Fear Factory’s Dino Cazares: “It Almost Seemed Like Sometimes We Were Too Heavy For The Nü-Metal Fans And Then Maybe Not Nü-Metal Enough”

During a recent interview with Heavy New York, Fear Factory’s Dino Cazares opened up about the band’s sound and how it impacted them during the nü-metal era. He says “it almost seemed like sometimes [they] were too heavy for the nü-metal fans and then maybe not nü-metal enough.”

Cazares said the following:

“The good thing is that we could branch out and play with a bunch of different bands. That was good. But the bad thing is that we never belonged to one genre… If we were a part of the nü-metal genre, maybe we would’ve been as big as some of those nü-metal bands. It almost seemed like sometimes we were too heavy for the nü-metal fans and then maybe not nü-metal enough, but maybe we were too nü-metal for the heavier fans.

So, I don’t know. We kind of sat in-between — we were like a snake in between all those bands and all those different genres. So we were kind of like right there, even though what we created later on — not even just later on — but what we created over the years was something that would inspire all those different bands. Mainly in the syncopated kick-and-guitar music and then obviously the vocals inspiring all those different types of genres.

Maybe some of those genres don’t even know where it came from, because they might have been listening to Killswitch Engage, even though Killswitch Engage was kind of more — the formula of the vocals was very much inspired by Fear Factory. Because sometimes a new generation of fans emerge and a new style of music emerges and people don’t really know the history of where it all started.

But if you go back, some of that stuff stems from Fear Factory and going into bands later on, like Killswitch and All That Remains and so on and so on; there’s a million bands like that. So it was kind of like Pantera with the groove and then Fear Factory with the vocals.”

He also added:

“We kind of had our foot in the door in all these different genres, and in some ways I almost felt like it hurt us ’cause we weren’t just one thing. ‘Cause right now there’s like a resurgence of death metal, a resurgence of nü-metal, but there’s no resurgence of [the kind of] metal we do. So it’s kind of weird that we’re not part of the resurgence of death metal or nü-metal because we weren’t just those type of things… I’m just saying that we were a part of all of it in a way — like I said, we had our foot in door in all those different genres, but we didn’t particularly fit into one genre. And that to me could have been part of the reason why we’re not part of a resurgence of certain genres.”

[via Blabbermouth]