Why did Hallelujah feel right to properly introduce album seven?
“It went through about 15 different versions, but I felt like we had something special with it… you start to feel the ‘magic’ of some [songs]. It's not the heaviest song on the record, but much has been made about how heavy it is. This is a much heavier record overall, but I think Hallelujah is emblematic of where the band is going and a good indication for old-school fans. There's a lot of old-school Black Veil in there…”
What message were you trying to convey through the lyric ‘They worship the screen, the digital shrine / Demanding purity while rotting inside’?
“In the biblical corpus, there's a lot of reference to the ‘in’ group and ‘out’ group – and fear of being rejected by the group. I see that so often: ‘This thing sucks’, and then everybody has to agree. I'm fascinated how things that we find ideologically acceptable shift constantly. I started exploring it in [2021’s] The Phantom Tomorrow.
“Notoriously, in your publication over the years, there’s many quotes of me saying very outlandish, angry things about our haters. It’s interesting how that has almost permeated all of culture. We don't like people that take oppositional views – but then that can change overnight. The feeling of getting revenge and [being] vindicated? A lot of the record is about the futility of feeling that way, and how feeling truly comfortable with who you are is the only means of getting through that. I will readily admit that I vacillate between those.”
Where does Hallelujah fit in the spectrum of these ideas across the record?
“There's this canonical idea that when you're certain of your faith, you can praise the thing that you believe in. The certainty that comes from the deeply held belief causes you to exclaim, ‘Hallelujah!’, even though that certainty could shift in a year and a half.
“The other thing referenced in the song is [Susan Sontag’s 1962 essay] The Artist As Exemplary Sufferer, which is about Saint Sebastian, who was told by the Romans that he should claim that he's not Christian during the persecution. He refused, got slain with a million arrows, and they kept doing it until he eventually died. There is an element of that with every artist or public figure. You work so hard on things, and you're willing to take those arrows from an audience.”