Enter Adam Dutkiewicz, who, as well as playing guitar in Killswitch, is the producer of Atonement. Having helmed multiple records featuring Jesse, Adam has long been respectful of giving the singer space when he works, having had enough years to come to appreciate the process. This time, however, Adam sensed something was amiss.
“I was in the midst of this, being inside my own head, and he’s asking to see stuff that I wasn’t sure about,” recalls Jesse. “In the end he had to say, ‘Why are you holding on to these?! They’re done!’ It wasn’t just writer’s block; it was self-doubt. I put so much pressure on myself.
“I needed someone to step in and say, ‘Snap out of it!’ If Adam hadn’t done that I don’t know what I’d be doing right now. I get by with a little help from my friends, as they say.”
One of those friends was Howard Jones, who had replaced him as Killswitch vocalist in 2002 until his own departure in 2012. No two people, surely, could understand the other better, having been pitted against one another by fans and the media alike, and both experiencing periods of poor mental health.
“[Recently] I felt an overwhelming need to speak to him, one-to-one,” reveals Jesse. “I said, ‘You have been one of my greatest vocal teachers, because I’ve had to mimic what you did and make it my own.’ I got emotional and gave him a big hug.”
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Howard, now frontman of Light The Torch, appears on the track The Signal Fire, which features him singing the lyric ‘Can we walk a mile in another’s shoes’.
“The lyrics reflect the lack of compassion and empathy that people have for one another,” explains Jesse. “I thought it was a perfect line to have Howard sing, because of the things we’ve both been through, being compared to each other and all the fucking nonsense the media has put on us.
“I also got to hear Adam get on his ass like he does to me,” laughs Jesse. “Making him do things over and over. There was this solidarity between us, like, ‘Yeah, you have to go through this same shit that I have to, singing the same fucking part 20 times!’”
Through shared experiences, good and bad, with friends old and new, Jesse has reached a place where he can head his demons off at the pass. He’s grateful, too, for Killswitch Engage, the vehicle that allows him to express himself so directly so that he, and the band’s fans, can heal and learn together.
Killswitch Engage's latest album Atonement is out now via Music For Nations.