Why the future's bright for Motionless In White (2024)

By Eleanor Goodman. Additional reporting: Sophie Maughan

( Metal Hammer )

published

Chris Cerulli has faced down the most difficult year of his young life. Now happier and with a new Motionless In White record on the way, he tells us why things are on the up

Why the future's bright for Motionless In White (1)

Last August, Chris Cerulli had just come off Warped Tour – the annual three-month ‘punk rock summer camp’ full of sunshine and good times, where Motionless In White had been playing to hundreds of enthusiastic fans every day. He was in California working on the band’s fourth record, Graveyard Shift, when he received a phonecall from his sister: his dad had had a heart attack.

“Your jaw drops and you get that feeling in your stomach where it just… you don’t know what to think,” he says. “You’re kind of paralysed in fear and in the moment, and in such shock that you’re learning that information.”

He called his producer and his manager, and then he took the first flight home to Pennsylvania. At the hospital, he sat at his dad’s bedside with his brother and sister, where they spent two days chatting during his recovery. A shock moment turned into a chance to catch up.

“We spent time connecting,” Chris remembers. “It was one of those times where a tragic type of moment did bring our family even closer, which is kind of a classic story. I’m just happy everyone was there, and I put everything out of my mind and experienced that closeness.”

You can hear about the experience on Hourglass, from Motionless’s new album, Graveyard Shift. The lyrics read: ’Will I expire before my dreams unfold?’ It’s a poignant song, but Chris had actually started writing it back in December 2015. He had been thinking about the passage of time – a theme he had explored in previous songs about being stuck in the past, and most recently on Reincarnate’s Break The Cycle, which was about his ability to finally look towards the future. But Hourglass went a step further. This time, he was focusing on the uncertainty of his future, and whether he would have enough time to achieve all of his ambitions.

“I’m starting to get to a point in my life where I’m getting a little older, where I’m questioning, ‘What the f*ck is next for me?’” says Chris, who turned 30 last year, as well as celebrating the band’s 10th anniversary. “I feel like there’s really no official stability. You have no idea if you’re going to wake up the next day, you have no idea if your career’s going to be available for you. There’s so much stuff we wanna accomplish, and it’s hard to know if those things are ever gonna happen. The phonecall put life into a new perspective for me. The song came to be closed off with that overtone of that experience happening to me that really shook my soul.”

It’s fair to say, the last 15 months or so have been a real time of change for Chris, as he’s taken stock of his life. Today we are chatting at London’s bustling Warners offices, as Graveyard Shift is the band’s debut record for legendary subsidiary Roadrunner. The towering frontman is all warm smiles and enveloping hugs, and is keen to discuss the songs that came from this period. One of them, Queen For Queen, addresses the end of some major friendships. We press for details, but he remains resolutely tight-lipped about the exact circ*mstances, only saying, “I grew apart from people. I don’t exactly agree with how they conduct themselves.”

Metal Hammer Newsletter

Sign up below to get the latest from Metal Hammer, plus exclusive special offers, direct to your inbox!

Do you think it was as much about you changing, as it was other people’s actions?

“There have been one or two that I know are definitely not me. But I think that yes, in a lot of these cases, my own personal evolution has brought me to a point where maybe I see other people differently, so rather than them changing, my view on them is different. Realising how work basically runs my life – and how the most important thing above even working is my family – it doesn’t really leave me a whole lot of room to be tolerant towards anything else,” he explains.

Why the future's bright for Motionless In White (2)

“I say it in the song Queen For Queen – ’I never said I’m perfect and there’s a guilt behind these eyes, so check me if it helps you fall asleep at night’. And that’s fault in my own friendships and lives. If I can recognise I’m to blame for something, I like to put that out there.”

The single LOUD (f*ck It) also discusses relationships, but looks outwards. On Warped Tour, Chris ran networking workshops for kids, which promised to “highlight life experiences and share hardships he has faced in establishing friendships and working relationships”. They effectively turned into group therapy sessions, with festival-goers pouring their hearts out.

“There were some days where people were talking about being abused by other family members, and talking about their sexual orientation and the criticisms that they’ve taken because of that,” he remembers. “There were stories about people who were afraid to go to school every day, and then they woke up and were like, ‘f*ck it. I have to do what I have to do, because I matter most in this equation.’ And that’s where the title is stemming from. You need to get to the point where you say ‘f*ck it’, and make the best of whatever situation you’re in.”

But beyond the broken friendships, the f*ck-its, and the self-determination, Graveyard Shift also has a lighthearted side, where darkness and humour collide – sometimes resulting in eye-rolling lyrics. The industrial Necessary Evil, featuring Jonathan Davis (see Here To Slay, below) contains the line, ’It’s my party and I’ll die when I want to’, while on the Zombie/Manson-influenced Soft, Chris implores people to ’Suck my middle f*cking finger’.

“These songs are just this band’s way of showing some personality, as well as the horrorpunk and Misfits influences,” he grins, his dramatically dark eyes twinkling in his pale, contoured face. “I feel like people think we take ourselves so seriously! At the end of the day, we’re really just a bunch of dorks and goofballs. I think a lot of fans are gonna enjoy it – just being able to have a song or two where they can turn the serious factor off and laugh!”

Comic relief is important to a guy who admits to anxiety about the unknown, and following the completion of Graveyard Shift, there was more instability to come. Keyboardist and longest- serving member Josh Balz left the band in January, to spend more time with his family, changing a lineup Chris thought was set in stone.

“It’s definitely been interesting to see a person who’s been around you for almost 10 years… not be,” he considers. “You think you’re gonna leave for the next tour, and that person’s gonna be there, and you’re gonna talk to them pretty often about things going on with the band, and then just one day they’re not.”

With all the turmoil you’ve experienced in the last year or so, it is fair to say you’ve had an early midlife crisis?

“That’s a really interesting and awesome way to put it,” Chris considers. “I wouldn’t exactly call it a crisis, but more a very harsh realisation that at the end of the day, if you’re doing all these great things, but you don’t even have a minute to step back and appreciate it, what are you really working for? I needed to force myself to step back and relax, and appreciate all the things around me, like my family and the fans.”

Chris’s dad is back to health and has a renewed lease of life (“He’s happier, and you can tell he’s definitely learned a lesson about life himself”), and Chris has found some clarity. He’s embarked on his first long-term relationship in five years, and with no time to lose, he’s fixing his sights on Motionless In White’s next steps.

“If the band ended today, there’s still clearly these things we want to accomplish,” he says, his voice taking on an edge of determination. “This year we’re doing the Main Stage at Download, and that’s such a huge moment for us. The ambition is to be headliners in a couple of years.”

Beyond that, his goal is simply to keep the Motionless dream alive. The young lad from Scranton who envisioned starting a band and escaping his sh*tty job at Wal-Mart has resolved to see out another decade doing what he loves.

“On our home Warped tour show that we played in northeast Pennsylvania, in the 570 area, I stated that we’re going to be a band for another 10 years,” he explains. “It wasn’t that we hope to be, it was, ‘We’re gonna celebrate our 20th anniversary in 10 years from now.’ That’s the bold statement I made for myself, and I’m going to accomplish that goal.”

It’s a confident declaration from a band who know where they came from – and exactly where they want to go.

Graveyard Shift is out on May 5 via Roadrunner. Motionless in White play Download festival on Friday June 9

Why the future's bright for Motionless In White (3)

Here To Slay

How Korn’s Jonathan Davis ending up guesting on the song Necessary Evil

How did the collaboration with Motionless come about?

Jonathan: “Our label reached out to me and asked if I’d be interested in doing that with him. We just came off the road with him and I liked the guys a lot, so I’m like, ‘Sure, I’d love to.’ I got the track and I sang on it – it’s that simple.”

What did you think when you first heard it?

“I thought it was cool. I got this really detailed email from Chris about what he wanted to do. There were things he wanted me to do that I didn’t wanna do, because it’s his song. I just placed my parts where I thought it was needed, and kept it at that.”

What’s it like working with a band who’ve been really influenced by Korn?

“I think it’s a trip. I see how excited Chris’s whole band got, and really, that’s what’s worth it for me. It’s an honour to be on his record – I love it!”

Motionless In White get Loud in new video

Motionless In White open album artwork contest to fans

Eleanor Goodman. Additional reporting: Sophie Maughan

More about metal hammer

Slayer guitarist Gary Holt declares his love for Taylor Swift: “Why all the hate? She’s an extraordinarily hard worker!”Heavy Psych Sounds Fest is returning to London, with Dozer, Black Rainbows, Lord Dying and more booked to perform

Latest

The 15 best new metal songs you need to hear right now
See more latest►

Most Popular
"I had never heard anything that raw and heavy and fast in my life": Dream Theater's Mike Portnoy picks the 10 albums that changed his life
“He goes, ‘This isn’t as good as the first album.’ The song became a bit like a baseball, but now it’s a favourite. It was a struggle for two or three months”: How Six By Six faced down their doubts for second record Beyond Shadowland
“I'm very, very, very, very competitive... and I've got unfinished business.” Travis' Fran Healy talks poverty, celebrity, car-jacking, insecurity, Radiohead, Coldplay, and why it's no sin to want to teach the world to sing
"Samara from The Ring is a fashion icon!" Genre-mashing Eurovision star Bambie Thug names the five horror movies that have terrified them the most
“Every song has an element of odd. I like to push against our audience, ourselves, our producer… and see how far that can go before it breaks”: The prog credentials of Baroness
"Everything that could go wrong, did go wrong": Praying Mantis once vied with Iron Maiden for attention, but setbacks and bad decisions took them on a very different journey
"I knew we were going nowhere fast and I had to get out": Triumph were on the cusp of superstardom – then they let it all go
"You have a right to a complete show. You paid for it. If they cut the power, be my guests, do what you want": Chaos, no-shows and bomb scares on Guns N' Roses' Use Your Illusion tour
"They're not gonna get anybody heavier than me, are they?": In 1971 Led Zeppelin manager Peter Grant was asked how he dealt with bootleggers
10 artists that defined 2000Trees festival 2024
“Because Dad did his album I thought, ‘Do I really want to put this out there?’” Despite Rick’s legendary work, Oliver Wakeman includes one wife of Henry VIII in his new solo record
Why the future's bright for Motionless In White (2024)
Top Articles
AI Chips: NoC Interconnect IP Solves Three Design Challenges
FlexNoC 5 Interconnect IP - Arteris
Dainty Rascal Io
Section 4Rs Dodger Stadium
Asist Liberty
Housing near Juneau, WI - craigslist
Amc Near My Location
Monthly Forecast Accuweather
Fredatmcd.read.inkling.com
25X11X10 Atv Tires Tractor Supply
Hertz Car Rental Partnership | Uber
Uvalde Topic
Lesson 2 Homework 4.1
Craigslist Jobs Phoenix
Who called you from 6466062860 (+16466062860) ?
Andhrajyothy Sunday Magazine
CANNABIS ONLINE DISPENSARY Promo Code — $100 Off 2024
Inter-Tech IM-2 Expander/SAMA IM01 Pro
Noaa Ilx
Moving Sales Craigslist
Indystar Obits
Juicy Deal D-Art
O'Reilly Auto Parts - Mathis, TX - Nextdoor
Used Safari Condo Alto R1723 For Sale
Employee Health Upmc
Brbl Barber Shop
12 Facts About John J. McCloy: The 20th Century’s Most Powerful American?
Breckiehill Shower Cucumber
Suspiciouswetspot
Dashboard Unt
Xxn Abbreviation List 2023
Wbap Iheart
Rush County Busted Newspaper
R3Vlimited Forum
Emiri's Adventures
Soiza Grass
Www.craigslist.com Syracuse Ny
Bus Dublin : guide complet, tarifs et infos pratiques en 2024 !
Giantess Feet Deviantart
Supermarkt Amsterdam - Openingstijden, Folder met alle Aanbiedingen
Closest 24 Hour Walmart
Back to the Future Part III | Rotten Tomatoes
Wal-Mart 2516 Directory
craigslist | michigan
Ursula Creed Datasheet
Uc Davis Tech Management Minor
Ohio Road Construction Map
Phone Store On 91St Brown Deer
Nope 123Movies Full
Rétrospective 2023 : une année culturelle de renaissances et de mutations
Divisadero Florist
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Chrissy Homenick

Last Updated:

Views: 6533

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (54 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Chrissy Homenick

Birthday: 2001-10-22

Address: 611 Kuhn Oval, Feltonbury, NY 02783-3818

Phone: +96619177651654

Job: Mining Representative

Hobby: amateur radio, Sculling, Knife making, Gardening, Watching movies, Gunsmithing, Video gaming

Introduction: My name is Chrissy Homenick, I am a tender, funny, determined, tender, glorious, fancy, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.