Words on ideal tour partners , writing processes and proudest milestones with Sam and Beck of central Scotland's best crossover band Tempered.
What role does old-school thrash bands like Anthrax/Metallica play in your music, and how do you work to make it feel fresh and personal?
Beck: We grew up on old school thrash. To us, bands like the Big 4 were, like a lot of people, our entry into heavy music and they still hold a special place. They are foundations of not only the genre, but our own individual styles as musicians. There’s aspects of that music which definitely still and probably always will inspire us.
Sam: It's fundamental. Evenly though we're firmly rooted in Thrash Metal, I do like to think we draw from a wider source of influences - but all those influences are probably just listening to Ride The Lightning for the hundredth time, like we all are. I'd say the old school gear that came slightly later than Metallica and that such as Sepultura, Demolition Hammer and Nuclear Assault was absolutely crucial for us.
When you sit down to write, what usually comes first for Tempered—a riff, a lyrical idea, or just jamming until something sticks?
Sam: We have a pretty collaborative process, which I like. Even when one of us essentially brings in a finished song, by the time it has spent a few weeks (or months) with us all in the rehearsal studio, it typically ends up being something different and greater than the sum of its parts. Doing things this way, no song is ever completely abandoned until we commit it to record either. We've played songs live in the past only to take them away and completely change them. It's a long process sometimes, but it beats just finishing a song demo, bringing it in and telling the band to play it exactly as is.
Beck: Outside of band rehearsal, I find it’s just a case of messing around on guitar as much as possible and if something feels fun to play I try and expand on it until I’m happy with it. I never sit down with the intention of writing something, because it never works out. I feel the best stuff comes together naturally.
If you could jump on tour with any band—past or present—who would it be, and what venue or festival would be the ultimate stage for Tempered?
Beck: I’d love to have toured with Cavalera on their recent runs. Old school Sepultura is a big influence for this band, and to be able to play alongside Max and Igor every night and pick their brains would be amazing. Any stage shared with those guys would be my ultimate.
Sam: I’ve been to Damnation Festival a good few times and always really enjoy it. Always a great lineup and good vibes - so that'd be a big achievement if we could ever play that one.
What other bands or local acts inspire you, and how do you support each other in the scene?
Beck: I love getting out to gigs and seeing what all the other bands are up to. There’s so much raw talent in the central belt right now. Old school death metal’s been the big thing here in recent years, but there’s just as much love shown for the thrash, hardcore, punk and grind stuff too. Everyone in these kind of bands has an appreciation for anything with good raw energy to it, and we all sing each other’s praises and support each other as much as we can.
Sam: Our man Kendo from BrainBath does a lot for helping heavy bands from Scotland and beyond release records under his Macho Records label/distro. He's done releases with us, Suffering Rites, Penny Coffin, Tymvos and a lot of other great heavy bands. Good, reliable distro and just an all round enthusiastic supporter of the scene. Always worth checking out a Macho Records release.
Looking back at where Tempered started, what’s the proudest moment or milestone for you so far?
Beck: My proudest moment is this new album. We’ve put a lot of work in to put out something we feel is worthy to sit beside some of our biggest contemporaries, and I feel we’ve achieved that. It’s definitely the best musical project that I’ve ever been a part of.
Sam: I’d say the album too but we did recently get to support Power Trip on a Glasgow show and that was a buzz. I haven't seen them since 2018 so it was great just to watch their set but it's nice seeing your band's name on a gig poster with a band you love. That was a class show.
Go listen to their devastating new album here :