Ghost’s Tobias Forge On “Satanized”: “It’s A Song About Being In Love”

During an interview with Detroit’s WRIF, Ghost frontman Tobias Forge discussed the band’s latest single “Satanized.” According to him, “it’s a song about being in love.”

Forge said the following:

“Yeah, it’s a fun video and it’s a upbeat, fun track. It’s a song about being in love and how that can potentially be mistaken as demonic possession, but in reality this song has nothing to do with demonic possession.”

He continued when asked why it was chosen as the first single from the band’s new album “Skeletá” (out April 25):

“It’s funny because as I was making the record, I didn’t really put much like regard into trying to write… Of course, as a songwriter, you always try to write as good songs as possible, but there wasn’t a whole lot of, like, ‘Oh, I’m gonna write a hit song.’ So I was more interested in sort of making a bunch of songs that I was gonna put cohesively into an understandable and entertaining album. And wise with experience over the years where I’ve delivered records to the people that work with me, and I’m, like, ‘This is the song. This is the single. This is the hit.’ And more than often, it ends up being, like, ‘Oh, no. We believe in that song instead.’ Okay. So finally I’ve sort of given up a little bit on that. So I just sort of gave the record and I’m, like, ‘You guys choose what you wanna do.’ And then I’m sort of holding my thumb a little, crossing my fingers, hoping that that maybe they they’ll hear what I hear. And to my big surprise, they came back with ‘Satanized’. And I was, like, ‘I couldn’t be happier. I have a really funny video idea for that one. I never thought that you would go for that one,’ simply because it’s like…

To me, I am a huge fan of ’70s music. That’s a very simplified way of saying that, but I’m a big fan of SCORPIONS from the ’80s, but also the SCORPIONS from the ’70s, which sometimes, I guess, a certain age group might not be aware that that SCORPIONS was a band in the ’70s, and they released several records. Those records are a little bit different from the ’80s records, when they sort of became a ’80s hit rock band. And ‘Satanized’ definitely had more of a SCORPIONS ’77 stomp that I really liked about the track. And somehow, therefore, I guess, I wasn’t like putting that as a hit-single fan favorite, or a favorite that way. I thought I was gonna work my magic to make that song a big song, the same way that we did with ‘Mary On A Cross’ once upon a time, when that was regarded as this ‘B’ track that was just for fun. And I was, like, ‘I think that that song is actually quite good. We’re gonna play it every show we’re playing.’ And it took years before it became what that became.”

He also added the following about the potential the record company seemingly saw in “Satanized”:

“I was overwhelmed and overjoyed with the synchronicity, because I have done that mistake before where I have conceived a record, conceived a track, have an idea for a video for a track, and then the powers that be want another kickoff. And then that leads to a discussion, and then more than often, the reasoning as to why you go with another track might be perfectly understandable, but all of a sudden my idea is just not worth the piece of paper it’s written on, because it simply doesn’t work if it’s not in a… Sometimes the crux of being conceptual, sometimes your ideas are simply too conceptual and too based on presentation and stars aligning. But in this case, we ended up with fluency, which was cool.”

[via Blabbermouth]