Deftones’ explosive new album ‘Private Music’ meets the moment head on

Deftones’ explosive new album ‘Private Music’ meets the moment head on


Nearly 40 years into Deftonesโ€™ career, the Sacramento-bred band are anything but a legacy act. As proved by the visceral allegiance from countless fans half their age thrashing at their feet as they perform on stage, the band continues to be as explosive as they were when they conquered the Warped Tour in the late โ€˜90s.

The bandโ€™s late-era surge in popularity with generations of fans who missed their first (and second) go-round inspires and surprises them.

โ€œIt does freak me out when I sit back and, in retrospect, think about it,โ€ Chino Moreno says of Deftonesโ€™ longevity. Sitting backstage in a Victoria, Canada, arena during a break from the bandโ€™s pre-tour rehearsal, kicking off in Vancouver on Friday, Moreno, 52, is relaxed as he discusses their place in the hard rock landscape.

Since roughly 2022, the singer has noticed that the crowds at some of the bandโ€™s meet and greets were younger. In some cases, fans in their teens and early 20s were introducing their parents to the bandโ€™s catalog, including their turn-of-the-century classic, โ€œWhite Pony.โ€

That stature has only grown as elements of Deftonesโ€™ amorphously aggressive sound, which has elements of post-hardcore, trip hop and, most relevant to their revival, shoegaze, have attracted a much younger audience. Theyโ€™ve broken out from being a cult and critical favorite from the nรผ-metal scene to being widely appreciated as one of the most important and influential bands of that era.

โ€œIโ€™m not a big social media person,โ€ Moreno says of the medium thatโ€™s enabled a new generation to discover Deftones. โ€œThere are positive sides to it, like amongst all the noise, you can share music. It is neat that everybodyโ€™s much more connected to be able to share it like that.โ€

Yet, heโ€™s aware that based on the online resurgence, Deftones donโ€™t have to release a new album. Even so, seeing this influx of a younger fan base invigorated the band. It has driven the band to push themselves not just on stage, but in the studio.

A singer perfoming in front of a large crowd.

Chino Moreno of Deftones performs at the Kia Forum on March 5, 2025.

(Clementine Ruiz)

โ€œHaving this whole new generation of eyes on us and more attention now than weโ€™ve had in decades. So why not embrace it?โ€ he says. โ€œI love that I met a lot of parents and children, fathers and daughters, and theyโ€™re at the show together as a bonding experience, and to talk about some type of art you both connected over โ€ฆ itโ€™s really cool.โ€

The band also knew that if they were going to write and record, it had to be for the right reasons.

Recording โ€œcanโ€™t be where the label needs [the album], or we need money,โ€ Moreno explains. โ€œWeโ€™ve made records under those circumstances before, and it sucks the fun out of the experience. Weโ€™re bratty in that way where we only want to do something if itโ€™s something we want to do. The minute someone tells us we have to do it, then we fight it.โ€

With the bandโ€™s members now scattered across the U.S., Deftones couldnโ€™t wait to get back into the studio together, just like they did as teens when they had a space that felt more like a clubhouse. As Moreno puts it, it excited them to be able to โ€œexperiment and hang out together. Locking ourselves in a room for six hours a day, five days a week, was fun. It was like going back into the clubhouse again.โ€

With โ€œPrivate Music,โ€ Deftones once again joined forces with Nick Raskulinecz, who produced โ€œDiamond Eyesโ€ and 2012โ€™s โ€œKoi No Yokanโ€ (โ€œDude, we have to finish the trifecta!โ€ Moreno says he told Raskulinecz whenever theyโ€™d see each other.) Throughout the last year and a half, the band and Raskulinecz worked together through a variety of sessions before deciding on the 11 songs that constitute the album. Without a definitive timetable to release their 10th studio album, it allowed for a much more relaxed and enjoyable atmosphere than before. That said, the time between 2020โ€™s โ€œOhmsโ€ and โ€œPrivate Musicโ€ was the longest span between Deftones albums.

โ€œWeโ€™re in a mind frame where itโ€™s like we donโ€™t have to make a record,โ€ he says. โ€œIt gave us a kick in the butt. If people are talking about us holding us to a certain standard and pushing ourselves. So the fact that weโ€™re gonna do it, we might as well make it great.โ€

A band this far into its career is generally in their victory-lap era. Write, record, release an album, go on tour, play mostly the hits, sprinkle in a new song, repeat. Not Deftones. Throughout this album, which is another significant achievement, the band mixes the moody and melodic to create a genre-bending album full of fire and fury. Look no further than the equally bombastic โ€œMy Mind Is a Mountainโ€ and โ€œLocked Club,โ€ the menacing โ€œEcdysis,โ€ the soaring Moreno-powered โ€œI Think About You All the Time,โ€ and the push-and-pull of the methodical โ€œcxz.โ€ Throughout the sessions, which included three additional songs left in various states, Deftones wrote and recorded batches of songs in different locations, which Moreno says allowed for a respective track to have its own sonic personality as a product of its environment.

โ€œโ€˜I Think About You All the Timeโ€™ was written in Malibu at 8 in the morning and was pretty fast,โ€ he says. โ€œWe put it aside then, after dinner that night, we made some coffee and went out and finished it. Whereas with โ€˜Ecdysis,โ€™ it was the last song we wrote, and it was while we were in the studio. We were looking at our collection of songs that we already had and just going, like, โ€˜OK, where does it fit within this batch of songs?โ€™ We wanted something jagged and also a little weird that was more experimental but with an aggressive approach.โ€

As their tours have gotten bigger, external factors have given the band a new appreciation for their ongoing success. During the bandโ€™s 2024 Coachella appearance, guitarist Stephen Carpenter felt his performance wasnโ€™t up to his standard, telling Zane Lowe of Apple Radio that he was โ€œcompletely out of it for both shows. I barely had enough energy to stand up. All I could think about during those shows was, โ€˜Please, just donโ€™t fall over on stage.โ€™โ€ Later, heโ€™d find out that he has Type II diabetes.

A few years before Carpenter learned of his health issues, Moreno got sober. Those changes enabled the bandmates, friends since they were teens, to become even closer, despite any misconceived notion that theyโ€™ve been at odds. Though Carpenter doesnโ€™t travel internationally with Deftones due to his condition, when the band was on the road in the States earlier this year, he and Moreno were busmates. They pushed each other to remain on their respective lifestyle-changing tracks.

โ€œI think weโ€™re both very proud of each other,โ€ Moreno says of their changes. โ€œHe is so on it. Heโ€™s an obsessive person about a lot of things, and now heโ€™s obsessed about his blood sugar and about his health. Itโ€™s parallel to my sobriety. So we get on the bus after a show, and weโ€™re all into our diet. With my sobriety, I think he sees me being a better version of myself.โ€

A band performing on a stage surrounded by lights.

Deftones perform at Kia Forum.

(Clementine Ruiz)

โ€œPrivate Musicโ€ stands not just as a wonderfully cohesive riff-heavy body of work with a relentless energy that is the next shapeshifting step in the Deftones catalog, but is also a well-balanced album. Itโ€™s a logical sonic step for the Deftones universe. The band has also been building its annual Dia de Los Deftones festival. The lineup for the sixth edition, taking place in November in San Diego, includes Virginia Beach, Va., hip-hop heroes Clipse, beloved metal band Deafheaven, Rico Nasty, 2hollis and more. Comparing curating the festival to compiling a mixtape, Deftones is the common thread that ties these diverse artists together, which Moreno calls โ€œa fun experiment.โ€

Decades later, itโ€™s Deftonesโ€™ music and adventurous sonic spirit that keep the crowds coming back, anticipating the groupโ€™s next move. Itโ€™s allowed them to gradually build on successes without being weighed down by the past. Now, itโ€™s moved so quickly and exponentially that theyโ€™ve barely had time to catch their collective breath โ€” with another stretch of arena dates and a pair of co-headlining stadium shows with System of a Down on the docket.

โ€œIโ€™m excited to be busy,โ€ Moreno says. โ€œIโ€™m the type of person who has been lucky enough to have done this for pretty much all of my adult life. We didnโ€™t get to go out and tour โ€˜Ohmsโ€™ after it was released, and this is such a different time. I really love this batch of songs, so Iโ€™m eager to go play them and stay busy for the next couple of years.โ€

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