Tap for menu
Go
Turnstile

Wednesday Thirteen

Posted on February 12, 2008

Back on the recent Wednesday 13 dates, Alison Aird of RoomThirteen.com got up close and personal for a quick chat with the man himself… a clip of her interview follows, and do be sure to browse around their site too and read the rest of it. “Front man of the Murderdolls, columnist for Metal Hammer, artist, father, husband and inventor of “ghoulade”, Wednesday 13 is certainly a man with plenty of ambition and long career ahead of him. Finding fame with the Murderdolls in 2002, Wednesday’s face became familiar to music fans across the country love it or hate it, any band featuring Joey Jordison with Marilyn Manson in the first single is going to be huge. The Murderdolls provided each band member with a stepping stone to greater thing, with each member now taking part in other bands or music related careers, but having mingled amongst the fans waiting outside in the bitter cold for Wednesday’s solo project, the majority want to know if we can expect a second album from the dynamic, tongue in cheek quintet. “There’s no structured time, nobody knows when we’re doing it” Wednesday says, “but yes, we’ve just got to find a time when everybody can do it”. At least that’s sorted then. The first thing I’ve noticed about this front man though, even while he speaks, is how completely and utterly different he is in a backstage area, to how is he portrayed by the media. He’s a small guy, wearing tight blue jeans, regulatory black t-shirt slashed with a band logo and a black cow boy hat. This hat, it turns out, is the wonder of many a fan state side and was originally red and from a breakfast diner/antiques shop somewhere in the states. Strangely enough, minus the makeup Wednesday is a normal looking guy, who fits into the crowd you usually see wandering around these parts, but once the white face paint and black eyeliner are slapped on, Wednesday turns from well spoken interviewee to a snarling, guitar playing singer that can work a crowd into a frenzy over the simplest KFC bucket. After swapping makeup tales we move back onto the topic of Murderdolls and musical influences of Wednesday’s. As Wednesday himself says, his main influence visually and musically came from the likes of Alice Cooper and Rob Zombie, who he first started listening to in his early teens but the glam scene of the late 80s and early 90s are what inspires the stage set up for the recent shows. At a Wednesday 13 show you’ll either be enthralled by the sight that greets you on stage, or it’ll all seem like some horrible nightmare. Plastic heads piled one on top of the other line the singers microphone stand, while futuristic tubes (vacuum tubes we expect) coil around the stands of the rest of the band as a grotesquely grinning clown sits infront of the bass drum, reminding each and every member of the audience just why they hated the circus so much as a child. Clearly, with a bigger stage, Wednesday 13 could run riot with all manner of gothic gismos and toys from childrens nightmares, but even on the smaller stage being used this evening Wednesday has gone all out. A conversation with Wednesday is never dull, you can talk about his favourite cakes (chocolate cake with yellow inside or the rainbow flake cakes that his mother makes) or you can move the topic onto his drawing hobbies and how Family Guy is a really great cartoon, how he identifies with Beetlejuice for being “stupid” and would like to meet movie directors such as Tim Burton and Sylvester Stylone, but one topic that’s particually interesting to myself, and to some of the hardcore kids outside is about Wednesday’s book “Thirteen Dead Kids” which in short, is little poems and drawings all about death…..”

Subscribe

Enter your email to subscribe to our regular newsletter & new music alerts

Submit

By submitting my information, I agree to receive personalized updates and marketing messages about Roadrunner Records, based on my information, interests, activities, website visits and device data and in accordance with the Privacy Policy. I understand that I can opt-out at any time by emailing privacypolicy@wmg.com.