I, robot: An interview with JB of Black
Robot
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Black Robot's Jonathan “JB” Brightman |
April 7, 2010
Life was good for Buckcherry bassist Jonathan “JB”
Brightman as the millennium wound down. Largely on the strength
of the hit single “Lit Up,” Buckcherry’s
debut album (1999) had gone gold, and he was living the rock
star dream shared by so many across the world. Then came album
No. 2, Time Bomb (2001). As it turned out, “bomb”
was an appropriate word in the title—that is exactly
what that record did. The subsequent tour led to JB’s
departure from the band, along with the exits of guitarist
Yogi Lonich and drummer Devon Glenn. It took some time for
schedules to align, but now JB is back, teaming with singer
Huck Johns in a new band called Black Robot. He even looked
up his old pals Yogi and Devon to help him out in the studio.
With their debut set for a June 8 release through Rocket Science
Ventures, JB checked in with Live-Metal.net’s Greg Maki
to discuss Buckcherry, Black Robot and more.
Live-Metal.net: Before
we really get into Black Robot and the new album, I was thinking
maybe you could kind of take me back in time about 10 years
or so. The first Buckcherry album came out, was a big hit
and then the second one, not so much. In your opinion, why
do you think that was?
Jonathan “JB” Brightman: In
my opinion, there was a dynamic that changed in the band as
we were progressing. We started out as a band that was just
good friends. We were ambitious and we wanted to get on a
major label and everything, but at that point in time, the
kind of rock that we were doing, it wasn’t very popular.
We were kind of resigned to the idea that we would have to
do it independently. But for some crazy reason, people would
start showing up at our shows. We were in L.A., so we started
seeing movie stars coming. One time, we played the Viper Room
and there was a line around the block. When I showed up, I
was like, “Who the hell is playing tonight?” People
were there to see us. It was almost like a phenomenon that
happened.
So we wound up getting a really huge record deal. I think
it was the biggest one of that year; it was 1997. We got a
lot of money, but that’s the money that you’re
supposed to live on for a while. We started taking things
step by step—doing small tours, then we got bigger tours.
And things started happening to the band where we started
getting noticed, and psychologically it kind of changed a
couple of us. A couple of the guys in the band started getting
a feeling in their heads that their value was higher than
the other guys’ and started behaving in different ways.
Needless to say, we had a great run on the first record,
and we had to make another record. At that point in time,
our publisher had agreed to give us a massive amount of money
upon delivering the second record. A couple of us, me not
being one of them, they thought that they could write that
whole record. So it got competitive with the writing. The
way we made music before, we would just all contribute some
music and whatever sounded good we would work on. It didn’t
matter where it came from; we didn’t have any egos about
it. But then while we were making the second record, the way
we were making music changed. [Vocalist] Josh [Todd] and [guitarist]
Keith [Nelson] were sneaking off into other rooms and writing
music together without involving us, and a lot of the material
was kind of forced on us, just because Keith wanted to write
the music. And a lot of the music really sucked. We were using
a producer, John Travis, who, quite honestly, he just didn’t
have the balls to say that the music sucked.
So we made a record that just didn’t have it. In my
opinion, there were good parts about the record and there
were a couple of good songs. But the record label, they weren’t
even fully endorsing it because they felt as if it wasn’t
the best record we could’ve made.
So the three of you—you,
Devon and Yogi—did you all leave at the same time?
No. What happened was, after we put the record out, I kind
of saw the writing on the wall. You could listen to it and
tell that it didn’t have a chance. It wasn’t as
good of a record. So I kind of saw the writing on the wall,
but I wanted to support the record. I was on the road for
about a year, and I had no money. Basically, I made what you
would make if you were working at McDonald’s. And that’s
how much money I got on the second record. And so did a couple
of us. Me and Devon and Yogi, we got peanuts.
So we had to try to work while we were on the road. That’s
the only way we could’ve made money. We were hoping
that we would make a little bit of money at the shows so we
could survive. We toured and we weren’t making the money
on the road. As soon as there was a profitable show or something,
our singer Josh would get the sniffles and he would cancel
these shows, or he would go and buy a wireless set for his
earphones. So we weren’t able to be profitable. It cost
us money to support this record, which we really didn’t
think was that amazing.
I wound up doing this, and the point in time which I decided
I needed to leave the band was, I was just taking a beating
out there—not making any money, sleeping in a little
bus, getting everybody’s colds. We would go into North
Carolina, I would get the cold that would be in Charlotte.
Then the next city, I’d be in Savannah, I’d get
the Savannah flu.
As it turned out, we had a show in Canada. If you’ve
ever had any trouble with the law, you will have trouble getting
into Canada at the border because they check into the U.S.
records to see. They don’t want to let criminals in.
When I was a teenager, I got into a fight with a police officer
and I got arrested. So they had to charge 220 bucks so that
I could get through immigration so that I could play the show.
And a couple of our roadies had the same issue. They had some
little rub with the law. My tour manager came to me and said,
“Well, listen, your singer wants you to pay your way
across the border,” after all the roadies got in and
the tour paid for them. So it made me realize that, quite
honestly, I wasn’t being valued. So I said, “Fuck
that,” and as soon as we got back into the U.S., I rented
a car and I drove back home to L.A., and I left in the middle
of the tour.
After you left, did you know
what you were gonna do next?
No. I honestly couldn’t survive because I didn’t
even have an apartment. I had all of my stuff in a storage
unit. But I knew that I had to go back and get a job, quite
honestly. I went back and I begged my old boss for my old
job back, and he gave me my job back and I started building
my life again.
When, where and how did you meet
Huck Johns?
We were on tour, on tour for that record, coincidentally,
that flop of a record. We were on tour with Kid Rock, and
the guys in his band said, “You have to listen to this
singer, man. He’s incredible. His name is Huck Johns.”
He actually did some work with Kenny Olson, who played with
Kid Rock. I went to a party after the Iggy Pop show in Detroit
, and me, Yogi, Devon and Huck wound up jamming together,
and we started being friends. That’s how we met him.
When did you decide that he was
someone that you wanted to work with on music and start a
band?
I was kind of over Buckcherry, so right when I met him I
thought, you know, I just really need to do something completely
different, because I could see that that band was gonna implode.
So when I met him, I was thinking I should just put a band
together with him. He moved to L.A. in 2001, and me, him and
Yogi, we wrote some songs and we jammed it, and it sounded
really, really good. But Yogi started getting work; he was
playing with The Wallflowers. We just started working on different
projects, and we didn’t have the chance to pick it back
up until 2008.
For Black Robot, what would be
the big influences and how would you describe the sound?
I think we just rely on our influences to make our music,
and I think it’s pretty obvious when you listen to it
that we love a lot of the stuff that came out of the ‘60s,
‘70s, ‘80s and ‘90s, just rock ‘n’
roll. We’re not trying to reinvent the wheel, we’re
just trying to keep it rolling.
The name, Black Robot, really
jumps out at you. Is there a story behind that name?
I had the name for a while. I had the vision. I wanted to
do a band that was kind of the way bands used to be creative
and they would have a mascot or something, and you’d
see this figure appear on each record. It was just something
that I had come up with, kind of like the Eddie character.
We’re kind of hoping that if the band starts taking
off that we can continue using that character. That’s
our story with that.
Your producer on this album,
Dave Cobb, I’m familiar with him through his work with
Shooter Jennings. How did you get hooked up with him and what
was he like to work with?
I got the Shooter Jennings record Electric Rodeo,
and I thought, man, this is like the best record I’ve
ever heard, and I decided that I needed to work with him.
I described to him exactly the record that I wanted to make,
and I played him some of our songs that we had. He’s
an insane guitar player—he’s like Jimmy Page—so
we got him to play a little guitar with us and Yogi. It was
an incredible experience. We were writing three or four songs
a day together. It’s a huge difference compared to all
the other producers I’ve ever worked with. I think he’s
gonna probably one day be one of the bigger producers out
there.
I read about how you recorded
the album using a lot of vintage equipment. Whose idea was
that, what do you think that added to it and when you say
“vintage,” how old are we talking?
We used microphones dating back to the turn of the century,
some of those old ribbon microphones maybe from the early
1900s all the way to the ‘50s. Some amplifiers we used
were from the ‘40s and the ‘50s. We just wanted
to make the record exactly how all these great records were
made that we loved and we all grew up on. We used some Pro
Tools and some tape, and we just did everything live. All
the music that you hear is all of us in a live room, jamming
the songs out. You hear the mistakes and you hear the bleed
from the other instruments in it if you listen closely, but
we think that’s part of the charm.
I want to ask you about some
of the songs. The first song kind of hits you hard coming
out, “Baddass.” Is that like a statement song
from the band?
I would say so. I think we wanted to come out with some attitude.
It’s kind of a tongue-in-cheek song. If you listen to
the lyrics, it’s really about someone who’s so
arrogant and so cocky that he’s calling himself baddass.
It’s always fun to sing along and say that you’re
baddass.
My two favorite songs on the
album, first, “23 Days of Night.” It’s got
that Black Sabbath-type groove to it. Is that what you were
going for on that?
Yeah, 100 percent, man.
My other favorite is the last
song, “Nervous Breakdown,” which is really a lot
different from the others. Where did that come from, that
soul type of feel to it?
We just jammed it out. It wasn’t even a thought-up
thing. We were kind of shooting to make something filthy,
and that’s kind of where we landed with that song.
Another you’re probably
getting asked about is the cover of “Cocaine.”
How did that come about?
That was completely accidental. We had the music for the
song, and we were deciding, what are we gonna write it about?
We were just goofing around with it, and it sounded really
good. The way our singer Huck works it that we’ll make
the music, and he’ll come up with some temporary lyrics
before we all get a chance to work on the lyrics together.
He put those in as placeholder lyrics, and when we revisited
the song and were ready to track the vocals, we were like,
“You know what? Let’s just keep it. It sounds
great.”
This band has definitely been
a true indie effort. What has been the biggest challenge in
getting it up off the ground?
I gotta tell ya, I have to thank Buckcherry for their help
with this record. They recently got popular again, and their
popularity increased my royalties. So I started getting checks
in the mailbox, and I thought, what I should do with this
money is I should finance some more music. I think after you’ve
been through the big label thing, you don’t really want
to deal with another big label again because they’re
such a pain in the ass. So one of the big challenges is, of
course, affording it and doing it right. If you cut corners,
people are gonna hear it. Our goal is to try to make an independent
record that is every bit as good as a major label record,
but at just a fraction of the cost. I think we’ve achieved
that, but it takes a lot of financial sacrifices.
Are there plans for a full U.S.
coast-to-coast tour?
We’re gonna take some small bites out of it. Right
now, we’re booking a tour through Texas in May. We’re
gonna go there and go out to the certain areas that happen
to be playing the song. Then after that, we’re gonna
go and do a series of mini tours. We’re talking to a
couple of bands that are considering us for an opening slot
for their tour. Once things are set in stone, it’ll
be available on our Facebook and MySpace and Twitter and everything.
http://blackrobotmusic.com/
http://www.myspace.com/blackrobot
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