When did you start working on the album?
“We started the first writing process in January 2018. We’ve had a problem before where we kind of get boxed into a corner and don’t have as much time as we want, and we had the choice of taking some more time off and enjoying the Graveyard Shift cycle or we could get to work earlier, which is the route we took, and I’m really grateful that we did. We only stopped writing when we went on tour, because it’s fucking impossible to write on the road.”
How do you think Disguise compares to Graveyard Shift?
“I think they’re the most similar two records that we’ve done. Graveyard Shift was what we believed to be the ultimate realisation of what we wanted the band to be, and seeing the reaction of the fans reinforced that.”
So, rather than calling this a new era, would you say that Disguise is more of a continuation from the Graveyard Shift era?
“Yeah, I would definitely say that. We’ve always been a band who doesn’t want to do the same record twice – and I think there are differences, so we’ve avoided that – but in the past we’ve always had each record be notably different to the last, and that wasn’t what we wanted to do. Maybe the next record will be different, but right now we really like where we’re at, so let’s just keep the fires burning!”
You released the first two tracks on the same day: the super-bouncy Brand New Numb, and the darker and far more aggressive title-track. Why did you decide to do that?
“(Laughs) Well, there was definitely an interesting sequence of phone calls with the label about that! They really wanted to push Brand New Numb, and we think the song is really cool, and it’s kind of a throwback song to our album [2012’s] Infamous, which has a lot of stuff like that on there. What’s cool about it is there’s a little sample at the beginning which is me and my guitarist Ricky [Olson] working on the song in 2012, recording the riff into my phone, and it’s cool that we chose not to put that song on that record and all these years later we can make it even better and get it out there. But as much as we like that song, when we look back to what happened when we dropped the track LOUD ahead of Graveyard Shift, we felt we were kind of misrepresenting ourselves with it, because it was the most different-sounding song on the record. We feel that Brand New Numb is also the most different song on this record, and we didn’t want people to have the wrong idea and think Motionless isn’t a heavy or aggressive band anymore. So we thought, ‘Let’s put out both and let people’s first taste of the record be two songs on both sides of the spectrum.’ If I were a fan and a band I love did that I know I’d be stoked!”