Here is the text from Flynn's journal on the Machine Head website:
As much as I do not want to write this journal, I promised
you I'd write them "at least once a week". Good, bad, happy or sad… so
this is what has to be done.
2-11-13.
That is the date we fired Adam Duce. That is the day that I
had to tell Adam that after 21 years of being in a band together, I just
couldn't take it anymore.
That is the day I said "My hope is that this can be
amicable."
The words sounded like someone else had spoken them.
It was like being outside of my body watching someone else
deliver these painful words.
But, it was me saying it.
And we all said it.
We had our say sitting in our jam room in Oakland. Dave said
it. Joseph (our manager) said it. Phil said it. We all said that we couldn't
take being in a band with him anymore. That if this didn't happen, we were
going to break up the band.
It was hard. One of the hardest moments of my life.
It was also a long time coming.
We may have fired Adam on 2-11-13, but Adam quit Machine
Head well over a decade ago. He just never bothered to tell anyone… but we all
knew it.
Contrary to popular belief, being in a band is tough. Really
fucking tough. It's the toughest sonofabitch you'll ever come across in your
life and it will beat the living shit out of you 80% of the time. Many times it
feels like one big rollercoaster, the highest of highs and the lowest of lows.
There are wins and losses seemingly every single day. Being in a band is one of
life’s strangest gambles.
But when you do win, when you win that 20%, well... it truly
is salvation. It's what makes eating the other 80% of that shit sandwich
bearable. It's where “those” stories come from. It can be the best job you'll
ever have and unquestionably one of the hardest you'll ever have. But until
you've done it for 20+ years, you have no clue. Until you've held a band
together for 20+ years, you really don't know jack shit about it.
You think you do.
You don't.
A band is a dysfunctional family. A brotherhood, a family business, and a
Renaissance-era court. You're roommates in a studio-apartment-on-wheels for
years at a time, 24 hours a day. Plus you're in the pressure cooker of the
spotlight, every move analyzed, read into, or attacked. Everybody wants
something from you, everybody wants to be your friend, everybody loves you,
everybody can do so-much-better-for-you-than-the-people-you-have-now. Some
people try and turn you against each other, and everyone wants to take credit
for your success.
Oftentimes you're enemies. At odds and fighting about
something, but "pretending" everything is "fine" onstage.
But it isn't...
You just wear a mask that looks like it's fine, and after 20
years, we know that mask so well, it slides on way too fuckin' easy.
Adam hasn't been happy in this band for a long time. But how
do you leave? To a guy like Adam everything is either winning or losing. A
stunning victory or the ultimate failure. There was no in-between. And while
that sounds great for a TV show or an interview sound bite, or even a John
Wayne movie that wraps up in 90 minutes... life just isn't like that.
And life certainly isn't like that for a band like Machine
Head. A band who operate in the upper-middle tier. For us, there are no
stunning victories, only respectable wins. No ultimate failures, just
better-luck-next-times. We carved a niche, we OWN that niche, but it's still
just a niche. Nothing wrong with that.
No matter how unhappy or fed up he got, quitting the band
would be seen as "losing" or a "failure". Truth be told, he
was sick of it. Sick of touring, sick of recording, sick of practicing, sick of
looking at album artwork, sick of being-on-a-team-but-never-getting-the-ball,
sick of yearning-for-the-honeymoon-to-resume when 20 years deep it never does.
Sick of never quite hitting the big-time, sick of carving the niche... sick of
caring.
I don't blame him. It's hard to keep the passion.
But he just wouldn't quit.
We wanted him to quit. We were hoping he would quit,
"guys, my heart isn't in this anymore, it was a good run, later
dayz". We didn't want it to come to this...
But he wouldn't.
I didn't feel anything as I drove away from the jam room
that night. When I awoke the next morning I didn't feel anything either. I
wasn't "numb," I still "felt", was just kinda blank. But
three days after the meeting, an argument broke out in the jam room about how
conflicted I felt about it. Then I cried.
I cried and cried.
I've cried every day since. I’ve been an emotional wreck. I
cried writing this. I was sick the day that we announced it (11 days and 2
General Journals after actually doing it), walking around about to vomit for
hours.
I met with him for a couple hours last Wednesday, met with
him yesterday. It's civil.
I don't know what else to say.
I don't have some inspirational quote to end with here. I'm
not gonna sit here and tell you everything is gonna be all right, or that's it
gonna be the same. At this moment I can’t even bring myself to say that it's
going to be better.
Why?
Because it sucks.
It fucking sucks.
It sucks for everyone who tried to save this.
It sucks more than you can imagine...
It's a horrible relief.
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