How does being around all these different artists on the
Projekt Revolution tour inspire you?
Chris Cornell: Being on tour can sometimes be less
complicated than being at home because your day is regimented. You
wake up in the morning, you warm up, you do a soundcheck, you play
your show, you sleep or get on the bus — every single day is
like that. There's someone putting a sheet of paper under your door
telling you what time you're gonna do what. But a festival tour
like this is very different. It's much less predictable and a lot
of different things can happen. And seeing other bands perform for
me changes my whole mood in terms of what I end up bringing
onstage. I've often watched live performance footage from any band
before I go onstage just 'cause it gets me in that mindset.
Chester Bennington: What I like about doing a
touring festival, especially Projekt Rev, is the fact these are
bands that I can get really excited about since I'm part of the
reason they're there. For me, last Projekt Revolution was probably
the best touring experience I've ever had. For me to be able to
bring out Mindless Self Indulgence — a band that I've always
liked and I've felt that they've never really gotten the love that
they deserve — to see them show up and play with another band
like Saosin and 5,000 kids are showing up at noon, just like, "Yes,
it's happening." And I felt really proud that they got to do that
and that Gerard [Way, of My Chemical Romance] and Lyn-Z [Mindless
Self Indulgence bassist Lindsey Ballato] reignited their friendship
and then ended up getting married backstage on the last show. I was
like, "This is freaking awesome." When we did Ozzfest I couldn't go
to the main stage because I had the wrong pass. I felt like I was
segregated from everybody else. The main stage guys were in their
superstar land and it was just like, "I don't feel comfortable
here." Everyone needs to feel respected and everyone needs to be
able to go wherever they wanna go and do whatever they wanna
do.
Chris, going back to what you said, how does seeing live
music affect the way you approach playing?
Cornell: Energy and enthusiasm, those are the
things that I'm talking about. To stand up in front of thousands of
people and perform whatever way it is, whether it's in a rock band
or a string quartet, it's an intense thing to do. As soon as I see
it, it's like I immediately absorb it. The other way to do it is
sit in a room by yourself and then you go out and suddenly stand in
front of a bunch of people for the first time. At Lollapalooza '92
I would go into the pit, put my hair in a hat, and watch Ministry
and try to see if I could jump over the security guards and stage
dive and really get into being a fan.
Bennington: That was a great tour
[laughs].
Cornell: That was also very diverse and seeing all
those bands in one day I could see it sort of changing everybody.
But the enthusiasm, the passion for doing it is what I connect with
immediately just by seeing it happening in front of me. When we
toured Australia, Chester broke his wrist on like, the third song
and then finished the whole set with a broken wrist. That kind of
dedication and passion, like, "This is what I'm doing, this is the
most important thing there is, I'm onstage right now." That affects
me.
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