Thomas Raggi and Tom Morello first met under unassuming conditions. “We were in the parking lot of the Roxy in Los Angeles,” Tom recalls. “Måneskin were playing there that evening. My wife and some friends were going to the show and they asked me if I might be able to facilitate some tickets, so I went along to the soundcheck. To be frank I hadn’t really heard of the band at the time, but when I looked into them, I found that one of the biggest rock bands in the world right now is from Italy. I thought it was such an interesting phenomenon…”
From that meeting three years ago grew plans to hang out; then a friendship; then intertwined creative paths that lead to Thomas joining Tom at his shows, and Tom featuring on Måneskin’s Gossip! single. It seems destiny, then, that the duo should be dialling into Kerrang! – Tom while on the road in Canada, Thomas from his Rome home during some downtime – to talk about their first fully-fledged collaborative album in a world-exclusive interview.
Marking Thomas’ first album released under his own banner, with Tom on production and creative duties, Masquerade is in many ways a solo album in name only, and more a communal celebration of rock’n’roll, pulling music’s great and good into its orbit for fleeting, thrilling fraternisation. So while you’ll hear Thomas rip through any number of guitar licks, as one would come to expect, you’ll also hear Tom grab his six-string to do likewise. The month-long recording sessions in Los Angeles saw Red Hot Chili Peppers and Guns N’ Roses legends Chad Smith and Matt Sorum swing by to pick up the sticks, and Hama Okamoto his bass. Vocals come from a cast as dizzying as Kasabian’s Serge Pizzorno, Jet’s Nic Chester, The Struts’ Luke Spiller, Franz Ferdinand’s Alex Kapranos, The Prodigy’s Maxim and alt.pop phenom UPSAHL – the latter pair, along with Beck, helped pen some of the songs. The eight-track collection – seven Thomas originals and a dizzying cover of You Spin Me Round (Like A Record) – is at once riotous, soulful and bluesy.
“You know that the younger audience that Måneskin has have already been exposed to the glory, the power, the sexiness, the appeal of rock’n’roll,” Tom says. “This project takes that even one step further in helping Thomas to forge a record that honours his influences and brings new, exciting rock into 2025 and beyond.
“It's an opportunity,” he adds, “to be a missionary for rock’n’roll.”
Going back to your first meeting, Tom, what impression did you have of Thomas?
Tom: “It was so encouraging and fantastic that a very young, talented guitar player like him was so interested in rock’n’roll and its history – and in the Rainbow Bar And Grill, and going to Guitar Center. I loved Thomas from that first meeting. He has such a rock’n’roll spirit and soul, which there’s not enough of these days. And that’s what began our friendship. In the aftermath of that meeting, Måneskin were living in LA making a record, and I came by a couple times to hang out and write songs with them. And that’s where I really realised that, like, this is a great band. I had so much fun jamming with them, and jamming with Thomas in particular. It really cemented for me that he is a guitar player who’s the real deal.”
Thomas: “It was amazing for me, because we really clicked from the first time we met. Tom was one of my idols when I was younger. I was super-inspired by him.”