Fans of twenty one pilots will remember the painful, year-long run-up to last year's Trench album very well. On July 6, 2017, Tyler Joseph and Josh Dun entered a 12-month social media blackout in order to focus on creating their fifth LP, with frontman Tyler pretty much hidden from public view entirely (Josh was occasionally spotted out and about, though it was rare).
Now, the Columbus, Ohio superstars have addressed that blackout in a new interview with KROQ for the station's Almost Acoustic Christmas 2019 event this past weekend, with drummer Josh revealing, "I don't know that there would be a world in which we completely go off the map again."
"Completely going off the grid was tough for both of us in a lot of ways," he later added. “We’re both wired to always be wanting to do something that pushes us forward.”
Ahead of Trench's release last year, Tyler and Josh went into detail about how they went offline, with fans having no idea what they were up to in that time.
“The idea of the concept of stepping away from social media began in, like, 2011 or 2012," Josh explained. "Just what it looked like for us mentally, and in the sense of, ‘How is that possible in our culture?’ We grew up in a world where bands are self-promoting – it’s what you have to do. To eliminate that factor was scary, but it was something that we felt was worth experimenting with, and see how that affected things. Social media can be a distraction sometimes (laughs). To remove some of that was healthy, and in some ways I’m still affected by it. We’re ‘back online’ now, but sometimes I forget to take a picture of something, or talk about something publicly, because I’ve learned to live more in the moment.”
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“The truth is, wherever humans gather, there’s going to be a bunch of emotion," added Tyler. "There’s emotion that you can pour into it, there’s emotion that you can receive from it – and ultimately that’s what the internet is. It’s a bunch of us that have gathered in this area, and we’re sharing emotions. And I knew I wanted to preserve any and every emotion for this record only. I didn’t want it to be affected by any sort of outside source. So it’s nothing against social media, necessarily; it was more a protection of the recording and the writing process, which is very delicate. It was about trying to block out those pressures and influences from the outside.”
Watch twenty one pilots' full interview with KROQ below: