Premier Guitar September 2016 | Page 87

Into the Gray h ce has alwa s uctuated etween l ht and da , c eat n e pe mental la e s o heav mus c w thout boundaries. Founding guitarists Dustin Kensrue and Teppei Teranishi share how they reached new outliers on To Be Everywhere Is to Be Nowhere e pe ment n w th amps, tun n s, and ove d ves and em ac n the neve end n uest o c eat n mus c w th pass on | BY PERRY BEAN | N ever content to stand still, Thrice is a band that defies easy categorization. Formed in 1998 in Irvine, California, by Dustin Kensrue and Teppei Teranishi, the band began playing an amalgam of punk, metal, and hardcore. “I remember trying to get shows around here in Orange County in 1999 or 2000,” recalls Teranishi. “People were like, ‘Well, you’re not really a punk band, but you’re not really a hardcore band. We don’t know what kind of shows to place you on.” Thrice’s musical evolution continued in 2005 with the release of Vheissu, which featured a broader variety of instrumentation—including piano, strings, some electronic programming, and even a song inspired by a music box—than the band had previously explored. This set the stage for the critically acclaimed 2007 concept album, The Alchemy Index, which debuted at No. 24 on the Billboard 200 chart and reached No. 5 on iTunes’ list of top-selling albums. The Alchemy Index was born as a series of four EPs, each of which was sonically inspired by a different element in nature: fire, water, air, and earth. “I think The Alchemy Index was a really interesting and cool experience, in the sense of being able to do something totally outside our box,” Teranishi offers. “And that, I think, was the result of premierguitar.com having boundaries. That was the first and only time really that we’ve written with a specific target in mind. We kind of made these boundaries like, “All right, the water EP—it’s going to be electronic. It’s going to have these kinds of sounds. The tones are going to sound like this or that. We were actually writing with some specific goals, whereas everything else we were just kind of writing whatever.” After releasing Vheissu and The Alchemy Index, both of which the band has described as having a “sleepy feeling,” Thrice set out to make a more upbeat, lively record. In 2009 Beggars was released, followed by Major/Minor in 2011, both of which further bolstered Thrice as a titanic name in indie rock. But after touring in support of Major/ Minor in 2012, Thrice announced an indefinite hiatus so its members could focus on personal projects. Fans rejoiced in December 2014 when a somewhat cryptic image of the band in the studio surfaced on their website with large text that simply read “Thrice 2015.” Within two months they announced some festival dates, followed a year later by the announcement of their new album, To Be Everywhere Is to Be Nowhere. To achieve new levels of drone tone on their ninth studio album, Teranishi and Kensrue experimented with custom string gauges, dropped and offbeat tunings on their baritone guitars, and added choice chorus and overdrives to their sonic palette. The result is a tastefully written and produced album that should leave the Thrice faithful feeling nothing less than satisfied. To Be Everywhere Is to Be Nowhere has the group’s unmistakable signature elements: catchy melodies, nuanced songwriting, and parts designed to illicit an emotional reaction from the listener. We recently caught up with Kensrue and Teranishi to discuss the sonic evolution of Thrice, the new album (which Kensrue considers their most melodic release to date), and how members of the band Brand New inspired Thrice’s return from a nearly four-year hiatus. PREMIER GUITAR SEPTEMBER 2016 85