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“You have to understand that we felt very miserable about ourselves at that time. Jimmy Bain and I were doing all the writing, and not that we were miserable because we had to write, but it’s a lot easier when you have a guitar player in your band who’s there to play the guitar. We’re not exactly great guitar players, but we had to do what we had to do.” Luckily the band’s second attempt to recruit Doug Aldrich proved successful, the timing was right, and as Dio puts it, the outcome has been “absolutely unbelievable.”
“When Doug
came in, the attitude just became
Despite the personnel change during Killing the Dragon, all of the material written was kept for the album as always. Dio says, “We always write for the project for the moment...it may lose its naturalness and intensity if you do it a year later. Maybe the subject matter will be wrong. So, for that reason we just write as we go along. In this case we did it over a period of about four months. And we don’t usually take that long…” Dio and bassist Jimmy Bain spent eight to twelve hours every day of those four months writing the bulk of the album as they had done in the past with releases like Holy Diver and Last in Line. And, while Craig Goldy hadn’t been around for most of that time, he did leave his signature on a few songs on this album. “There were a few things, three other tracks we wrote with Craig in some varying forms and those are the things that probably remind you a bit more of Magica.” Although the message may at times be hidden in his own signature medieval phrases and medieval fantasies, Dio says, it’s almost always people that inspire his passionate writing. “I’m a real observer of what the world is around me, especially with people, because humanity has taken over this world. The deer don’t own it and the raccoons don’t, which is probably really unfortunate at some point. It’s a people world and so you have to examine and then know how to kind of wind your way through the maze of what some people think. But, it’s pretty easy to put them all into categories, people are people at the end of the day, they’re greedy, and they’re miserable, and they’re happy, and they’re charitable, and they’re all these things.” You may catch Dio writing about people that are afraid to face the world, people that have no dreams, and people who need to bury themselves in some kind of fantasy, but he says, really, at the end of the day, he’s still writing for them. “I have the stage to do it, I’m a very fortunate person that I can get up there and I can write these songs, and I can sing them and perform them, and so I’m doing it for them. They don’t have that luxury. So, when we play I connect with everyone, they know that I’m speaking their words, as they like what we’ve done.” DIO will have a great opportunity to showcase selections from Killing the Dragon appearing as a special guest on the Deep Purple/Scorpions co-headlining tour this summer, and they have no problem deferring to the history and legend of Deep Purple. "For us it is not a battle of the bands, we never go into anything like that thinking that it's a battle of the bands, because once you do that, you've taken away what you are going to do and suddenly it becomes a competition." Dio says there is no competition, because nobody is like Dio, nobody is like Purple, and nobody is like Scorpions, and he suspects it will be a fun tour, because they all know each other so well. More importantly, it will be a productive tour for them since they are the only band on the tour with a new album. However, an opening slot leaves them with the great challenge of selecting a one hour set that will meet at least most of the expectations of their fans. “The problem with this one is, we do have a lot of songs, and we have an hour to perform them in. So, it almost makes it impossible to do Magica, because Magica is a song unto itself to me. I mean, you can take a bit out of it here and there, we would. We’ve taken ‘Lord of the Last Day’ and ‘Fever Dreams’ and put those two pieces together just as a representative. But, in the case of only one hour, I think we probably owe it to ourselves to play some things from the newer album than we do from the old one, because Magica is going to carry on.
When we do play again in the
states, which we’ll do, we’ll tour ourselves on our own. At that point, we can
do ‘Fever Dreams’ and ‘Lord of the Last Day’ without a problem. So we won’t
forget the piece. But, I think because we do have such a limited amount of time
to do so much material that our job is to make sure people go away not being too
dissatisfied by the things they didn’t hear, but satisfied by all that they did
hear in one hour.” For more information on DIO visit www.ronniejamesdio.com or www.spitfirerecords.com. And keep a lookout at TPRS.com for a review from their anticipated summer tour.
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