ADEMA Is Putting Finishing Touches On New Album

ADEMA Is Putting Finishing Touches On New Album


In a new interview with Australia’s Heavy, ADEMA guitarist/vocalist Tim Fluckey confirmed that he and his bandmates are working on new music at the moment. He said (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET):  ”We’re trying to finish up our record right now. All the songs were written. We recorded drums and bass and some guitars, and so I’m gonna record some more guitars tomorrow and then do some vocals and then we’ll probably get it done when we get back from [touring] Australia [in September].”

Tim also addressed the fact that he is now handling vocals for ADEMA after the 2024 departure of Ryan Shuck, who joined the group in 2019. Asked if he always wanted to be the singer in ADEMA or if that’s just how it worked out, Fluckey said: “ No. I did not always wanna do that. I didn’t mind doing backup vocals. That was cool. I liked just being over in my guitar world, and doing that and being able to jump around and move around and interact with the crowd that way. And then it just came by necessity. One tour, our singer, we had already… we couldn’t find him for days. We already missed a couple of shows and we were, like, ‘Are are we gonna get sued?’ And so they were, like, ‘Can you do it?’ I go, ‘I’ll try.’ So literally on the way out to the first show — we never rehearsed with me singing. I was just sitting there playing my guitar and trying to sing along to this stuff. And we went out there… We were, like, ‘Let’s play three songs without saying a word and see what happens. We’ll see how the crowd reacts.’ And the first song people were like confused. And the second song they were kind of, like, ‘Eh, it’s okay.’ And then the third song, they were, like, ‘Oh, this is fine. This works.’ And so never once did anybody say they wanted their money back or said it sucked it our faces. And so it just kind of grew from that. And then Marky [Chavez, ADEMA‘s original singer] did come back for a little while, but then he kind of essentially retired. And then we got offered a tour in 2019 and I was, like, ‘Well, let’s bring somebody in from our genre.’ And then Ryan came in from ORGY and JULIEN-K. But he had another band, so it was always gonna be temporary. So then when it came down to making a decision about moving on, and we were getting offered record deals at the time, so they were, like, ‘Do you wanna sing again?’ I go, ‘Yeah, let’s do it. We don’t need to bring anybody else in here.'”

Tim continued: “The four of us have been around each other for 25 years, so we can deal with each other. I’m sure it’s hard for somebody new to come into that situation. We’re not normal dudes. Our band would be boring if it was. I know it’s probably hard for people to come in and join that and just be around guys who’ve been around each other for 25 years.”

Asked if he is “fully settled into” the ADEMA frontman role by now, Tim said: “I think so. I think the difference between me back then and me doing it now is I’m a little more confident with the crowd. I just pretty much went to the James Hetfield school of the crowd, and not copying him, but just being like… Some singers get the tendency of saying the same thing in the same spots every night and then kind of maybe homogenizing it a little bit, but I one day just said, ‘I’m just gonna say whatever the hell comes to my mind. Who cares what the repercussions are.’ I feel a lot more comfortable on stage doing that, and I think people react to that. I think when you’re just who you are, people react to that. They don’t have to agree with what you’re saying, and I’m not political, but I’m just saying that they don’t have to like or agree with it, but they can appreciate that you’re being yourself.”

Fluckey also talked in more detail about the new ADEMA music, saying: “This new stuff, it sounds like ADEMA. It’s the original band. It’s everybody from the band. And so just through kind of, I’m sure, osmosis, there’s gonna be parts where I sound like Marky, our original singer, and then I have my own thing too. But it just sounds like ADEMA now. And so I’m excited about it. The songs are cool, and, like I said, I have a little more confidence probably with what my sound is and what kind of singer I wanna be.”

Asked if the new ADEMA material is musically what the band’s fans expect at this point or if it’s going off in new directions, Tim said: “Yeah. I think it is [what the fans expect]. Obviously it’s gonna evolve a little bit, but it’s not far from our first two or three records. So, I think ADEMA fans will be into it. Everybody kind of brings their own kind of special thing to the band that made it sound like ADEMA back then, and I think that’s back in the band now. I had to change the way I kind of wrote music when Mikey [Ransom, ADEMA guitarist] was out of the band. And so now to go back to how I originally wanted to do it and how I’m doing it now, knowing that when I write a part, I can think about, ‘Okay, what’s he gonna do over it?’ ‘What’s Dave [DeRoo] gonna do on bass?’ That stuff. ‘What’s Kris [Kohls] gonna do on drums?’ So, that’s exciting for us, and hopefully it’s exciting for our fans.”

Fluckey previously revealed that the next ADEMA album will be released via the band’s new label home, Cleopatra Records.

In June 2024, Fluckey was asked by Radioactive MikeZ, host of the 96.7 KCAL-FM program “Wired In The Empire”, what happened to cause the “divorce” between ADEMA and Shuck. Tim said: “I don’t know if I would characterize it as a divorce. And Ryan — I’ll start by saying we wish Ryan and Amir [Derakh, Ryan‘s bandmate in JULIEN-K] the best, for sure. It’s nothing like that. And there’s maybe a kind of a divergence of —and he can say what he wants to say — just kind of things like… We knew from the beginning, let’s say, that he was in another band and that he was helping us out, and that we needed somebody in the band, including Amir, to be around. And for people don’t know Amir was in ORGY with Ryan and they’ve been partners for years. And they don’t just do music together; it’s kind of definitely a package thing. But it just came to a point where, and even in his own words, he knew that it was somehow temporary. We just didn’t know how temporary. And so it just came down to our band was heading in one direction as far as how we wanted to do what we’re gonna do — like massive amounts of touring, get these new songs out and take advantage of what our band’s about. And then his band was doing his thing. And it really was one of those things, we just [went], ‘Do we do this now or do we do it six months from now? Do we do it two years from now? And so it was just pretty much, ‘We’re doing it now.'”

In February 2024, ADEMA “abruptly” parted ways with Shuck. A short time later, the remaining members of ADEMAFluckey, DeRoo, Kohls and Ransom — posted a message on social media in which they said: “ADEMA has made the decision to move forward without Ryan Shuck. Our plan is to continue on indefinitely as a four-piece, and we sincerely wish Ryan all the best in the future.”

In June 2022, ADEMA released a new song, “Violent Principles”. It was the follow-up to ADEMA‘s first single in nearly a decade, “Ready To Die”, which came out in August 2021. Both tracks were planned for inclusion on ADEMA‘s upcoming album, which was tentatively titled “360 Degrees Of Separation”.

Original ADEMA frontman Marky Chavez first
left ADEMA in 2004 due to “creative differences” after two successful albums, “Adema” and “Unstable”. The singer — who is the half brother of KORN frontman Jonathan Davis — quit ADEMA again in January 2011 in order to pursue his “solo project.” He rejoined the group again six years later and played his first comeback show with ADEMA in May 2017 at the Whisky A Go Go in West Hollywood, California.

After Chavez‘s original exit from ADEMA, the other members of the band found their way with new lead singers Luke Caraccioli and later Bobby Reeves, while Mark founded MIDNIGHT PANIC with his cousin Peter Shubert. He also produced fellow artists.

ADEMA‘s last official release was 2013’s “Topple The Giants” EP. The group’s first CD since 2007’s “Kill The Headlights” contained brand new tracks plus re-worked versions of ADEMA‘s chart-topping hits “Giving In” and “Unstable”. A three-song EP, “The Cerberus”, was sold exclusively on ADEMA‘s 2023 “Nu Metal Madness 2” tour.

Photo courtesy of ADEMA


Tags

Share this post:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore