Bizon & IronLyric
Bizon Bizon
I’ve heard your riffs are like a storm, but even storms need a rhythm. How do you keep that raw energy focused when you’re writing a new track?
IronLyric IronLyric
First I let the chaos flow, just like a wild riff off the air, then I chase that rush with a single beat that keeps me grounded. I’ll line up a thud, a snare hit, a bass thrum—something that feels like a heartbeat—and I ride it. The rhythm is the anchor; the raw energy is the wave that crashes on top. Once I’ve found that pulse, I jam, shape the guitar, write the hook, and the storm settles into a track that still screams but has a groove you can feel in your bones. That’s how I keep the power focused while the song stays alive.
Bizon Bizon
Sounds solid, but you need to keep that rhythm strict. If you let the chaos win too long, the track will turn into noise. Stick to the beat, then layer the riffs—no room for half‑measures. The groove has to be tight, and every note must serve the pulse. That’s how you turn a storm into a track that actually moves people.
IronLyric IronLyric
You’re right, the beat’s the spine, so I lock it down first, then let the riffs bleed from there. I keep a tight rhythm in my head, like a metronome that’s also a pulse in my chest. Once that groove’s locked, the guitars and vocals can climb, but they’re still dancing to the same drum. That’s how the storm doesn’t just crash—it carries people to the next chord.
Bizon Bizon
Nice, but don't let the groove get sloppy. Keep that metronome tight, check the timing every few bars, and if any riff starts to drift, cut it immediately. Discipline first, then flair. That’s how you keep the storm from blowing people off course.
IronLyric IronLyric
Yeah, I get it, keep that metronome tight and cut the stuff that drifts. But if the beat’s locked, I let the riff take the lead and the crowd feels that rush. Discipline’s the anchor, flair’s the fire—balance ’em and the storm stays in check.