Rammstein Set To Release Five Music Videos From New Album
The as-yet-untitled follow-up to 2009’s ‘Liebe Ist Für Alle Da’ has been mixed at a Los Angeles studio with producer Rich Costey.
Industrial metal icons Rammstein have completed work on their long-awaited new album for a tentative April release. The follow-up to 2009’s Liebe Ist Für Alle Da was mixed at a Los Angeles studio with Rich Costey, an American producer who has previously worked with Muse, Rage Against The Machine and Franz Ferdinand, among others. Speaking to Kerrang!, Rammstein guitarist Richard Z. Kruspe said: “It looks like we will have five music videos coming out this time too. I feel really happy with the album, although a few things might still change, of course.”
Kruspe also recently told Consequence Of Sound that Rammstein wanted to take things to the next level with their new album.
“I wanted to do a record that stands out even more than our past records, and I kind of find when I listen to the [new] record, it’s like Rammstein 3D, if I can summarize it,” he said. “We’re happy to work with my good friend Olsen Involtini, who also worked on Emigrate [Kruspe’s solo project] records. He a great friend of mine, and he brought certain kind of harmonies into the world of Rammstein, which I like.
“I’m so close to the project, it’s always hard to say,” the guitarist added. “The next step is going to be what the fans will think about it. But I think that in the world of making records, it’s so important to please yourself first. It’s like, if you don’t like it, how can you expect other people to like it. I’m trying to bring the record into a dimension that Rammstein hasn’t achieved yet.”
The as-yet-untitled Rammstein album will be released ahead of the band’s first-ever European stadium tour, which will kick off on 27 May in Gelsenkirchen, Germany and end on 23 August in Vienna, Austria.
The tour is hotly-anticipated, as Rammstein are renowned for their electrifying live shows often involving spectacular pyrotechnics.
“It’s going to be this really, really big and super-intense show,” Kruspe told Kerrang! “It’s so funny — during this recording process, we’ve been like six guys in a band, arguing about each tiny f_ing snare hit. That was also such an intense experience. You name it, everything you could argue about we have. But now that it’s done, I’m very proud of what we’ve achieved. And actually, that intensity is what made our songs even better.”
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