Jacksonville-based hard rockers Shinedown have gone through numerous lineup changes in their eight years. Yet singer Brent Smith, maintains the band hasn’t suffered, boasting that it’s “the most honest band in existence on Earth today.” Just back from their first European headlining tour that took them to nine countries and 20 cities, Shinedown are touring the U.S. behind the chart-topping The Sound of Madness, a collection of grunge-inspired ballads (“Second Chance”) and radio-friendly rockers (“Devour”).

p>I read that you were signed to a label deal before you even had a
band. Is that true?

I mean, yeah, it’s a pretty elaborate thing. In my way of looking at
things, it’s a romantic story, to be honest with you. I was signed nine
years ago to Atlantic Records with a band that was dropped. I started
writing with different people as a development artist. That led me to
Jacksonville, Florida. I met the original members and we did two
records. Now, with The Sound of Madness, we’re with our new
members, and there you have it.

Many variables in the band have changed, but what for you has
remained constant?

Shinedown is the most honest band that is in existence on the Earth
today.

Can you elaborate a bit?

I have to be upfront about that. Every single song is the reality of
who we all are. The strength of the work we’ve done and what we’ve put
into the thing we call Shinedown is the most honest integrity, and
that’s just who we are. Somebody might look at that and laugh and
ponder it and go, “That’s cool, dude, and that’s great.” But if you
were to go back and look at over 1000 shows we’ve done since 2001,
we’ve always been honest and straight-up. It’s not always been pretty.
It’s not always been what you would want to see. It’s always been
honest. I think the record we made, which is The Sound of
Madness,
is a stepping stone in the history of music in general.
Every song in my opinion is a catalyst to what a lot of people have
wanted to say for a long time in their own life.

Leave a Whisper wasn’t popular right out of the gate. It
was a slow, grassroots thing, right?

Yeah. We had four singles from the first album. We built this band
off of radio. We have a lot of people we’re very close to in radio.
We’re the biggest supporters of rock radio and in general of radio. We
adore and love all formats of radio. That’s how the band’s been built.
To be honest, we didn’t build this band off media or exposure or
magazines or anything else. We built it off airwaves. We’re very
respectful of radio. At the end of the day, long live the radio. We’re
very honest about it.

You guys still play your cover of “Simple Man”?

Not anymore.

What’s in the set?

It’s the singles from the first two records and a lot from The
Sound of Madness.
But some venues might see “Simple Man.” Some.

You have a new guitarist?

Zach Myers is the guitar player. If there’s any quote from me as far
as guitar players in this band and the way we look at it and this, that
and the other, you can quote me saying Zach Myers is the greatest
guitar player in the world.

I’ll make a note of that.

You can. It’s totally cool. You can say it.

After the multi-platinum success of your debut, did you
experience any pressure while making your second album, Us and
Them?

Yeah, because it was rushed so much. It’s not as good of an
album.

So if you could go back, you would do things differently?

I would never go back and do anything differently. I would do The
Sound of Madness. Leave a Whisper
took my whole life, and Us and
Them
took six months, and The Sound of Madness

took 18 months. There’s that differentiation. But in the time
between the writing of the records, I wouldn’t take anything back, man.
Never.

jniesel@clevescene.com

Jeff has been covering the Cleveland music scene for more than 25 years now. On a regular basis, he tries to talk to whatever big acts are coming through town. And if you're in a local band that he needs to hear, email him at jniesel@clevescene.com.