
STUMP: I really missed having to tune a guitar for an inordinate amount of time or having to place microphones. SUMMERS: Patrick Stump says getting back to that sound meant a welcome return to the basics in the recording studio. Nowhere left for us to go but heaven, summer falling through our fingers again, and you were the sunshine of my lifetime. PETE WENTZ: When I look at artists whose art I love, like, sometimes after they make something polarizing, maybe the next thing they do is something that's more recognizably that artist.įALL OUT BOY: (Singing) I'm not sure. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "LOVE FROM THE OTHER SIDE")įALL OUT BOY: (Singing) Generation sleep. SUMMERS: The band's bassist and lyricist Pete Wentz says the album was sometimes purposely polarizing and that provided some artistic direction for their new album, "So Much (For) Stardust." Just make things weird.įALL OUT BOY: (Singing) Young, young, young and a menace, and a menace, and a menace, young and a menace. PATRICK STUMP: How much you can bend the sounds and distort the sounds and make them into different things - you know, make guitars into synthesizers and make voices into - you know, into guitars or whatever. SUMMERS: Vocalist and guitarist Patrick Stump says he was playing around with technology. Shoes again but somewhere you exist singing, oops, I.



JUANA SUMMERS, BYLINE: On Fall Out Boy's 2018 album, "Mania," experimentation was the point.įALL OUT BOY: (Singing).
