Danger Days didn’t just provide My Chemical Romance with an opportunity to break free from The Black Parade’s
 heavy rules and restrictions. The freedom the quartet experienced 
throughout the creative process gave them space to not only reflect on 
their career, but also gain important insight into fundamental decisions
 they made along the way. 
Chatting to NovaFM on the phone shortly before dinner, MCR frontman 
Gerard Way sounded relaxed and reflective and he explained what it was 
that pushed the band to shift from the darkness of Parade, to the hopeful and spirited Danger Days.
“I think it was a response, even if it was a self-response. And I think it had to exist,” Way, 34, said.  
“It’s as simple as that. It’s what we needed at the time in order to 
make a new album. It’s what we felt the band needed and I think it’s 
gonna be looked at later on as a really interesting time in the band’s 
career."
Way said the Danger Days process provided him with the opportunity to discover answers he didn’t even realise he was seeking.  “I learnt during Danger Days, more than anything else. I even learnt more about The Black Parade through Danger Days which was interesting because I didn’t learn anything about The Black Parade while touring on it,” he said. 
“I think I just understood why The Black Parade existed and I took more ownership of it. I was a lot more proud of it.  “I learnt why we made some decisions on Danger Days, why we made another record... I just really learnt why.”  
In order to give the upbeat, energetic and fast-faced Danger Days
 tracks the electricity and energy they deserve, MCR’s live shows have 
taken a huge turn since the band members were last Down Under.  
 “Ever since the first show (of Danger Days) there has always 
been this intense party atmosphere. It’s definitely a very different 
thing,” Way said.   “The atmosphere is not created by set pieces 
anymore. It’s created by the light and all the colours we have on stage –
 and then the audience,” he said.   “It’s a bit more ‘bare bones’ in 
that way.”  
Despite releasing Danger Days more than a year ago, the tracks 
on their most recent studio delivery haven’t aged over the last 12 
months.  When you listen to “Planetry (GO!”), “Na Na Na”, “The Kids From
 Yesterday” and "Party Poison” they sound as energetic and alive as they
 did when they were unveiled. 
“The digital element we’re referencing on Danger Days is 
directly related to stuff in the 90s, like Chemical Brothers and a lot 
of British electronic bands,” he explained.   “That’s starting to come 
back now. For this whole culture of kids that missed the rave scene, 
it’s staring to exist pretty heavily again and I think because that 
stuff is everywhere now, it’s probably sounding very right now.” 
Despite boasting a red-hot fiery hairdo, and appearing as energetic as 
ever in all of the MCR images and videos we see online, Way admitted 
that he’s been struggling with the demands of the band’s high-intensity 
performances. 
“I feel our challenge (has been) constantly having energy – like pedal-to-the-medal – all the time,” he explained.  
“That was a big challenge this time whereas Parade was less so 
that, and a bit more reflective –whereas this is more progressive. It’s 
like eating imaginary speed. So that (has been) a physical and mental 
challenge every night to do.”  
But don’t worry MCR fans, even though Way’s having some issues, he won't go down without a fight.
“The live experience is something that I find physically more demanding 
as I get older because there is a lot of recklessness involved – and 
there always has been with the band," he said.
“It’s a very difficult thing to constantly pull off and my threshold 
for it is lower in terms of how much I can do and how often I can do 
it... But I can’t not get completely reckless up there and break something. 
"I just can’t not do it.”
Source: NovaFM
 

 
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