6. ouch
“ouch is another interlude-type track. It’s got some lyrics from another song that we didn’t end up using in the end, but we really liked the words and they tie in nicely with the themes of the record. So we wanted to find a way of keeping them. They’re a bit of a callback to one of our old songs for fans to pick up on. I’ll leave it at that…”
7. medicine
“It’s about people who are negative influences and how when they leave your life things get much better. It’s a mixture of the electronic and radio-friendly elements of our band, but it’s still got characteristics of some of the bigger songs we’ve done before. You’d need to ask Oli who exactly that’s about, but I can think of a few people it might be about…”
8. sugar, honey, ice & tea
“One of the heavier, riffy songs. It’s got a metal-meets-Britpop feel to it. It went through a few different variations, but we nailed it in the end. It’s quite fun and quirky, so I think it’ll be a good one to play live. The chorus is a weird falsetto thing that goes, ‘Sugar, honey, ice and tea.’”
9. why you gotta kick me when I’m down
“It’s Oli talking about his relationship with fans of our band and how they might have opinions about him and his personal life. Yet it also goes deeper than that. It comes from a personal place, from a time when things weren’t necessarily going his or our way. Oh, it has my local village’s kids’ choir on there, too – another Oli brainwave. It reminded me of Pink Floyd [Another Brick In The Wall] or [Jay-Z’s Annie-sampling Hard Knock Life] ‘It’s a hard knock life.’”
10. fresh bruises
“This is another interlude. There’s not really much to say about it other than it’s very different for us.”
11. mother tongue
“Vocal-wise it’s quite a big song. There’s a little bit of Portuguese in there, which is quite unusual. It’s kind of a big, anthemic song. It’s probably as close as we get to something like Drown on this album. It’s a love song, so it’s an emotional one.”
12. heavy metal [Featuring Rahzel]
“Rahzel is a beatboxer from The Roots. We had this demo for ages, and the beat was so crazy and heavy it sounded like a beatboxer. I was like, ‘If we got an actual beatboxer on it, that’d be sick.’ Back when the internet first became big, there was this viral video on LimeWire of him beatboxing, so we got in touch and he was up for it. The title is completely ironic – a nod to how we’re completely not heavy metal. There’s a little five-second clip at the end of the track that’s the heaviest we’ve sounded in years.”
13. i don’t know what to say
“Oli wrote the lyrics about his friend Aidan. He was at our Teenage Cancer Trust show at the Royal Albert Hall after he’d recovered from cancer, and Oli gave him a shoutout onstage. But unfortunately the cancer came back and Aidan passed away. This track is in his honour. He wrote this thing before he died – like a poem, but not really – and all the lyrics are taken from that. It’s a very personal one for Oli, and it felt like an appropriate way to end the album.”
Bring Me The Horizon's new album amo is set for release on January 25, 2019.