“There’s this misconception that with success it gets easier, but it really doesn’t,” says Lzzy Hale.
“It gets harder not to lose yourself in the game and in the politics of all of this, and not chase after things for the wrong reasons. We didn’t get too far out, but we got a little lost there for a second.”
The Halestorm frontwoman is reflecting on a period of turmoil, the like of which her band had never experienced before. But in the run-up to writing their new album, Vicious, things were different. It seems strange to think of the Pennsylvanian quartet – completed by her brother Arejay on drums, guitarist Joe Hottinger and bassist Josh Smith – having a hard time at all. Especially when you consider the on-the-surface smooth sailing of their career to date: a major label deal with Atlantic Records, a GRAMMY Award for 2013 single, Love Bites (So Do I), and soon-to-be four albums to their name, not to mention all eight dates of their September Academy tour in the UK and Ireland selling out months in advance.
Yet something wasn’t right as the band embarked upon the creation of their latest record. So much so, Lzzy scrapped the first batch of songs they wrote. The weight of expectation rested heavily on her shoulders, leading to self-doubt and creative second-guessing. To put it right, Halestorm had to reconnect as bandmates and seek out the same spark that initially inspired them, way back when.
“In order to get back to that, it takes so much more than being strong and riding out the storm,” she explains. “We had to show our teeth and be aggressive. We’re all still best friends. We were fierce and defiant about it. We used ‘vicious’ in a very positive way.”
Vicious, it seems, is not just the album's title. It represents the very spirit and soul of how the band got themselves back on track. Over to Lzzy, to find out exactly what it is to be vicious…
WHAT’S THE MOST VICIOUS THING THAT YOU’VE DONE?
I’ve tortured my little brother Arejay for most of his life. When we were in London two years ago, he emptied a bottle of vodka into a couple of used water bottles and then filled the vodka bottle with water, so that he could chug it on camera before he went on stage to freak everybody out. But during his drum solo, I went back to our dressing room, took all of the vodka-filled water bottles and that night, the guys and I replaced all of his bunk water bottles with the vodka ones. So we’re sitting there, waiting for him to take a sip and when he finally does he’s like, ‘That’s crazy,’ we all laugh about it and go to sleep. The next morning, we’re driving to a gig and our bus driver’s complaining about how the coffee tastes like shit. Then we realised that there’s booze in the coffee. I come to find out that in the middle of the night, Arejay put all of the vodka water bottles into the water case and the driver made coffee with vodka the next morning. He was pissed. He was like, ‘Oh my God I could get pulled over – I think I’m drunk!’ So Arejay did get everybody back, but we do all that stuff to him all the time…