![]() It’s somewhere in there, in this battle between our ideas the good stuff comes out. You guys have clearly learned how to compromise. Some bands just can’t compromise and they simply cease to function. Often the very thing that drives a band apart is that force that makes them so great in the first place. I think probably the most important lesson we learned from taking five years off from Blink was each of us is very different from one another and we’re never going to connect on certain things and it’s that disconnect that makes us Blink. I think that doing things outside of Blink allows us to find out what our skill sets are, what we’re good at, what we lack, what each person brings to the table. Do you think that helped the creative process after you guys convened to cut the new album? We spoke about the difficult birth of their new album Neighborhoods, how they finally learned to communicate and compromise after years of strife, and Delonge’s belief that that the band has embraced a “much more modern and relevant form of rock & roll.”Įverybody in the group spent the last few years working on different projects. ![]() Here’s part two of our series of Q&As with Mark Hoppus, Tom Delonge and Travis Barker, conducted backstage at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center in upstate New York. We recently posted a long series of interviews with the members of Blink-182 – but that was only the beginning.
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