Elsewhere, it’s a record that diagnoses and challenges the archetypes complicit in our mutual downfall in a number of ways, with Public Stoning addressing people who are addicted to their own unchallenged truths…
“Nobody is 100 per cent win, win, win, win,” says Maynard. “We don’t all – and can’t all – think alike. That’s absolutely insane if you’re just living in an echo chamber, sniffing your own farts with your buddies. The echo chamber idea gets you in a loop, and you can’t have normal conversations with people, for fuck’s sake.”
Another archetype of our mutual misery is addressed on ManTastic, a song inspired, at least partly, by pubic hair.
“I was watching UFC and they’re sponsored by all these weird fucking things, and one was manscaping,” Maynard says. “Then I had to listen to a bunch of fucking alpha male douchebags talk about how they’re alpha maley, right? And it’s like, ‘Don’t you fucking wax your balls? Like, you’re manscaping and carving up your fucking pubes.’ I want to watch you explain the fucking alpha maleism of waxing. I don’t know. I think it’s just this weird tribalism, in a way, this, ‘(Puts on macho voice) What kind of creatine are you drinking?’ It’s a weird caricature of ourselves.”
With humanity rapidly morphing into a gigantic clown shoe, drastic times call for drastic measures. And sounds. Normal Isn’t sonically pivots this already most chameleonic of bands into new territory, drawing from post-punk, new wave and goth, with each Puscifer member even sharing a soundtrack of personal influences to set the mood. Throbbing Gristle. New Order. The Cure. Cocteau Twins. Siouxsie & The Banshees. Bauhaus. All appear, and more besides.
“It was fun to put it out,” says Puscifer multi-instrumentalist extraordinaire Mat Mitchell, reaching K! from a purple-bathed neon studio in LA. “I mean, it was even fun for me to look and see what Carina and Maynard had put on it. These are people that inspire us and deserve recognition – not that any of them need any more recognition, but it’s nice to pat people on the back when they’re inspiring you.”
Perhaps unsurprisingly, then, things get experimental on Normal Isn’t, with help drafted in from Tony Levin (King Crimson), Greg Edwards (Failure) and Sarah Jones (Bloc Party, Hot Chip), while Seven One even features Tool’s Danny Carey on drums and Atticus Ross’ dad, Ian, narrating it. Part of the experimentalism this time around also comes from Maynard getting more involved by learning how to do things in the studio himself, courtesy of Mat teaching him some tricks.
Mat’s verdict on Maynard’s performance as a student?
“He’s a pro!”
As for Maynard’s own self-evaluation? Well, he recalls conversations that often went like this.
Maynard: “Heeeeeeeey, remember when you taught me how to do that thing with the thing and then I went on to the thing?”
Mat: “Uh-huh.”
Maynard: “Can you start over and tell me again?”
Mat: “Uh-huh.’”
Still, presumably after a bunch of uh-huhs, Puscifer have ended up with a brilliant record, and one accompanied with a comic series shedding light on the arrival of their new characters, all adding depth and humour to this chapter. There’s the exsanguinated Bellendia (pronounced Belleeeendiaaaaaahhhhh, as he stressed to Maynard in their recent strained YouTube interview) as well as Fanny Gray and the Synth Whisperer. And there is still a hell of a lot to get into.
Here, Maynard and Mat guide us through the predicament of our present, the pain of our past, phalluses mounted on household appliances, and how the band who came to life back in 2007 with a record called V Is For Vagina have now come to stand for L Is For Longevity…