USA: The title track on GO, as you’ve mentioned
before, is about a hopeful singer who misses her
theater debut as she’s attacked and raped on her way
to the theater. Where’d the inspiration for that idea
come from?
TY: Really, the idea just popped into my mind from the
title. We had the title and myself and Roy [Khan],
just started collaborating on it. We knew we wanted
her to have gone insane from some sort of traumatic
event. So we were thinking what could that have been.
Was she on stage and something happened like in the
movie Carrie? It ended up being that tragic event that
happened on her way to her debut. And every night this
woman who never got to have “her night” just
fantasized about what could have happened. Then we had
the story and then we did the video to go along with
that. And I think it really came out great with the
video and the visuals. There’s already been some kind
of controversy about the attack on the girl. But for
the most part I think most people realize that this is
a statement against this sort of violence really.
USA: Another song that I really loved from the album
was Up through the Ashes. From what I’ve been able to
interpret through the lyrics is that it’s about the
trial of Christ through Pontius Pilate’s eyes. How’d
you get the inspiration for that?
TY: That was an instance where me and Roy sat down and
talked about what we wanted the songs to be about.
That’s a particular song where we had the chorus and
we were thinking about what that could be about. And
then Roy showed me song lyrics and the idea came from
him on that one. But this record has a lot of
different kinds of subjects. Be it fictitious like GO
or Ashes where that’s a story from the Bible. There’s
another song called Blucher which is about a German
warship, so there are a lot of different subjects. And
it’s nice too because for four years we were doing
this concept piece so we were stuck to one subject in
terms of what we could write about. So it was nice to
write about a whole bunch of different subjects.
USA: And correct me if I’m wrong here, but is The
Human Stain about global warming or the environment?
TY: It’s about everything. Everything that we do to
this planet, to each other; about dying. It’s about
the human condition and how we affect the planet. I
think with the darker mood, we wrote about a lot of
things that are going on in today’s world. There’s a
song, Mourning Star, that’s about a soldier who’s in a
war that he doesn’t believe in, but he’s kinda stuck
and it’s about his life at that point. There’s a lot
of things that touch on current events in a metaphoric
kind of way. It gives it a more melancholy feel to it,
you know?