Interview, Side-Line 2017

Ambassador21 recently celebrated their 15th Anniversary. Natatasha A Twentyone and Alexey Protasov both are terrorizing industrial audiences since 2001 and have released an important number of productions. Most of their work has been self-released on their own label Invasion Wreck Chords. “Human Rage” is the newest opus from the Belarus band and is a new mix of industrial hardcore, punk, power-noise and other related genres.

‘LUST FOR LIFE’

Q: Ambassador21 last year celebrated its 15th anniversary! What comes into mind evoking this anniversary?

Ambassador21: We survived. We enjoyed. We did so many things, met so many people and visited so many places. We will have it more.

Q: The anniversary has been celebrated by the new album “Human Rage”. What kind of album is “Human Rage” all about?

Ambassador21: This album probably is the most conceptual and solid work we ever released. “Human Rage” is about religion and terrorism. It could be nice to make an album about happiness, we are not joking, but unfortunately during the work on “Human Rage” – from the idea to release – we didn’t get a chance to be relaxed with all these disgusting things, which happened nearly every day. Paris, Brussels, Copenhagen, Kabul, Aleppo, Nice, Mosul, Orlando, Gaza, Istanbul… Track “Fear Level Red” was written the day after Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris. But “Human Rage” is not about hatred, it’s about lust for life. Our best album ever.

Q: You introduced the album as ‘a martial dance in the name of life’. Can you give us more details about this quote?

Ambassador21: Life is wonderful and highly valuable. It must be protected.

Q: The title song of the album took me by surprise, like revealing a ‘softer’, but efficient and well-crafted side of the band. Tell us a bit more about this song and its approach?

Ambassador21: This song is not soft, it’s harder than many other songs on this album. We are not speaking about instruments or temp, which are just tools to reach an aim. The attitude makes the song harder or softer, not exact sounds, synths or whatever. The hardness of the music is not possible to measure with distortion, BPM or ‘crazy’ screams. We don’t make ‘crazy’ music.

Q: I always experienced your sound as something different, a kind of anarchistic sound without compromises! Where does that come from?

Ambassador21: From life – how we feel it, how we love it, how we are ready to defend it.

Q: How do you usually proceed to compose your songs?

Ambassador21: Maybe, as somebody else does – it’s a long and complicated working process, which could bring a great or not a great result.

 

By Stephane Froidcoeur, March 2017