For Ville Valo, life as a musician is very surreal, or very "Dali-esque" as he might say, and he's not referring to the painter's infamous mustache. In some ways Valo is still waiting for the day when he wakes up and finds out it's all been a giant LSD experiment in the Finnish military, where institutional illusions of grandeur and dreamlike oddities smash artistic ambition through the looking glass of fame, personal casualties be damned. "Its like 'Alice in Wonderland'," he says. "Because there are so many unexpected things happening all the time...surrealism actually exists in your everyday life...youre there 'in the looking glass' so to speak."
At 30-years-old, the singer has spent half his life in the limelight, fronting a handful of local bands in Helsinki, Finland before forming HIM in the early '90s and almost instantly being hurled towards star status in Europe and soon after, worldwide. It's a surreal succession of events that began with Valo as a teenager working in his father's sex shop, to now fronting one of the most popular rock bands around. His has been a life where time seems to run backward, then forward, faces come, go and change shape, and record labels push and pull in a laissez-faire game of chess where a hit single is king and the artist merely a pawn. "It is a little weird," Valo adds. "But that's life, isn't it?"
The wounded romantic turned rock surrealist endures it all with a wink and a healthy laugh, of course. With six studio albums, numerous hit singles and a devout fan base, the musicians in HIM are not want for false accolade or sympathy. For the band, it's a life filled with adventure and all the humor one could imagine. Completed by bassist Mige, guitarist Linde, drummer Gas and keyboardist Burton, the band dubbed it's Sabbath-meets-Depeche Mode sound as "Love Metal" long ago, though HIM's newest album, Venus Doom (Sire/Warner), ventures away from the band's pop sensibilities and leans more towards its Scandinavian melancholia roots. It's an album Valo wrote while holed up in a cabin in Lapland, far away from the hustle of the city and even further away from the pains of a troubled relationship, a friend's suicide and the throws of alcohol abuse that would later land him in rehab.
Sober now for months, Ville Valo took some time after browsing antique sofas to chat with SuicideGirls. In between fits of tongue-in-cheek laughter we somehow managed to talk about the new album, sobriety, and his mission in life, which is, fittingly, to have his own definition of love in Webster's Dictionary.
Erin Broadley: Hello. How are you ?
Ville Valo: Hello there. Im doing fairly okay, thanks for asking. Ive had three Red Bulls and eight cups of coffee. Im like a Duracell [Energizer] Bunny, just hopping around the house.
EB: Hopping around, beating your drum.
VV: Just short of being beamed up by UFOs.
EB: What was that Michael Jackson movie where he morphs into a bunny?
VV: Moonwalker. [Laughs] I dont know what that was.
EB: [Laughs] Some horrible thing with a claymation bunny.
VV: Well, Michael Jackson is one of those characters that you hope your brain will be like a hard drive you can just defragment and, like, erase the files you dont want to have in there.
EB: Right, right. Hes had some memorable moments.
VV: Indeed. But you know, R. Kelly is taking care of that now.
EB: Oh man, have you seen the Trapped in the Closet DVD?
VV: Not the new one, but the first one. Bits and pieces. To be honest with you, it was so psychologically demanding I wasnt able to watch the whole thing through.
EB: Its pretty intense, [laughs] theres a lot of hidden meaning in all its layers.
VV: Yeah, its very, very deep, [laughs] very deep soaked in urine. Theres nothing wrong with taking a leak but at times people do, you know, take their leaks in places that are not appropriate.
EB: Yeah, just dont pee on the wrong person.
VV: Thats very well put.
EB: Alright, well, on that note, how are things going so far with the release of the new record?
VV: [Laughs] Everything seems to be going well. The bands happy and we cant wait to get back on tour. I had a really shitty last year and its been kind of tough on me. I went to fucking rehab and shit. I had nearly both of my feet in the grave. You know, Im not the only one and Im not so self-centered that Id be sitting in a corner cursing God, Why me? Why me? Its just that I found myself in a funny position like R. Kelly [laughs] but
EB: [Laughs] But you handled it a little differently.
VV: [Laughs] Very differently. I had my meltdown, but I kept all the liquids inside of me. But everything is fine, its all good.
EB: So things have kind of balanced out for you?
VV: Well, everything is kind of new and kind of weird. I had a long-term relationship, we were engaged and we broke up. We were recording the album at the same time and me battling with the boozea lot of shit hitting the fan in all directions, at the same time. A lot of it was caused by myself, nobody else. I just didnt have the time to decompress and have quality time with myself [laughs].
EB: Right, light some candles and have me time [laughs].
VV: Oh my God, I hate that term me time. I love the fact that I had somebody say, Im really sorry I have to get going because Im missing myself. It sounds corny. It sounds like a sailor sitting on his hands just to make them numb just to be able to jerk off. But yeah, things are looking pretty good. Its kind of cool after a year of traveling to be able to be home for a week and a half and actually buy that toilet paper and do laundry and do the dishes.
EB: Right. Do the normal, day-to-day things.
VV: You can do even normal things in a very abnormal way. So its always a challenge and its always an adventure if you make it one.
EB: Well, being in bands since you were a teenager, your whole development of what normal life is has definitely been a different challenge than for the average person.
VV: Its different, its not better, its not worse. Its a lot of traveling. Im really glad that Im blessed with the opportunity of traveling and having this way of life, spending all this time with my band mates who I grew up with. Thats a luxury a lot of bands dont have.
EB: Youve said before that writing albums can be really disastrous, emotionally. How do you pull yourself up and stay grounded after making a record? Its a very intense way to live and it can be very manic. No wonder it destroys so many young artists, both personally and in their relationships with other people.
VV: Well, you know, Im not a quitter. So when you wake up and youre walking out and its raining and feels like R. Kelly sitting on top of a cloud and peeing on you
EB: [Laughs]
VV: When you feel miserable and all that, you feel vengeful. I do feel that life is a challenge. It is a pain in the ass and if youre fucked up it makes it easier. Im not fucked up anymore so I feel very challenged about everything now.
EB: Alcohol is an amazing filter.
VV: Yeah it is. It kind of happened with me not thinking about it. Theres just a tremendous amount of partying available. When youre touring in a band theres always a cause for celebrating after a good gig, or if you fucked up a gig theres always a reason to get shit-faced because you feel bad about it. Theres always a reason, so it was perfect for me to be in a position where I was shitting and vomiting blood. But now Ive gone through that and now even thinking about a pint of beer makes me feel nauseous. I had to walk that line. I went to the doctors and they said I had to go to the ER. I said, No I cant because Ive got to do a couple of interviews [laughs]. So I was that, before I got the blood tests and everything back.
EB: Literally, the press was becoming the death of you, you cant do that.
VV: Fuck no, man. I tried.
EB: If you throw up after this interview Im going to be really, really upset.
VV: [Laughs] Fair enough, fair enough. They said Ive got either Ive got to stop drinking and calm myself down or its going to be heart failure next. You know, its a lonely life being sober, missing all my bar friends and everything, here on my own playing acoustic guitar, playing forlorn love songs, trying to pray to the Devil to get myself a new loved one to write some songs for. Unfortunately for me, I wasnt able to drink or party in moderation. My last bender lasted more than two years, getting fucked up every single day. Its not healthy but obviously its a way of life. You get a different social scene and you care about different things, based on the idea that youre not happy with yourself or youre not feeling comfortable with yourself so you just want to numb the pain by using something whether its legal or illegal. I just had vengeance in me and was pointing my middle finger up toward the cloud where R. Kelly was pissing on top of me [laughs].
EB: [Laughs] Take that, R. Kelly!
VV: Thats the reason why I turned out to be a proper Scandinavian satanist. [Laughs] Yeah, but everybodys got to find their own way. Im still getting used to it. Its the first time in years that Ive been actually alone in a house.
EB: With yourself and your me time.
VV: Yeah, with the me time. Its me and my guitar time.
EB: Exactly, which is be a more satisfying relationship than most, probably.
VV: Well, they never stay in tune and theyre fucking downright bastards.
EB: Well, at least you dont have to kick them out of the house the next day.
VV: Yeah, you dont have to saw your own arm off when you wake up in the morning.
EB: One thing weve talked about before is that its really hard for you to separate fantasy from reality in music, mainly because you live your life in the music that you write. That seems like something that could trigger the emotional fallout that happens when you write a record.
VV: It is emotionally devastating but thats how I like it. Lets say its good to be a white boy dancing badly on the razors edge, if you know what Im saying. You know, its not necessarily the white boy thing. Im just a shitty dancer thats all. Just the fact that Im not purposefully trying to find myself in tough situations, but the world in itself it is a pretty tough place. Turn on the TV and watch the news. I just cant do that anymore. It just makes me so sad.
EB: You said recently in another interview that life as a musician is a very [Salvador] Dali-esque experience.
VV: Yeah, I dont know. Im living my life the best way I can and I dont know the perception of the band or me as a person outside of myself. Its not like Im sitting up in the morning, sitting in a fucking Gothic chair.
EB: Or having midgets bring you morning tea.
VV: Yeah, with trays of cocaine on the top of their heads.
EB: Oh God. Rise and shine.
VV: Yeah, oh my God, ooh, I dont even want to think about that.
EB: Yeah, lets not. Because we dont want to throw up, right?
VV: Why not? They have phone sex, why cant you have phone vomiting sessions?
EB: We could, we could throw up in tandem over the phone. Itll be really romantic [laughs].
VV: Exactly. Purge on beautifully, my dear [laughs]. But, you know, at the end of the day you are one with your art and everybodys an artist. Everybodys a piece of art. Everybodys got a story to tell. Everybody tells it in different ways, some people tell it the way they walk, some people tell it the way they talk or the way they smile. Youve just got to have some imagination. [Being a musician] is surreal and it is very surprising that you never know whats around the corner. Its weird because phone calls happen, all of a sudden an album is on the charts, and all of a sudden youve got to fly tomorrow somewhere to meet somebody, like, lets say a video director whose videos you watched since you were a teen. Things like that, its very surreal so in that sense it is an adventure. Its like Alice in Wonderland because there are so many unexpected things happening all the time. The surrealism actually exists in your everyday life. So youre there 'in the looking glass' so to speak. It is a little weird. But thats life, isnt it. It can make you feel like, Whoa, what the hell is going on right now? But its also really beautiful. Its more of a laugh when youre sober. Theres a great comedy in me coming out one day. I wish that it would be like The Truman Show, there would be somebody secretly recording.
EB: All of a sudden you wake up and you find out that the whole thing has been this big experiment. They tap you on the shoulder and say, And scene. Thats a wrap, guys Youre like, What?
VV: Id fucking love it. Itd be so fun. Im waiting for that to happen. With the surrealism in everyday life, thats something that actually could happen.
EB: Exactly, well, if that ever does happen to you
VV: I will call and let you know.
EB: Let me know. I didnt sign any release forms.
VV: [Laughs]
EB: [Laughs] Well, your music definitely has a wickedly humorous side to it as well. Would you mind telling me how humor plays a factor in your music? A lot of people would consider it really emotional and melancholy.
VV: There is humor in melancholy as well, you know. Its like existential humor. Its funny that single individuals and billions of people are sitting alone in a chair and all sad about the fact that he or she lost a relationship or whatever. Its a weird thing. Were like fucking ants, building up our own den and house, to do what? To live there and maybe procreate someday? I am a miserable bastard in the most positive sense of that term. So lets say the stuff Im writing about at times is so demanding that humor is the only thing that helps me through the day and night, and the mornings with the ridiculous amounts of coffee I drink. We were talking about the surreal, the Dali-esqueness of life being in a rock band or my life in general. You know its just nice that it is like a cluster fuck that you cant separate the humor from the sadness. And I dont want to. Its nice to find yourself laughing at the wrong spot.
EB: You told me once that the best way to express emotions is through music and not through lyrics. Thats something I find really interesting because a lot of your fans really connect with the particular words you use in your lyrics and the emotions they convey.
VV: What Im trying to do, my mission in life is to get thirty different definitions of love into Websters Dictionary. Thats my mission in life. [Definitions] that really, really do explain the emotion. To be able to verbally explain how people really do feel. Thats what I do and thats my new challenge. My first challenge was to be able to express myself through music and now Ive learned it and Im really happy with it because it makes me more of a whole person. That would be an interesting thing to do in life, to concentrate on emotion so much and to be able to verbalize it so well that it would make the dictionary.
EB: That would be nice.
VV: At the end of the day I just want to be happy.
SuicideGirls has teamed up with HIM and is giving away a Fender Squier Stratocaster autographed by the band. Leave a comment, and be entered to win. HIM will look over the comments left by members and choose a winner. For more info go here.
HIM is currently on tour. Go to www.heartagram.com for more information
At 30-years-old, the singer has spent half his life in the limelight, fronting a handful of local bands in Helsinki, Finland before forming HIM in the early '90s and almost instantly being hurled towards star status in Europe and soon after, worldwide. It's a surreal succession of events that began with Valo as a teenager working in his father's sex shop, to now fronting one of the most popular rock bands around. His has been a life where time seems to run backward, then forward, faces come, go and change shape, and record labels push and pull in a laissez-faire game of chess where a hit single is king and the artist merely a pawn. "It is a little weird," Valo adds. "But that's life, isn't it?"
The wounded romantic turned rock surrealist endures it all with a wink and a healthy laugh, of course. With six studio albums, numerous hit singles and a devout fan base, the musicians in HIM are not want for false accolade or sympathy. For the band, it's a life filled with adventure and all the humor one could imagine. Completed by bassist Mige, guitarist Linde, drummer Gas and keyboardist Burton, the band dubbed it's Sabbath-meets-Depeche Mode sound as "Love Metal" long ago, though HIM's newest album, Venus Doom (Sire/Warner), ventures away from the band's pop sensibilities and leans more towards its Scandinavian melancholia roots. It's an album Valo wrote while holed up in a cabin in Lapland, far away from the hustle of the city and even further away from the pains of a troubled relationship, a friend's suicide and the throws of alcohol abuse that would later land him in rehab.
Sober now for months, Ville Valo took some time after browsing antique sofas to chat with SuicideGirls. In between fits of tongue-in-cheek laughter we somehow managed to talk about the new album, sobriety, and his mission in life, which is, fittingly, to have his own definition of love in Webster's Dictionary.
Erin Broadley: Hello. How are you ?
Ville Valo: Hello there. Im doing fairly okay, thanks for asking. Ive had three Red Bulls and eight cups of coffee. Im like a Duracell [Energizer] Bunny, just hopping around the house.
EB: Hopping around, beating your drum.
VV: Just short of being beamed up by UFOs.
EB: What was that Michael Jackson movie where he morphs into a bunny?
VV: Moonwalker. [Laughs] I dont know what that was.
EB: [Laughs] Some horrible thing with a claymation bunny.
VV: Well, Michael Jackson is one of those characters that you hope your brain will be like a hard drive you can just defragment and, like, erase the files you dont want to have in there.
EB: Right, right. Hes had some memorable moments.
VV: Indeed. But you know, R. Kelly is taking care of that now.
EB: Oh man, have you seen the Trapped in the Closet DVD?
VV: Not the new one, but the first one. Bits and pieces. To be honest with you, it was so psychologically demanding I wasnt able to watch the whole thing through.
EB: Its pretty intense, [laughs] theres a lot of hidden meaning in all its layers.
VV: Yeah, its very, very deep, [laughs] very deep soaked in urine. Theres nothing wrong with taking a leak but at times people do, you know, take their leaks in places that are not appropriate.
EB: Yeah, just dont pee on the wrong person.
VV: Thats very well put.
EB: Alright, well, on that note, how are things going so far with the release of the new record?
VV: [Laughs] Everything seems to be going well. The bands happy and we cant wait to get back on tour. I had a really shitty last year and its been kind of tough on me. I went to fucking rehab and shit. I had nearly both of my feet in the grave. You know, Im not the only one and Im not so self-centered that Id be sitting in a corner cursing God, Why me? Why me? Its just that I found myself in a funny position like R. Kelly [laughs] but
EB: [Laughs] But you handled it a little differently.
VV: [Laughs] Very differently. I had my meltdown, but I kept all the liquids inside of me. But everything is fine, its all good.
EB: So things have kind of balanced out for you?
VV: Well, everything is kind of new and kind of weird. I had a long-term relationship, we were engaged and we broke up. We were recording the album at the same time and me battling with the boozea lot of shit hitting the fan in all directions, at the same time. A lot of it was caused by myself, nobody else. I just didnt have the time to decompress and have quality time with myself [laughs].
EB: Right, light some candles and have me time [laughs].
VV: Oh my God, I hate that term me time. I love the fact that I had somebody say, Im really sorry I have to get going because Im missing myself. It sounds corny. It sounds like a sailor sitting on his hands just to make them numb just to be able to jerk off. But yeah, things are looking pretty good. Its kind of cool after a year of traveling to be able to be home for a week and a half and actually buy that toilet paper and do laundry and do the dishes.
EB: Right. Do the normal, day-to-day things.
VV: You can do even normal things in a very abnormal way. So its always a challenge and its always an adventure if you make it one.
EB: Well, being in bands since you were a teenager, your whole development of what normal life is has definitely been a different challenge than for the average person.
VV: Its different, its not better, its not worse. Its a lot of traveling. Im really glad that Im blessed with the opportunity of traveling and having this way of life, spending all this time with my band mates who I grew up with. Thats a luxury a lot of bands dont have.
EB: Youve said before that writing albums can be really disastrous, emotionally. How do you pull yourself up and stay grounded after making a record? Its a very intense way to live and it can be very manic. No wonder it destroys so many young artists, both personally and in their relationships with other people.
VV: Well, you know, Im not a quitter. So when you wake up and youre walking out and its raining and feels like R. Kelly sitting on top of a cloud and peeing on you
EB: [Laughs]
VV: When you feel miserable and all that, you feel vengeful. I do feel that life is a challenge. It is a pain in the ass and if youre fucked up it makes it easier. Im not fucked up anymore so I feel very challenged about everything now.
EB: Alcohol is an amazing filter.
VV: Yeah it is. It kind of happened with me not thinking about it. Theres just a tremendous amount of partying available. When youre touring in a band theres always a cause for celebrating after a good gig, or if you fucked up a gig theres always a reason to get shit-faced because you feel bad about it. Theres always a reason, so it was perfect for me to be in a position where I was shitting and vomiting blood. But now Ive gone through that and now even thinking about a pint of beer makes me feel nauseous. I had to walk that line. I went to the doctors and they said I had to go to the ER. I said, No I cant because Ive got to do a couple of interviews [laughs]. So I was that, before I got the blood tests and everything back.
EB: Literally, the press was becoming the death of you, you cant do that.
VV: Fuck no, man. I tried.
EB: If you throw up after this interview Im going to be really, really upset.
VV: [Laughs] Fair enough, fair enough. They said Ive got either Ive got to stop drinking and calm myself down or its going to be heart failure next. You know, its a lonely life being sober, missing all my bar friends and everything, here on my own playing acoustic guitar, playing forlorn love songs, trying to pray to the Devil to get myself a new loved one to write some songs for. Unfortunately for me, I wasnt able to drink or party in moderation. My last bender lasted more than two years, getting fucked up every single day. Its not healthy but obviously its a way of life. You get a different social scene and you care about different things, based on the idea that youre not happy with yourself or youre not feeling comfortable with yourself so you just want to numb the pain by using something whether its legal or illegal. I just had vengeance in me and was pointing my middle finger up toward the cloud where R. Kelly was pissing on top of me [laughs].
EB: [Laughs] Take that, R. Kelly!
VV: Thats the reason why I turned out to be a proper Scandinavian satanist. [Laughs] Yeah, but everybodys got to find their own way. Im still getting used to it. Its the first time in years that Ive been actually alone in a house.
EB: With yourself and your me time.
VV: Yeah, with the me time. Its me and my guitar time.
EB: Exactly, which is be a more satisfying relationship than most, probably.
VV: Well, they never stay in tune and theyre fucking downright bastards.
EB: Well, at least you dont have to kick them out of the house the next day.
VV: Yeah, you dont have to saw your own arm off when you wake up in the morning.
EB: One thing weve talked about before is that its really hard for you to separate fantasy from reality in music, mainly because you live your life in the music that you write. That seems like something that could trigger the emotional fallout that happens when you write a record.
VV: It is emotionally devastating but thats how I like it. Lets say its good to be a white boy dancing badly on the razors edge, if you know what Im saying. You know, its not necessarily the white boy thing. Im just a shitty dancer thats all. Just the fact that Im not purposefully trying to find myself in tough situations, but the world in itself it is a pretty tough place. Turn on the TV and watch the news. I just cant do that anymore. It just makes me so sad.
EB: You said recently in another interview that life as a musician is a very [Salvador] Dali-esque experience.
VV: Yeah, I dont know. Im living my life the best way I can and I dont know the perception of the band or me as a person outside of myself. Its not like Im sitting up in the morning, sitting in a fucking Gothic chair.
EB: Or having midgets bring you morning tea.
VV: Yeah, with trays of cocaine on the top of their heads.
EB: Oh God. Rise and shine.
VV: Yeah, oh my God, ooh, I dont even want to think about that.
EB: Yeah, lets not. Because we dont want to throw up, right?
VV: Why not? They have phone sex, why cant you have phone vomiting sessions?
EB: We could, we could throw up in tandem over the phone. Itll be really romantic [laughs].
VV: Exactly. Purge on beautifully, my dear [laughs]. But, you know, at the end of the day you are one with your art and everybodys an artist. Everybodys a piece of art. Everybodys got a story to tell. Everybody tells it in different ways, some people tell it the way they walk, some people tell it the way they talk or the way they smile. Youve just got to have some imagination. [Being a musician] is surreal and it is very surprising that you never know whats around the corner. Its weird because phone calls happen, all of a sudden an album is on the charts, and all of a sudden youve got to fly tomorrow somewhere to meet somebody, like, lets say a video director whose videos you watched since you were a teen. Things like that, its very surreal so in that sense it is an adventure. Its like Alice in Wonderland because there are so many unexpected things happening all the time. The surrealism actually exists in your everyday life. So youre there 'in the looking glass' so to speak. It is a little weird. But thats life, isnt it. It can make you feel like, Whoa, what the hell is going on right now? But its also really beautiful. Its more of a laugh when youre sober. Theres a great comedy in me coming out one day. I wish that it would be like The Truman Show, there would be somebody secretly recording.
EB: All of a sudden you wake up and you find out that the whole thing has been this big experiment. They tap you on the shoulder and say, And scene. Thats a wrap, guys Youre like, What?
VV: Id fucking love it. Itd be so fun. Im waiting for that to happen. With the surrealism in everyday life, thats something that actually could happen.
EB: Exactly, well, if that ever does happen to you
VV: I will call and let you know.
EB: Let me know. I didnt sign any release forms.
VV: [Laughs]
EB: [Laughs] Well, your music definitely has a wickedly humorous side to it as well. Would you mind telling me how humor plays a factor in your music? A lot of people would consider it really emotional and melancholy.
VV: There is humor in melancholy as well, you know. Its like existential humor. Its funny that single individuals and billions of people are sitting alone in a chair and all sad about the fact that he or she lost a relationship or whatever. Its a weird thing. Were like fucking ants, building up our own den and house, to do what? To live there and maybe procreate someday? I am a miserable bastard in the most positive sense of that term. So lets say the stuff Im writing about at times is so demanding that humor is the only thing that helps me through the day and night, and the mornings with the ridiculous amounts of coffee I drink. We were talking about the surreal, the Dali-esqueness of life being in a rock band or my life in general. You know its just nice that it is like a cluster fuck that you cant separate the humor from the sadness. And I dont want to. Its nice to find yourself laughing at the wrong spot.
EB: You told me once that the best way to express emotions is through music and not through lyrics. Thats something I find really interesting because a lot of your fans really connect with the particular words you use in your lyrics and the emotions they convey.
VV: What Im trying to do, my mission in life is to get thirty different definitions of love into Websters Dictionary. Thats my mission in life. [Definitions] that really, really do explain the emotion. To be able to verbally explain how people really do feel. Thats what I do and thats my new challenge. My first challenge was to be able to express myself through music and now Ive learned it and Im really happy with it because it makes me more of a whole person. That would be an interesting thing to do in life, to concentrate on emotion so much and to be able to verbalize it so well that it would make the dictionary.
EB: That would be nice.
VV: At the end of the day I just want to be happy.
SuicideGirls has teamed up with HIM and is giving away a Fender Squier Stratocaster autographed by the band. Leave a comment, and be entered to win. HIM will look over the comments left by members and choose a winner. For more info go here.
HIM is currently on tour. Go to www.heartagram.com for more information
VIEW 25 of 98 COMMENTS
Great interview even if it was a while back.