“I’m turning these two into one because they are the same song just cut into two parts. Joakim and I found a really cool splice loop of a clippy distorted drum beat by Travis Barker, which ultimately became the inspiration for this entire song, looping the whole way through. From that point, the writing around it took place exactly in order of how the two songs are played from start to finish.
“For What It Cost we added the pumpy synth bass over the sample, and some guitars that follow, and then went back and forth between tracking vocal ideas and doing more production based around the vocals until we got to the 1:43 mark. Despite how unconventional to traditional song structure it seemed at first glance to start a big heavy riff two minutes into such a laid-back track and what felt like now an entirely new song, we did it anyway because it just sounded cool building for two minutes into that. At this point we had what I guess you could call two verses, and two pre-choruses, but nothing that feels like an actual chorus yet, and nothing that felt good going back to and repeating for a now third time, so we just made a whole new song in the same key and BPM that felt appropriate following the main riff. Though by the end of it all we felt a little confused on what to do because the song as a whole seemed too long and a little weird being perceived as one single body of work.
“However, when Like A Villain actually kicks in, everything afterwards felt like it had potential to be a strong single if not even a rock-radio-friendly track, despite a slightly more adventurous vocal / production compared to most rock-radio music in my opinion. Sad, because we didn’t want to ditch the first two minutes of the song either, I realised we could just cut it into two songs right when the riff starts, and turn the first two minutes into an interlude of sorts that rolls seamlessly into Like A Villain which is always neat when you can pull it off on an album’s tracklist.
“Lastly when we were tracking drums for the record we re-recorded our own version of the Travis Barker sample with what we called a ‘Frankenstein’ drum kit to try to recreate that sound in our own unique way. Experimenting mixing kick sizes, head types, and putting loose chains on the head of the snare drum, breaking away from the global drum tones entirely to give the riff and verses of LAV a very special, one-of-a-kind feeling.”