Billboard exclusive: multi-platinum rock band, FILTER streams new album // US headlining tour‏

FILTER release new album “Crazy Eyes”
streaming exclusively on Billboard
+ headlining US tour this Spring +
available April 8, 2016 via Wind-up Records
interested in talking to Filter frontman, Richard Patrick?
Reconstruction requires deconstruction. The institutions must be razed in order to clear space for the future to flourish. You tear down the old and build up the new. Filter founder, singer, guitarist, and producer Richard Patrick knows this dance well. It’s what established the group as a multiplatinum industrial alternative luminary, and it catalyzed their seventh full-length album, Crazy Eyes [Wind-up Records].
“Filter is the mind,” he exclaims. “It’s your interpretation or my interpretation. Our thing is to look at people’s unexplainable behavior and assess it, using sound. It’s a way to approximate the insanity of the human condition. The reason this record is so fucking heavy and strange is it’s exactly the opposite of what’s popular. It’s not pretty. It’s not cute. It’s real.”
Rather than partner with a producer, he took the reins and oversaw production on “Crazy Eyes” himself. “You recognize it’s us from my aggression and singing, but the instrumentation had to change,” he admits. “It wasn’t about just stacking guitars like we might’ve done on the last couple records. There are way more electronics and sound design.”
He collaborated with old friends such as the man behind 1999’s seminal platinum-certified Title of Record, producer Ben Grosse [Thirty Seconds To Mars, Marilyn Manson], and Michael “Blumpy” Tuller [Nine Inch Nails]. He also worked closely with new band mates Oumi Kapila [guitar, programming], Ashley Dzerigian [bass], Chris Reeve [drums], and Bobby Miller [keyboards], and former Filter bandmates, Johnny Radke and Danny Lohner. Mixed by Brian Virtue (Janes Addiction, Thirty Seconds To Mars, Deftones) and mastered by Howie Weinberg (Van Halen, Mars Volta, The White Stripes).
The first single “Take Me To Heaven” rides a pulse-pounding gallop into an entrancing and ponderous refrain. “I was looking into the eyes of my father when he was passing away, and I held his hand,” Richard recalls. “He glanced at me really quickly, focused on me, had this look of gratitude, and then he slipped away. I was almost like, ‘I hope you’re going to heaven.’ Scientifically, the idea doesn’t make any sense to me, but if there is a heaven, take me there. That’s what happened.”
Ultimately, it all comes back to the fact that Richard remains honest. “I’m completely into this for the music,” he leaves off. “Being yourself is the most important thing. I authentically went places I’d never gone before. That was from my heart. I’m trying to be as genuine as possible to what Filter is. It’s about sounding fucking different, forward, and original.
+ Praise for Crazy Eyes +
“Crazy Eyes is hardly bereft of guitars but there are a substantial amount of electronics and effects in use. The result features heavy industrial crunch and solemn, ambient songs that reach back to Patrick’s time in Nine Inch Nails and the first Filter album, 1995’s Short Bus.” 
“The first single, “Take Me To Heaven”, rides a pulse-pounding gallop into an entrancing and ponderous refrain.”
– Blabbermouth
“…a new album that is just as angry and honest as Filter’s early work.”
– Music Times
“Backed by a brutal, punishing band, collaborations with Title of Record producer Ben Grosse, and a massive fan base, Filter is set to release their best collection since, dare I say, Short Bus.”
– Rara’s Farm
“Crazy Eyes” takes a different approach, meaning Filter goes back more to the early days in the 90’s. Mighty guitars are less present on the new release. This time it’s more an oppressive industrial sound that gets the spotlight. ”
– Heavy Music Blog

“Sonically Crazy Eyes, the seventh album from Filter, harks back to Short Bus and Title of Record but has been produced to provide a bit of ‘oomph’ – that kick that ties a band’s live sound and energy to their studio work”
– Renowned For Sound

“Certainly one of their most aggressive and intense, both musically and thematically”
– Ear Peeler

“10/10 – Crazy Eyes, Filter‘s seventh studio album – 21 years after their debut record – is their best, their heaviest, and their most politically charged album yet – their upcoming tour is even titled the “Make America Hate Again” tour, a riff on a certain presidential candidate’s campaign slogan.”
– Anti-Hero

find Filter: