Tré Cool is going to tell us something about Saviors that “nobody knows yet”.
“This is exclusive for Kerrang!,” the drummer reveals enticingly, as we brace ourselves for some juicy, top-secret gossip about the making of Green Day’s latest opus.
“When we recorded at RAK Studios, I wore the same clothes for every single song – including the same socks,” he grins. “I’d walk to the studio, and I genuinely would dress smart and wear a suit, because it’s London. But then I’d hang my stuff up and get changed, and put on my lucky socks, my lucky pants, and the same shirt. I wore the same shit for all those sessions.”
Oh. Did you wash anything?
“No!” he laughs. “I left my clothes there. It got quite smelly at the end…”
“He’s wearing them right now!” quips Billie.
While we respectfully don’t recommend this approach for those with more conventional jobs, it’s a tactic that worked wonders for Green Day.
“This is some of the finest stuff that Tré’s ever done,” says Billie, apparently unbothered by the drummer’s ponging attire. “At the end of Coma City, there’s this sort of freeform way of playing drums – it’s like this controlled chaos. Tré is playing in a pocket that I’ve never heard before, which is this conscious effort to create a backbeat that feels really good. And, at the same time, it’s fast and punk as fuck.
“And I think this is some of the best playing that Mike has ever done,” he continues. “On a song like Goodnight Adeline, he’s playing these sort of doo-wop counter melodies that are going off of my vocal, and I think that’s when Mike is at his best: when he’s got this playfulness and a sense of humour that’s happening at the same time that creates something that’s really great, and it loosens everything up and it doesn’t just come across as this stiff baseline – it creates a hook and a moment that a listener can sing all by themselves, you know?”
It’s a sentiment reciprocated by Mike and Tré, too. So go on, guys, tell us: were there any moments during the making of Saviors that left you happily thinking, ‘God, Billie is really good, isn’t he?’
“That’s every day!” replies Tré.
“Yeah,” nods Mike. “There’s times where you’ll be playing and be focused on music or whatever, but when we were writing the record, I would just stop and go, ‘Whoa, whoa, what did you say there? Wow, that’s really a powerful statement.’ I know he worked really hard on those lyrics, and I feel like it’s some of the best work Billie’s ever done.”
Billie’s face becomes an affectionately cheesy grin, before he puts on a comically droning voice.
“Thaaaaaank youuuuuuu!” he tells Mike.
“One thing that was really cool was Billie made a lyric zine,” picks up Tré, in a rare moment of seriousness. “He put images in it, like a fanzine, but with his lyrics. Listening to it and having that experience, for me, it was like, ‘Holy fuck, dude! Really?! So good!’”