
“When I sit down to write, it’s always a few weeks before we start recording,” he continued. “I don’t have any songs, and I sit down in my studio and I write a song a day. Once I have one song finished, I go down the next day, I write another song until there’s 11 songs or 12 songs. And then we go in a studio, I teach the songs to the guys and we record them. And it’s been that way really from the beginning, starting with [the 1984 EP] ‘The Yellow And Black Attack’, but the difference between now and then is we spent more time working out songs [back then]. Now it’s a lot faster process, and it’s not because it’s rushed [or] because we have to; it’s just because that’s the way it is. That’s the way it works.
“But I love writing,” Sweet added. “Everyone has this perception that we’ve always written songs as a band. That’s just not true. It’s never been that way. I’ve always been open and honest about that. And sometimes people think I’m a dictator and I hold a gun to the guys’ heads and I don’t let ’em write and whatnot, and it’s just not true. I give music to my brother all the time and say, ‘Hey, why don’t you write the lyrics?’ Because Robert‘s [Sweet, STRYPER drummer] a good lyricist. I say, ‘Why don’t you write the lyrics for the song?’ And three months later, when it’s time for me to sing the song, the lyrics aren’t done. So I wind up doing it myself. And it’s perceived often as I don’t let the guys do anything, and it couldn’t be further from the truth. And I’m letting you know that, I’m going off on that a bit of tangent, because I see this online every day. I just saw something at breakfast an hour ago, someone saying that very same thing.”