Confidence is high around Bring Me The Horizon today. Lounging around Drop Dead in-between photo shoots and interviews, the weight on their shoulders is there, but there’s also a lot of calm shrugging at the notion of pressure. So much so that it’s suddenly realised that they should probably rehearse or something before they do any touring. In fact, Lee and Matt seem more concerned about their forthcoming post-gig bangovers.
“It’s getting worse as I get older,” chuckles Lee. “It goes after the first couple of shows, but it’s Reading & Leeds, and then we’ve got about a month off, so I’ll get rid of it, rest, and then get it again when we start again.”
If this all seems surprising, then it sums up That’s The Spirit perfectly. When word filtered through in May that Horizon were on the final lap of having the new record finished, it didn’t seem like five minutes since Wembley. Then they announced they’d recorded it on their own, choosing to produce it themselves rather than with a big name knob-twiddler, at a luxurious studio on the gorgeous, sun-kissed Greek island of Santorini. Which they chose because, well...
“We just Googled ‘best studio in the world’ and that was the first thing that came up,” grins Oli. “We saved money on a producer, so we thought, ‘Fuck it.’”
But let’s not get ahead of the story here. Because, unbeknownst to their management, record label or pretty much anyone not in the band, nobody knew Bring Me The Horizon had even started making a new record at all. In January, a month after Wembley, when they were officially on downtime after the enormous Sempiternal cycle, the band reconvened in secret at Oli’s house and started work.
“Normally we have a few months off before we start work on a new record,” he reveals. “Usually on tour we burn ourselves out fucking hard.”
“Before, by the end of the tour and coming time to write a new record it’s usually, ‘Aw, for fuck’s sake,’” adds Mat, “because we knew it was going to be stress, proper hard.”
“Every other campaign, by that last date you’re like, ‘I don’t want to even think about this band for a good couple of months,’” Oli admits. “But the Sempiternal tour was such a positive experience. There were no real negatives or big downers, where for this band there usually is! On There Is A Hell… it ended on the Machine Head tour, but Sempiternal was so good after Wembley we were like, ‘Let’s get on with it!’ We didn’t want to be gone too long, either.”
“Our management didn’t even know what we were doing!” hoots Jordan. “They messaged me in March saying, ‘Do you want to start talking about the next record?’ I replied going, ‘I don’t think we’ll be starting it until at least April or May.’ I did it to kind of freak them out a bit, but the thing is, if we told everyone we were working on stuff, you’d end up feeling rushed and getting deadlines and talking about studios and stuff. We didn’t want that, we wanted to be able to relax and work on it at our own pace.”