Deftones - 7 Words Now
By the time they recorded it for their 1995 debut album, Adrenaline , the song had become their calling card. It was the track that turned their chaotic club shows into literal riots. During the recording sessions at Indigo Ranch, producer Terry Date pushed them to capture that "live" danger, resulting in the frantic, heavy breathing and screeching vocals you hear on the record.
Musically, the song was born from a basement jam. Stephen Carpenter laid down that signature, bouncy "bad brains" inspired riff, and Abe Cunningham locked in a hip-hop-influenced groove. When Chino stepped to the mic, he didn't lean into the poetic, dreamy metaphors he’s known for today. Instead, he let out a raw, squealing, punk-rock venting session about racial profiling and social suppression. deftones - 7 Words
Decades later, even as Deftones evolved into a sophisticated, atmospheric art-rock band, "7 Words" remains the one song they almost have to play. It’s a time capsule of their adolescent rage—a reminder of a time when they were just kids from Sacramento who were tired of being told what to do. By the time they recorded it for their
The "7 words" of the title actually refer to the explosive chorus: "You have no right / Fuck with me." (The count comes from the seven syllables/words of that defiant hook). Musically, the song was born from a basement jam
"7 Words" wasn’t just a song; it was a pressure valve for a nineteen-year-old Chino Moreno working a dead-end job in Sacramento.