trivium

Source: Blabbermouth

Florida metallers TRIVIUM are filming a video for an as-yet-undiclosed song off their upcoming album at Studio One in Orlando. The clip is being directed by Ramon Boutviseth, who has previously worked withNONPOINTDARKEST HOURINCUBUS and ALL THAT REMAINS, among others. Check out photos from the video shoot at this location.

TRIVIUM‘s new CD, which is rumored to be titled “Vengeance Falls”, was produced by DISTURBED and DEVICE frontman David Draiman and is due this fall via Roadrunner Records.

In a recent new interview with RoadrunnerRecords.com, TRIVIUM bassistPaolo Gregoletto stated about Draiman‘s approach to producing: “He was there for everything. Where we recorded was this sort of loft above his house [in Austin, Texas], and that’s where we did a lot of the recording, a lot of the pre-production. We got an electronic drum set and we all just kind of sat around in a circle and we played the stuff, we listened back to demos that we did, we recorded a couple of things, just rough demos so we had the parts recorded and could remember them and reference them later. But he was really hands-on with everything. It was definitely very meticulous, very well organized how he went through attacking every part of a song, whether it was the drums or the guitar parts, bass parts, and finally the vocals, making sure it all fit together really well. I mean, the lyrics and the vocals, that was the biggest thing we had never really had before, was working in pre-production with finished vocal ideas, and I think the thing David really brought to the album was being so well organized and having real clear goals of how we were going to achieve everything along the way. In my opinion, that’s definitely the sign of a great producer, because there are so many things to what a producer does, but in my opinion, being organized and having a real clear-cut plan for how we’re going to achieve all the ideas we’ve been talking about is super-important for a producer.”

Paolo also spoke about TRIVIUM‘s songwriting process for the new CD and how it differed from the band’s previous experiences in the studio.

“Definitely in the past, we kind of approached it like…we definitely had some records that were a bit of a 180 from the previous one, but now we’ve really learned what works within our band and it’s really about improving those things, bettering them each time we go into it,” he said. “I think once you find what your identity is, you just want to keep improving and building upon that, and adding new elements in but also retaining what makes your band unique among the thousands and thousands of bands that are out there. So I think with this record, it wasn’t a total clean slate, it was really just tightening everything up and bringing everything that makes us TRIVIUM together even more and writing the best material and having an album that, start to finish, never really lets up. It never has any filler or dead spots, and I think David really being a fan of TRIVIUM, and really seeing our growth as a band along the way, helped out, because it wasn’t like he was coming in and not really knowing what our band was about. He really understood what we’ve built as a band over the last seven, eight years, and how important it is to really respect all of that and to keep that stuff that’s made us TRIVIUM, and just better it — bigger melodies, bigger hooks, bigger riffs, everything. Sonically, he wanted us to make a thicker-sounding album, and he definitely really pushed [mixer] Colin [Richardson] and [engineer] Carl [Bown] to make this our biggest-sounding record. And I think they did an amazing job, to be honest. We’ve worked with Colin for so many records now, and he’s totally outdone himself.”