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Red Hot Chili Peppers ‘A New Band’ On I’m With You

First album in five years, out Monday (August 29), is ‘us, with a whole new thing,’ Anthony Kiedis tells MTV News. By James Montgomery Red Hot Chili Peppers Photo: MTV News Anthony Kiedis makes no bones about the fact that the Red Hot Chili Peppers are “a new band,” despite all evidence to the contrary. After all, not many “new” bands have sold more than 65 million albums worldwide, won a grip of Grammy awards, survived a series of rather-seismic lineup shifts or made some of the most-iconic music videos of all time. And even fewer have actually been a band since 1983. And yet, here is Kiedis, talking about the Chili Peppers’ 10th studio album, I’m With You, in stores Monday (August 29), and how its recording signifies not only a new era — it’s the first with new guitarist Josh Klinghoffer, who replaced longtime member John Frusciante in 2009 — but a new band, too. As Kieids explained to MTV News, it has “a lot to do with” Klinghoffer. “He’s definitely a big part of why it’s different: different person, different chemistry, different experience, different era … we’re a new band, and thank goodness. “It seemed to be, whether we liked it or not, time for change to take place. So, an opportunity was created, one that instantly seemed to be a wonderful occasion. It’s so exciting when you get thrown a curveball by the universe, and you turn that curveball into a home run. And I feel like that’s what happened … Curveballs used to break my heart and freak me out, but now, I know from experience that they usually lead to something cool.” And on I’m With You, not only do the Peppers begin a new chapter, but they push their signature sound further than they’ve ever pushed before. Sure, Flea’s propulsive bass lines still form the backbone, but the new songs are amplified and expounded upon by his time spent studying music theory at USC. In a new twist, most of the tunes began as piano compositions and slowly blossomed in the recording studio, with Klinghoffer adding slow-diving guitar flourishes (and the occasional keyboard, too). There are percussive tones added by Brazilian musicians and organ peals from former Beastie Boys associates. As Kiedis put it, “It’s more ethereally complex and layered and kind of spooky and moody and dreamy, yet still profound. … The spirit of the Red Hot Chili Peppers remains and changes and moves on. It’s us, with a whole new thing.” Of course, that “new thing” couldn’t have been created without putting the old thing to bed — which means that, for the first time in their careers, the Chili Peppers decided to take a break from the business of being a band: A break that, to hear Kiedis tell it, was a long time coming. “We had a little coffee break there … it was a hell of a big cup,” he said, laughing. “It was kind of an unspoken, obvious time for [it]. By the end of the Stadium Arcadium tour, which was a year and a half, everybody was like a pile of broken dolls, and no one could really conceive of not taking a break. “So when somebody uttered ‘Two-year break,’ everyone just hip-hip hoorayed, and without really knowing what that would mean, it was a good idea,” he continued. “It was just an innate, gut-instinct good idea. And everybody went and did things that made a lot of sense.” And though the self-imposed hiatus lasted two years (and included Frusciante’s departure,) there was never a moment where Kiedis ever thought about doing anything but the Red Hot Chili Peppers. And even if fans began to worry about the band’s future — Arcadium was released in 2006, making this the longest period between albums in RHCP history — he never did — partially because he never lost the passion, but mostly because he knew rebirths take a long time. “I have never felt anywhere close to being done. I was pretty sure after the last record that the best was yet to come, but I always kind of feel like that, like if you want it, it’s there,” he said. “I like really old people that still make out intensely with their wives or girlfriends … why would you ever stop?” Related Videos MTV First: Red Hot Chili Peppers Related Artists Red Hot Chili Peppers

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Red Hot Chili Peppers ‘A New Band’ On I’m With You

Red Hot Chili Peppers Reveal Origins Of ‘Rain Dance Maggie’

New single started life as an hour-long jam session, Anthony Kiedis tells MTV News. By James Montgomery Red Hot Chili Peppers’ Anthony Kiedis Photo: MTV News On Friday, the Red Hot Chili Peppers officially ended their hiatus with the premiere of “The Adventures of Rain Dance Maggie,” the first single from their upcoming I’m With You album. About a month before the premiere of “Maggie,” MTV News sat down with RHCP’s Anthony Kiedis and Josh Klinghoffer in Venice, California, to talk about the band’s new album (and the lengthy break that preceded it). We’ll be rolling out more of the interview as we get closer to I’m With You ‘s August 30 release date, but we’ve already given fans a taste of what they can expect, when Kiedis and Klinghoffer explained the genesis of the album’s title. And now, with “Maggie” officially out of the box, we figured it would be time to pull the curtain back on a second portion of the chat, in which Kiedis revealed the origins of the song itself — origins that began with an hour-long jam session and exactly one classic bass line. “When I first heard [‘Maggie’], I didn’t know it would be a single. [But] I knew that I loved the jam, ” Kiedis explained. “My first recording of that, I don’t think it had many vocals on it. It was kind of mostly instrumental, about an hour long. Flea brought it in as a very specific exercise to write a classic bass line. He woke up, had his tea, sat down: ‘I’m going to write a classic bass line. You can’t stop me.’ Played his bass line until he felt it was cooked into a classic, brought it to us and said, ‘This is Classic Number One.’ On a good day, you just know if there’s music to wrestle with and get with, and it was one of those moments.” So Kiedis sat down and listened to the track and was immediately struck by the propulsive groove Flea had laid down. And things just took off from there, with Klinghoffer adding a winging guitar line and drummer Chad Smith providing a loose, limber backbeat. But even if things were taking shape, Kiedis said he never thought “Maggie” would be anything more than a B-side. If that. “I took it home and it felt so fun to listen to at length that I literally left it on in my driveway, opened the door and danced with the tree next to me for quite a while,” he said. “I had no idea that it would even be a song, I just thought, ‘Oh, this is a great dance track. Let’s put it on as a B-side, [an] hour long.’ And then, as fate would have it, people heard it, and they were like, ‘Oh, that’s your best thing right there. That’s your best thing.’ ” And so, eventually, “The Adventures of Rain Dance Maggie” made the leap from jam to official first single. And now that it’s out there, Kiedis knows he’s going asked plenty of times just who this Maggie is. Unfortunately, he’s not about to reveal his inspirations. “It’s just a collection of memories and people along the way that had maybe left my consciousness until I heard that music, and then they kind of came dancing back into my consciousness, and out the old pen onto the paper,” he smiled. “Names have been changed to protect the innocent. Although there is a Maggie, I realized later. There’s two Maggies, actually.” What do you think of the Chili Peppers’ new song? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Red Hot Chili Peppers

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Red Hot Chili Peppers Reveal Origins Of ‘Rain Dance Maggie’