Who wrote the lyrics?
Randy: “Troy and I did those. I wrote probably 75 per cent of the lyrics, and I talked to Troy about what I was writing about, and conceptually what I wanted it to be. I sent them to the Mastodon guys, and they were like, ‘That's great.’ I mean, I was hoping for a little bit more input, but maybe I'm just being needy. These are my homies, but it's kind of like, are they just saying that because we're friends and they don't want to hurt my feelings? Do they think it sucks?”
Brann: “No way. I care about your feelings, but not when it comes to lyrics…”
Randy: “Exactly, they’ve got to be good. We sat in the in the kitchen of their studio, went through the lyrics, because I wanted to make sure what I was hearing as the chorus was actually the chorus. I'm not a guitar player or a drummer or a bass player, I'm a singer. So sometimes with my band even, I'll be like, ‘This is what I hear for the chorus.’ And they’ll go, ‘No, dude, that's the bridge.’ I discussed it with Troy, because he and I were the ones that sang it mostly, and went back and forth.
“Because it's not just Mastodon with me doing guest vocals, we really wanted it to be collaborative. I was originally hoping that that we would write 50/50, lyrics, but it didn't work out that way. But I’d done 75 per cent, and Troy said he had brought some. Even in the studio, we added a line or two we came up with, which just happens when you're together, not when you're emailing stuff back and forth.
“It was a collaborative effort. It wasn't like strangers asking me, ‘Hey, will you do guest vocals, and we'll give you this credit,’ or whatever. These are my friends. They want to make music with me, so let's make music together. And that's truly what it felt like. That's one thing I love about it. I love making music with my friends. I have my own band, but I also love making music with all my friends, because a lot of my friends are musicians.”
Where did the idea for the Triton stuff come from?
Randy: “Well, if you if you look at the lyrics, there's sort of an apocalyptic feel to them, sort of a disastrous feel. We threw around a bunch of titles, and I was thinking of some stuff that didn't really work. And then I believe it was my friend right here, I'll let him answer that…”
Brann: “I think we were having a conversation about Triton while we were in the studio, and we just started talking about the mythologies surrounding Triton, son of Poseidon. We were discussing tridents and things, and how we all desperately wanted to own a trident of our own, at the house, in case of a burglary. Could you imagine some guy comes running down the stairs, naked, with a trident? Yeah, you're gone. You're leaving.
“Anyway, the imagery was in my mind from having a conversation when we were having fun in the studio. But going through the lyrics and going through everything, I don't know, I kind of had the ocean, I had the flood… There’s the lyric that Randy came up with: ‘A flood is coming.’ I had this image of Triton causing that flood. That’s where it came from. I like to name things.”
Randy: “Yeah, you're good at naming things.”
Brann: “I know. So, there you go. We had a bunch of different names, but even as I would type them out and send them, I'd be like, ‘That's not it.’ You just have to be patient and know that a name will strike that chord, and usually everyone is into it. It conjures up imagery, that’s the most important thing about a song title, I think. It sort of creates a little scene in your mind, even if you haven't seen the actual art. But that looks fantastic as well. What I'm trying to say is, I love it when a plan comes together…”