The attentive CoC reader may notice that  My  Dying  Bride  were last interviewed in this publication not long ago -- CoC  #56,  as  a matter of fact, shortly after their latest studio album _The Dreadful Hours_ [CoC #55] came out. Why, then, would we interview  them  again so soon? Well, if you look at our Album Asylum and  Chaotic  Concerts sections in this issue, you will find reviews of a live album, a  DVD re-release of a live video tape, and a gig. Yes, My Dying Bride  have been rather active lately, and very remarkably so: their latest  opus _The Dreadful Hours_ was my favourite album of 2001,  and  also  came second in the overall CoC writers' top  20  [CoC  #57],  just  behind Opeth. At 8:30pm sharp, my phone rings  and  I  ask  My  Dying  Bride guitarist Andrew Craighan how he feels about this result.
 He thanks me for  my  personal  choice,  and  acknowledges  that "Opeth are a very good band, so that's not a bad place  to  be."  But has every review of _The Dreadful Hours_ been  positive,  or  is  the band still being accused of choosing the easy path of going  back  to their musical roots? "The reviews have all been very, very good, full stop. We were accused of choosing the easy option on  _The  Light  at the End of the World_ [CoC #44], which is something  I  never  agreed with. Some people just didn't know what to say  --  most  journalists who are actually into the band never mentioned this,  they  just  saw _TLatEotW_ as a great return to form, MDB doing  what  MDB  do  best. Those who were not into the band saw it as a step sideways, or a step back; I never saw it like  that  at  all.  When  Calvin  [Robertshaw, guitarist] left [after _34.788%_ [CoC #35]], we had to decide whether to continue with MDB as MDB or put My Dying Bride in  the  grave  and start something new,  because  half  the  band  was  gone  [including drummer Rick Myah and keyboard/violin player Martin Powell -- Pedro]. We just decided we can do this, this is what we do and who we are; we did what we felt in our hearts: cold, miserable, stupidly long  songs that only MDB can get away with. <laughs> Our fans liked it, felt  it was what they wanted to hear from MDB. The experimental crowd  didn't like it, didn't think it was experimental  enough  for  them,  but  I don't care -- we don't have to be too outlandish anymore. With Hamish [Glencross, guitarist] we now have a more  stable  line-up,  a  solid outfit who understand what our brand of blackness  and  doom  is  all about. And _The Dreadful Hours_ is what you get from that.  We  don't want to do the jump up and down metal that is popular these days."
 It's been a long career -- going on twelve years now -- and  the band must wonder whether they will be able to top such a solid  album next time. What does Andy think about that? "That's a scary question. I thought _The Light at the End of the World_ was a brilliant  album, but _The Dreadful Hours_ is even better -- I just  thought,  how  the fuck did we do that?! <laughs> In  between  the  gigs  we're  already putting  down  ideas  for  when  we  start  to  record,  and  it's  a nerve-racking time -- thinking whether the next album is going to  be better than _The Dreadful Hours_. It's a testing time. We don't  know what we are going to sound like. I just hope we can  at  least  equal _The Dreadful Hours_, or make something even  better.  We  have  some ideas to make it even more miserable in certain places  which  should sound good on CD."
 My Dying Bride have recently been doing a bit  of  touring,  and they traveled down to Portugal  and  the  excellent  Hard  Club  [see review in this issue]. It was the gig of my life, and  apparently  it was rather good for the band as well. I mention the excellent setting provided by the Hard Club, and Andy immediately agrees. "It's such an idyllic place. It's a  strange  place  for  gigs,  such  a  beautiful setting, whereas gigs normally take place in industrialized parts  of cities. Myself and Adrian especially enjoy drinking  Port  wine  back home, so drinking it in Porto was like going to  Mecca!  <laughs>  We did the whole tourist thing, the gig  itself  was  almost  secondary! <laughs again> But that club is fantastic, it's one of the best  I've ever been to, it just looks great sat there by the river [Douro].  It was a really special gig for us, too. The  band  played  particularly well; the night before [in Lisbon] was OK, but in  Porto  it  was  as close as it can get to the band being in top form."
 "The gigs have been going very well. We  played  in  Dublin  and Greece recently. We thought the Portuguese crowd was very active  and noisy, but there must be something wrong  with  the  Greeks!  We  had never been there  before,  so  they  were  absolutely  ballistic.  We actually got our first ever fan mail letter from Greece, but it  took us twelve years to go there -- it was really special. We  had  a  few problems in the first Greek gig but managed to overcome them, and  on the second we were on fire. Dublin was OK, but it wasn't the best  of gigs; still, we hadn't been to Ireland for eight years, and we played for a full crowd. We've been selling out gigs all the time, which  is a massive achievement for MDB."
 Although I elaborate on this in my  gig  review  later  in  this issue, I cannot avoid mentioning how much the band seems to grow when playing live,  Aaron's  vocals  especially  noteworthy  in  the  live setting. "It's a bit strange, I have to admit. On record we're  quite controlled -- not too loud, not too distorted, but it's still got the power. Live we like to  do  the  full  heavy  metal  thing  and  have everything louder than everything else, and everything  becomes  more exaggerated. The band is playing better live than ever, and Aaron  is in top form -- if I  had  been  in  the  crowd,  I  would  have  been impressed with Aaron as well. There is a very  special  chemistry  in the band now, and the crowd reacts very well -- they  can't  seem  to get their eyes off us, they stare at us and we stare back...  and  we like it! <laughs>"
 Reviewed below is _The Voice of the Wretched_, their  brand  new live album. One thing that quickly became evident to me  as  I  first glanced at the track listing was the fact  that  it  contained  three songs from my favourite MDB album, 1993's  _Turn  Loose  the  Swans_. "It's just coincidence", answers Andy after pondering for  a  moment; "I've never noticed that. We have got  quite  a  career  now,  twelve years coming up, and when we play live  there's  always  someone  who shouts for an obscure song that we never play live. We would like to, but we can't play everything for everybody. But on the Peacefest gigs [where _The Voice of the  Wretched_  was  recorded  --  Pedro],  _The Dreadful Hours_ wasn't yet fully ready to be played live --  we  only played "A Cruel Taste of Winter", which was later changed for the CD. So we intended to bring stuff from the EPs -- we  actually  rehearsed "The Thrash of Naked Limbs", but in the end decided  against  it  for some more _Turn Loose the Swans_. It just happened, we wanted to play some older stuff for our older fans, and everyone  says  _Turn  Loose the Swans_ is their favourite record, so... but we didn't plan it, it just is."
 Having re-recorded "The Return of the  Beautiful"  (from  1992's _As the Flower Withers_) for _The Dreadful  Hours_,  and  now  having included the first song they ever  wrote,  "Symphonaire  Infernus  et Spera Empyrium", in their live set, how does Andrew feel  going  back to such old  songs?  "I  don't  think  we've  changed  that  much  in style  and  mentality",  he  replies.  "If  you  look  at  the  style and composition, those  are  all  very  solid  songs.  When  we  play "Symphonaire"  live,  it  fits  perfectly  into  the  set,  the  slow beginning that grows into total carnage -- which is rather  difficult for us to play now, actually, since Shawn  [Steels,  drummer]  blasts through it at a million miles an hour. <laughs> A lot of  people  who go to our gigs may have never heard that song.  Some  of  the  people won't know the full history of My Dying  Bride,  and  it  is  a  good opportunity to say that this is what we sounded like ten  years  ago. It's good to really blast them out. As for "Return to the Beautiful", the idea had been bubbling and simmering away since 1997,  since  the tour with Dio in America, which lasted for six weeks. It was a friend of ours from a band called  Novembers  Doom",  he  starts.  I  wonder whether his name is Paul Kuhr, the band's vocalist, and Andy tells me I've guessed correctly. He continues: "Paul said we had to  re-record it, that it was such an  amazing  song,  and  suddenly  everyone  was saying that  --  we  were  thinking  whether  he  had  some  sort  of conspiracy going! <laughs> Anyway, it eventually happened; we  nearly put it on _The Light at the End of the World_, but the CD was already full, and then when we wrote  _The  Dreadful  Hours_  we  managed  to squeeze it in. We also made the ending a bit more brutal. It was such a joy; I actually played both guitars, I was so proud of it. I  still prefer the first version, to be honest, but it felt  very  good,  and I'm glad it's there."
 _The Voice of the Wretched_ covers every era of My Dying  Bride, and I ask Andrew an unfair question: which  of  those  eras  was  his favourite? "The most enjoyable and care-free time would  have  to  be around _Turn Loose the Swans_, going into and through _The Angel  and the Dark River_. That's when we did the most touring and we  had  the most exposure. The records were very well received and it was a  very nice time for us. It's been brilliant all the time,  except  when  it started to become very difficult before _34.788%_ -- a product  of  a band under extreme pressure from its record label, but I still  stand by that record, which was done under not so nice circumstances."
 Did they consider the possibility of moving to a different label at the time after having been on Peaceville for  so  long?  "We  know Hammy and his wife Lisa [Peaceville label owners -- Pedro] very  well now, but even before we signed to them -- and we were very excited to sign -- Aaron already knew them reasonably well. We  also  understand that they had a business to run. They may like the music, but it's  a business. We trust them to a certain degree, and they're  very  local to us, too, which is good. We didn't want to sign with a  label  from London -- which, given the connections at the time, would  have  been Music for Nations, and I can tell you any band who's with them is  in for fucking trouble. I would be reluctant to  leave  Peaceville  even now; you can't get this  trust  anywhere  else,  and  it  makes  life easier. Being in a band is hard work sometimes, and you need  someone to rely on, and we feel we can rely on Peaceville."
 The events Andrew  refers  to  happened  during  the  time  when Peaceville was temporarily a sub-label of Music  for  Nations.  "When that contract with Music for Nations finished we were very glad.  The whole problem was coming from Music for Nations;  Hammy  didn't  have full control over Peaceville anymore, and it  freaked  him  out.  The [Music for Nations] people in London weren't into the music,  and  it was difficult for them to grasp a band like MDB --  they  got  twelve minute songs and asked "where's our commercial hit?" --  MDB  doesn't do that, fuck that."
 Which reminds  me  of  how  Anathema,  currently  on  Music  for Nations, have made their way into MTV with a  video  clip  off  their bland _A Fine Day to Exit_ [CoC #55]. "I can't comment", says Andrew. "I haven't heard anything of theirs for a long time -- the last thing was their demo _An Iliad of Woes_, actually,  which  I  liked.  Since they became signed to the same label we were on, and their style  was similar to ours, I just didn't want to be influenced. So I've  simply lost touch with what they're doing, although I know they're not doing metal anymore. I only heard one song  off  the  new  record,  and  it reminded me of Radiohead  --  but  I  like  Radiohead.  I  know  it's difficult to be in a band and on Music for Nations,  so  I  know  the trouble they're having; but MDB is my main concern."
 The brand new live CD is not coming out alone: the _For  Darkest Eyes_ video is being re-released in DVD format [also reviewed in this issue] with a couple of extra features. "It could have been  better", admits Andrew. "The main problem is that  there  is  not  enough  new stuff on it. It's not really Peaceville's or MDB's fault, it's just a bizarre twist of fate -- after _34.788%_ the  band  dipped  into  the shadows and didn't do much, no videos  or  recording  of  gigs.  Now, having released _The Dreadful Hours_, which along with _The Light  at the End of the World_ has put MDB back on the British doom map  --  I don't think anyone else is doing  this  kind  of  thing  in  Northern Europe --, Hammy and Lisa are really ecstatic with MDB's success, and it's to their credit as well. So we've got a new  format,  DVD,  what can we do? Since there was such a dip in the band's activity, there's nothing new to put in it, so it's just a format change. I was talking to Hammy about a video for _The  Dreadful  Hours_  and  he  was  very enthusiastic. I can imagine we may do an MTV-style video for the next album."
 One of the extras on the DVD is their  Dynamo  '95  performance, originally released in a double-disc edition of _The  Angel  and  the Dark River_. "We enjoyed it a lot, but it was our first gig after six months, so we were rusty. Rehearsing  in  a  rehearsal  room  is  one thing, but in front of 3500 people or more, suddenly you're not  sure how to play the songs in a -live- environment. That's the  importance of playing warm-up shows. We learned valuable lessons that night, but it wasn't the ideal place for that! <laughs> We didn't do any warm-up shows before Portugal, actually, but we're a bit  more  long  in  the tooth now."
 Compared to the Krakow  gig  featured  on  _For  Darkest  Eyes_, Martin Powell's violin is no longer a part of their music; yet during the Porto gig, I never had a chance to even think about that.  "We've been fortunate in that respect", he says, "only  a  few  people  ever complain about that. Those who are more open-minded about  MDB  would love to see him back, but overall they think it's not the  loss  they expected it to be. When we toured for _The Light at the  End  of  the World_ we wanted to test  the  water,  and  we  were  surprised  with ourselves and the crowd response. We usually mingle  with  the  crowd after the gigs, which is a very eye-opening  experience,  and  people weren't mentioning it much at all -- "It is a shame, but you're  good enough without it", and that was a  great  relief.  You  can  replace guitar players -- no offence to Calvin, you could replace me too  --, but violin players who are into doom metal aren't easy  to  find.  We actually rehearsed for a month with a violin  player,  a  young  girl from Halifax, and she could play very well, but once you put the band around her she was completely lost, and it just wasn't  happening.  I actually met Martin a couple of times since then, in a pub near where we live in Bradford called Rio's -- we usually  go  there  --  and  I talked to him about the good times and it was nice. Maybe  he  was  a bit drunk, or just giddy from seeing old friends again, but  he  said he'd like to play live with us again -- but he's away with Cradle  of Filth at the moment. We didn't fall out in an ugly way at all,  we're still very much friends, so..."
 And how does the future of My Dying Bride look like  to  Andrew? Is the passion still intact? "I have to admit at the  moment  I  have more energy for My Dying Bride than I have had in a  long  time,  but after _The Light at the End of the World_ I wondered if we were doing the right thing. I have a great fiance, who's a great fan of MDB; I'm often a miserable twat, but then she reminds me how special  MDB  is. I'm feeling very positive -- even though  we  sing  about  death  and doom, I'm very happy at the moment. <laughs>"