The
slow road through the clubs eventually landed them an EP, Enjoy
Incubus, and a trip to Europe supporting Korn. "That was our
very first real tour, playing in front of 2-6,000 kids a night,"
he says. "We're very thankful to Korn for that."
That
and years of the hard-knock van tours across the States led to them
being taken in by none other than Sharon Osbourne (current wife
and former manager of Ozzy), and a coveted spot on the 1998 OZZfest
tour: Limp Bizkit, Tool, System of a Down, Primus and, of course,
Ozzy and Black Sabbath.
"It
wouldn't have happened if it wasn't for Sharon," he says. "Truthfully,
I don't know the exact contact point [how Sharon found out about
the band]. Of course, I'd like to think that she somehow stumbled
across a tape and loved it so much that she asked us to come on
tour, but I doubt that's how it happened. But Sharon is amazing.
She's given so many young bands so many brilliant opportunities
that she deserves some kind of a medal."
He gleefully
continues, "The OZZfest was like summer camp. Because we knew most
of the bands on the bill from previous touring, it was just like
a big group of friends kind of traveling around the country together
and playing music and having a brilliant time."
While
the phrase "rock/hip-hop/funk" is used to describe Incubus, it should
be noted that this band has some distinct differences from peers
like Korn or Limp Bizkit. Dynamics are what made songs like "Smells
Like Teen Spirit" so powerful--loud choruses were made louder by
having subdued verses to set them up, a point not lost on Incubus'
collaborative songwriting efforts. And, Praise The Lord, they aren't
allergic to that ancient musical practice: melody. Guitar textures
on songs like "Nowhere Fast" bend from a crunchy, Faith-No-More
Jim Martin vibe to middle-eastern Steve Vai. "The electric sitar,
yeah, Steve Vai was actually probably one of Michael's (Einziger)
biggest influences," Boyd says.
Perhaps
one of the things that makes Boyd sound so sober and humble is the
car accident that occurred last fall while the band was putting
the finishing touches on Make Yourself.
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"It
was about a week and a half into mixing the record," he explains.
"I was pulling into the studio in my little Honda Civic, making
a left, and a guy in a Mercedes was trying to jump a red light and
he broadsided me. Totaled my car. I bashed my knee and kind of blacked
out for a second and came to. I saw my whole band and one of the
guys who mixed the record, Rick Will, running towards me and I was
like, 'Whoa. Am I dead right now?' But as they're lifting me out
of the car, I was laughing; I think I was in shock a little bit.
And I asked them, 'What song are you guys mixing?' And they all
started laughing back at me and I said, 'Drive.'... I'm definitely
a little more wary of left turns on Sunset Boulevard now," Boyd
underscores with tongue in cheek.
It probably
makes better copy to talk about rock stars in the traditional sense:
self-destructive media whores with their feet planted firmly in
their stratospheric egos. But there's something special about a
band that can musically whip your ass, make you think, and keep
their heads on straight. Maybe it's because while they're in this
business, they're smart enough to understand it's just a business,
and purposefully go after what they want.
"In
a lot of people's eyes, being a musician or a writer or an artist
full time is not something too respectable," Boyd concludes. "But
to tell you the truth, I think it's the most respectable
profession because you're doing it as (only) what you want to do.
And you didn't succumb to the pressures of doing what you don't
want to do, just to make a living. You realize you can actually
make a living by doing something that excites you. And the more
you pursue what excites you, the more you're rewarded."
Too
fucking sane. But then he laughs, "Well, give me a couple more months
on the road and I'll lose it."
Not bloody likely.
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