
Mark Tremonti admits he doesn’t really listen to modern guitar music – he’d rather listen to Frank Sinatra
Let it be known that Mark Tremonti is not doomscrolling Spotify’s New Guitar Music playlists. If given the choice between checking out what today’s guitar heroes are up to or dropping the needle on a Frank Sinatra record, the Alter Bridge guitarist already knows which one he’s choosing.
In a new interview with New Noise magazine, Tremonti opens up about the band’s upcoming self-titled album – due 9 January via Napalm Records – while offering a candid take on songwriting, inspiration, and why he doesn’t feel much pressure to keep up with modern rock trends.
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Dishing on his creative process, Tremonti explains that for him, the music always comes first: “Usually, the riffs come first and then the lyrics and melody follow suit,” he says. “Intuitively, you spit out or pull out what the music is drawing out of you.”
That approach was put to the test while working on the new album, which saw Alter Bridge head to the legendary 5150 Van Halen Studios in Los Angeles for writing sessions and pre-production, with the help of longtime friend Wolfgang Van Halen.
According to Tremonti, the challenge wasn’t a lack of ideas, but rather, avoiding repetition after two decades as a band.
“For us, it’s a constant journey,” he says. “It becomes more challenging along the way because we try not to repeat ourselves. There are so many songs written in the band that you have to make sure you’re not hitting similar song structures, progressions, melodies, or lyrics.”
To keep things fresh, Tremonto says he tries to “approach things differently whether it’s writing a song using a different instrument or using some weird software program or a drum loop or a different guitar tuning, getting inspiration from different angles.”
The guitarist also speaks of the distinct challenges of writing experimental tunes and radio-friendly music: “Sometimes the simplest, straight-forward songs are the hardest to write,” he says. “They might sound like they’re easy, but to make something commercially successful that doesn’t have any fat or dead space and has hook after hook, is way more difficult than it sounds.”
And while Tremonti acknowledges that rock music spent a long time operating under a ‘don’t bore us, get us to the chorus’ philosophy – and is now becoming more experimental again – he admits he doesn’t spend much time monitoring what’s currently dominating the airwaves.
“I don’t spend too much time keeping up with what’s getting played right now because I can just tap in and play a Frank Sinatra record, that’s what I’ll do,” he says. “Back in the day, you had no choice. You either had a CD player or the radio; you listened to the radio. Now it’s one of the many things you can do.”
Back in 2022, Mark Tremonti teamed up with surviving members of Frank Sinatra’s band – as well as other musicians – to create his Sinatra covers album, Mark Tremonti Sings Frank Sinatra, even performing a handful of shows promoting the project.
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Source: www.guitar-bass.net











