovating. We discuss the dilemma bands face between maintaining their signature style and experimenting with new sounds, acknowledging that trying to please everyone often leads to pleasing no one. Authenticity in music creation is emphasized, with a nod to Rick Rubin's advice to write for oneself, ensuring that music remains genuine. We touch upon the narrow definitions of genre that fans sometimes enforce, highlighting that true music appreciation transcends such boundaries, using the example of Ozzy Osbourne's diverse collaborations. We also cover the excitement of performing new music live, the anticipation it builds for upcoming releases, and the joy of connecting with fans through physical albums, underscoring the importance of live shows in experiencing and supporting music.
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Hi, you have unto censure for
Wow crazy you Wake up America. It's
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time for the Adventures of Pipe Man
on W four c Y dot com.
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West pomp Beats is number one internet
radio station. Here's your host, the
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Pipe Man. M hmm, I
wanna STARp love you. This is the
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pipe Man here on the Adventures pipe
Man W four c Y Radio. And
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I'm very excited about our next guest, uh because he is a badass musician.
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And I do have to say also
right off the bat that when I
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went to his website, the first
thing that happened to me just looking like
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real quick, I got a flash
of Chris Cornell and he I don't know
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if he's ever heard that, but
it was pretty well. So I'm like,
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well, there's a good step right
there in the right direction, because
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uh, I think he I think
he is on a parallel level there.
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So let's welcome to the show.
Mark Daly, how are you very good?
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Thank you for having me on.
And Chris Cornell is my favorite singer
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ever, so I'll take that one. Well, look at that yet the
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picture you have on the website,
it's like wow, I was like,
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you know, at first glance,
it's like, holy crap, you know,
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and so yeah, and uh boost
today I know exactly. So let's
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start off with for people that don't
know you had this journey of music start
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for you, what was that moment
in time in your life that you knew
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music was going to be a part
of your life forever. I always love
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music, and as a kid,
like played in different instruments and I was
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always into music. But I think
when I got into like the band scene
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and the first time I got on
stage with a full band and that the
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you know, the amps, just
the drum kit and just feeling that feeling.
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I have to say, the first
time I got on stage of the
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band, I was like, Okay, I don't want to do anything else.
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That's it. And that was it. And you know, I want
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to bring that up too, because
I also as somebody being in radio and
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being a speaker, you know,
I know that feeling when you get up
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on stage. But then some people
wonder, it's like, well, why
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do music artists think they're introverts?
They get up on stage and they like
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sing or perform or play guitar or
what have you. To these masses of
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people, how could an introvert do
that and maybe you could explain to the
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list what happens when you get up
on that stage. It's like you could
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be off the stage and either your
extrovert or introvert doesn't matter. Once you
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get up on that stage, there's
this like zone that you get into and
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like I call it a switch in
my brain that just automatically switches. It's
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so true, It's so true.
That's exactly what it is. Because when
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I'm quite shy and quiet in general, but like when I get up on
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stage, friends that have come to
see as play for the first time are
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like, was that actually you?
Like you're a completely different person, And
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like, because we're very energetic on
stage as a band, and I like
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to rock out, I like to
really get into it. I love talking
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to the audience. I love that
connection, the magic, that feeling.
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And then yeah, it's it's like
an alter ego. It's just completely different
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to to who I am off stage. But I think that's part of the
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magic with music. Yeah, totally
is. And you know, on the
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other side of it, I think
and I think it's good for fans to
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notice type of stuff that don't always
expect the artists to be exactly like that
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when you meet them in real life
off the stage, because it's just like
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with me, I can't all the
time, like I have my pipe Man
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Monikers, my radio Moniker, but
pipe Man and Dean are like two different
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people but still the same people,
but extreme, like the Moniker is the
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extreme part that you kind of keep
filter on the real part to Yeah,
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it is. It's an amazing kind
of thing, and I think a lot
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of people don't understand. That's why
I'm bringing it up. So tell us
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a little bit about your upcoming album, Devil's Arms, which is like right
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behind me there and you like that, right, yeah, And you know
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you have your newest song out which
is real, really cool. Tell us
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a little bit about that and how
because I know a little bit, but
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tell the listeners how this song and
this album is kind of like, you
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know, it's different because you've really
reached out of your comfort zone with it.
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Absolutely. Yeah. This record is
kind of the first one with all
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the band involved, so it was
kind of a really special thing where that
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you know, beforehand, I had
written the songs kind of on my own,
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or you know, worked with a
producer or something like that, but
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this record we went to El Paso, Texas into Sonic Cranch Studios. Uh,
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incredible place first of all, and
working with Brian Virtue on this album
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was just amazing as well. And
yeah, this is kind of just a
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different sounded, different style for us. And like I think the songs that
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came out of us at that those
sessions where it was unbelievable, like it
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was just next level. I think
we really found our Like it was great
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because we played live together for a
couple of years. We have that like,
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you know, we know each other
inside out things. And we went
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in and it was like I was
so curious. I was like, what's
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it going to sound like? What
all the boys involved? And they just
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nailed it. I basically went in
with like acoustic demos and just built from
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there, and even some of them
weren't finished. I wanted to leave them
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like wide open so that the lads
could put in their their style, their
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sound, and it worked really really
well. So we but we did a
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bunch of tracks. The first one
came out on Friday. I Want to
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Be More and we wanted to go
with like a fun, upbeat rock song
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that's just fun to play live,
It's fun to listen to it's kind of
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got a mainstream kind of rock sound
to it, but then the record is
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a bit of a roller coaster.
There's some there's some deep dark stuff,
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there's some heavy stuff. It's got
a really nice blend between without sounding like
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different records. And that's where Brian
came into the mix, of Brian Virtue
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who just got it perfect where the
songs blend, but they're different as well,
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and it's a nice roller coaster.
And I love hearing all that for
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multiple reasons. One is, you
know, I think it's so important the
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team work and camaraderie that happens in
music, and you really have to be
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all connected and everybody puts something else
into the funnel, and I think that's
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when you come out with the best, best music. You know. It's
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just like I would rather have other
people and their perception of what I do
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opposed to just my own, because
you're getting that different viewpoint that maybe you
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never even thought of, and that
brings you to a whole different level.
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For even the intros, like you
know that I want to be more starts
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with a bit of cowbell, little
bit of drums and then brings in the
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sound like things like that I wouldn't
have done on my own, right,
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you know, So, like those
ideas that we just collectively came and worked
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on. We had like two days
of pre production just to kind of go
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through everything, and which was a
short amount of time, but it was
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perfect because we had a bit of
pressure, but we also had complete creativity
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and that really shows in the record
that, you know, we were all
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just in the zone with these ones. Yeah. And I love that you
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said rock because nowadays there are ten
million sub genres or whatever of rock and
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really it is all just rock music. And I love that artists like you
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are bringing back that term because it's
almost like bands nowadays, Oh god forbid,
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we should call it rock. Let's
call it this other fancy name.
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Yeah. Yeah, Because people come
up with the merchant and they're like,
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oh, how would you describe your
music? And I say, it's just
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rock. It's like that's what we're
doing. We're rocking out and we're playing
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the songs that we wrote, and
it's like, it's just rock. There's
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no there's no subcategory, there's nothing
like that. It's just we're just rocking
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out. And you know what else
I'd love about that is that as an
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artist. Of course, you never
want to be like put in this box,
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because the whole idea of an artist
is to explore and experiment and all
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that. And so if you're putting
this little box of your blah blah blah
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blah blah, then that's the only
music people want to hear from you.
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It's the only music the record label
wants to hear. And then you get
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bored yourself, you know, with
it, and then you start sounding like
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everybody else because you're just putting in
this formula. So I love the idea
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of just calling it rock is then
you could be whatever type of artists you
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agreed, agreed, and we and
it's not like we were trying to reinvent
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the wheel when we were recording,
like we right, We just we just
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did what we felt genuine well,
I felt honest, like lyrically, honest,
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musically honest, just just went with
what we felt as opposed to like
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we should probably do that because that
will make a sound like this. We
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just let it flow. And there's
a there's a couple of tracks on like
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Brighter Days and you like, those
are deep, those are dark, those
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are you know, different tempo,
and I think it's really cool that we
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were allowed to do that and have
that creativity just to just be ourselves.
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I love it. I love it, And I also really liked how you
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said roller coaster because to me,
I want to listen to an album that
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doesn't have the same song over and
over again, you know, and artists
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I know this for a fact,
Like perfect example, I've talked about it
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in other interviews the band Bring Me
to Rizon when when they give Ali all
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this shade for all the stuff he's
been doing recently, it's like his answer.
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I love his answer, why do
I want to write the same song
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over and over again? And he
goes, it's already been written, it's
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already been done, and so that's
what I love. But other people want
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to, hey, you should just
be this, and that's what I'm talking
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about. But it should be a
roller coaster because like, think of it
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this way. For those listeners out
there that like go from track to track
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to track, well, yeah,
this is like having your own playlist on
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one album. That's the way exactly. And I feel like bands are you
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can't like it's it's a lose lose
situation because if you if you stick to
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the same style all the time people
get fed up with it. But then
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if you come way off the style, people are like, well, what
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are you doing? That's not why
I listen to you? So right,
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I think exactly when you're in when
you're in the studio, just like,
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just do whatever it feels real and
authentic and genuine, and then whatever happens
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afterwards happens. And Rick Rubin.
Rick Rubin used to say that is like
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right for yourself and the audience will
come. And I think, like that's
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the best advice that you can give
because if you're trying to like you,
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so if I if I put this
in here, the crowd might like that
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bit or like you're thinking about a
crowd's reaction as opposed to the music.
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And I think it's important just to
stick to stick to your guns. I
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agree. And you know what you
find is is when you try to please
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somebody, you don't please somebody else. So no matter what, the only
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way to go is to please yourself
because you're not gonna please everybody, and
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you got a better chance of pleasing
everybody by just being real. I agree,
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I agree totally, And yeah it
was Rick that said that, And
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I think about too, you know, I'm an old school metal head from
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the eighties, you know, and
I remember I wasn't allowed to listen to
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crap, you know, like,
oh you like Slayer now, which you
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are one of my full time favorite
bands. You can't listen to Motley Crue,
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you know, and stuff like that. And it's it's like, it's
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just so ridiculous because to me,
I saw something recently somebody posts on Facebook
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that I loved, is you're not
truly a metal head if you say you
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only like metal. Everybody likes different
kinds of music and there's different things,
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and you know, if you're into
music, you're into music. Is there
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some crappy music? Is there music
maybe you don't like? Yeah, but
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I wouldn't say I only listened to
rock, even I don't even think rock
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even if you listen to like Ozzy
Osbourne, Like he's got fantastic melodies like
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their melody there, he's a great
like singer melodies, Like he's great at
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that. And it's like, you
know, is that categorized as metal?
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You know, like exactly, yeah, you know, and it's like it's
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melody, it's catchy and it's good. Well, and look at he did
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a song with John as an example, you know, like I love that
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and remember that, and it's wild
because you might have the old school Sabbath
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band to be like, oh,
you sell out blah blah blah bah blah.
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But you know what, and I
remember that term sellout, poser this
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and that. Yes, but maybe
if some bands didn't quote unquote sell out
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like people like the coin It,
I don't think it's really snowing out.
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Maybe rock and metal would be dead, but it's not, you know,
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I agree, And because yes,
it's great to be an underground band,
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but with a little maturity you realize
that, you know, if you really
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want your music to be out there, it does have to go everywhere.
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It does. And then when you're
performing the shows, you can put the
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old stuff and the new stuff in
and introduce them it differently, you know.
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And on this tour, we're playing
most of our new album, which
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isn't even out, but we just
said why not, let's let them hear
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the new stuff, and then we're
playing a couple of the older stuff for
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people that are returning from the last
US tour. And I think it's just
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really nice to blend the too,
so people that have never heard us before
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hearing old stuff and new stuff all
in the one night. I think that's
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really it's really good. Yeah,
And you know what's cool about that too.
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The way you worded it is like, Okay, so you're playing this
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new stuff before you know the album
even comes out. That's so old school
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anyway, because old school was you
didn't buy the album by hearing it on
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Spotify. You went to a live
show and you heard the music exactly.
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And we're gone old school as well
because you can only get the album right
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now, actuals and the album is
not going to be on Spotify or anywhere
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until July. So we're like saying
that every night to the crowd, is
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like, if you want to pick
up an album, you can get it
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now, otherwise it will be July
when it's out. And then people are
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digging the new songs and they're run
up to the merch and grabbing a CD
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and it helps us on the road
big time. And I think it's just
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really cool to just be like just
selling CDs again and just you know,
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meeting people at the merch signing CDs
and getting the new music out there.
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That way is It's fun. I
love it. I love it. So
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speaking, which how can people go
to your website, your socials connect with
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you, you know, check out
where your shows are, and most importantly
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buy your merch because you do have
some cool merch on your website, and
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that's the my way down survive today. It isn't. It isn't by getting
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a million hits on Spotify because then
you get like fifteen dollars exactly. I
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just read art recently. It was
like musicians are kind of like on the
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road t shirt salesman. Now there's
there's an element, so that's true.
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But everything at one stop shop is
our website. It's Mark dailyofficials dot com.
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So all our tour DIDs, merch
links to everything is up there,
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and then our tour, like on
on the road, shenanigans and pictures and
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videos are going up on Instagram and
Facebook under Mark Daily Music. I love
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it and I love shenanigans. It's
so funny in the United States has such
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a bigly used word now, is
it? Yeah? Oh yeah, totally.
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If somebody is going out partying or
like shenanigans, if they're going on
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adventures, what shenangans are like,
they use that word for I love it.
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You have any other final words you
want to leave the listeners with that
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we haven't covered a array that they
need to know about you. Well,
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I'm just super happy to be on
firstly, so thank you for that teen
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and yeah, Chris, I'd like
for everyone to check out the new music.
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The first single, I Want to
Be More is out now, there's
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a music video on the way.
We just shout out. There's a bunch
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of music videos on the way.
Actually we just did three in the last
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week. Nice. So yeah,
that's all. That's all coming out.
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So every four weeks we're gonna four
to six weeks we're gonna have a new
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single from the album drip Feed at
slow release, and then the whole thing
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will drop in the summer. Love
it and love the music. Everybody's got
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to check it out for sure.
And thanks for being on the Adventures of
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pipe Man. Thank you very much
for having me appreciate it. Thank you
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for listening to the Adventures of Pipelin. I'm w for CUI Radio.










































