Chicago Sun-Times

GETTING SUM PERSPECTIV­E

Fans asked for it, so band tours to mark the 15th anniversar­y of ‘ Does This Look Infected?’

- BY ED MASLEY USATODAY Network

DeryckWhib­ley had no plans to celebrate the 15th anniversar­y of “Does This Look Infected?”

“In all honesty,” he says, “I didn’t even know it was the anniversar­y. I don’t really pay attention to that kind of stuff. And it just sort of feels like it wasn’t that long ago.”

He and the other four members of Sum 41 were more focused on getting new music together for their first release since “13 Voices” hit the streets in late 2016 when the fans started asking about the prospects of an anniversar­y tour, he says.

“So we thought, ‘ All right, let’s go out and do a short run.’”

“Does This Look Infected?” was their second album, following the platinum breakthrou­gh they’d enjoyed with “All Killer No Filler,” which did not, as it turns out, rate an anniversar­y tour.

The singer, guitarist and primary songwriter shares his thoughts on the state of the world, new music and more.

Q: What do you recall of the writing and recording of “Does This Look Infected?”

A: It was really fast. We put out four records in four years. We were touring on “All Killer.” Our whole goal was just to be out on the road. And we were getting pressured by the record company and management, all the people around us, that we needed to put out new music to stay on tour. Which I realize, looking back at it, we didn’t really need to. We could’ve gone around the world a second time on that same album. But I didn’t know that at the time. We just felt that pressure of “Can you go into the studio?” and I said, “Sure, why not?”

So we got off the road. I wrote songs for about six weeks. We went into the studio for six weeks and then that was it. It was done. We were out on the road. We were actually finishing it up while we were on the road because we already had the tour. We went over to England, did Reading and Leeds, then we were back in the studio in the U. K. for a week and finished it off.

Q: You talked about the label pressuring you to get new music out. Did you also feel pressure to match the success of “All Killer No Filler?”

A: No, not really. It wasn’t your typical kind of pressure. They were pressuring us to put something out. But it could’ve been anything. They always let us do what we wanted to do creatively and they always stood behind everything that we wanted to do.

When I started writing songs for “Does This Look Infected?,” they were drasticall­y different than “All Killer,” even though it was only a year apart. I mean, the first single, “Still Waiting,” compared to the single, “In Too Deep?” They were two different bands. But they didn’t say anything about that. They said, “Great, let’s put it out.” And it did really well for us. So it didn’t matter. But there were all these people saying, “When can you get back in the studio?” And that happened again on the next album, “Chuck.”

Q: Lyrically, “Does This Look Infected?” is a heavier album than the first one. Obviously, 9/ 11 had happened between those two records. Did that play a factor in where your head was?

A: Absolutely. I had been around the world, 9/ 11 happened. Even though it was only a year later, I felt like I’d been through so much that year that I had more to say.

“Still Waiting” was all about George W. Bush and going into Iraq and what a disaster it was gonna be. It was an anti- war, anti- Bush song. But I didn’t have the best messaging. I felt like I was being so obvious. That’s that young sort of naïve thing and probably subconscio­us insecurity, feeling “Oh, this is so obvious.” I was almost embarrasse­d, thinking “Everybody’s gonna know what I’m talking about.”

But of course, no one really did. And I didn’t explain it. I didn’t talk about it in interviews. I don’t think I really talked much in interviews.

Q: You said you’re working on new music? A: Yeah, this whole year we’re supposed to be making a record. We’re at the beginning to middle of making a new album now, still in the writing phase.

Q: How does it feel to step away from the creative process to go out and tour a 15- year- old record?

A: On the last record, I was forced to do that for aweekend. I came back after that and I felt somuch better. I’mactually kind of looking forward to getting away from the studio.

Q: Which part of being in a band do you prefer, playing live or making records? A: Playing live by far.

 ??  ?? Sum 41— Cone McCaslin ( from left), Dave “Brownsound” Baksh, Deryck Whibley, TomThacker and Frank Zummo.
Sum 41— Cone McCaslin ( from left), Dave “Brownsound” Baksh, Deryck Whibley, TomThacker and Frank Zummo.

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