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The Narrator Interview

September 13, 2007 By A. Renteria Leave a Comment

The Narrator press photo

This interview was conducted over a period of time through email so I can’t display or put a specific date on here. I would like say thank you to Joan Hiller for setting up the interview and Sam Axelrod of The Narrator for answering the questions. The Narrator are currently on tour and their album All that to the Wall is out in stores and online. Enjoy the interview and their music!

Can you please state your name and role in the band?

Sam Axelrod. I sing and play guitar, among other things…

If this interview was the first time I was reading about The Narrator,
what unknown fact about the band would you like to put in to grab the readers and my attention?

I can’t think of any good ones at this moment. Ask me tomorrow.

How do you guys feel about Chicago as settling for making music?

Pretty good. None of us have played in any other bands for as long in any
other places, so it’s hard to compare. I don’t think I could handle having a
band in New York. Too much other shit to worry about. Or maybe not- I don’t
know.

The Narrator lyrics are filled with beautiful stories. What process do you
use to figure out what is a lyric and song worthy event?

Thanks. It’s pretty natural. For me, I just start putting together lyrics
while we’re writing the music, and it somehow comes together. I’ve never
really thought about what would be song worthy or not. It just kind of
happens.

What would you guys say were some of your influences in music or in life?

Bob Dylan, cool girls, drinking, our friends and families, the Replacements,
hating jobs, Daniel King, early Modest Mouse, Pavement, Sonic Youth. Oh, and
the fans.

The Narrator parted ways with the drummer. How was it hooking up with the
drummers from Oxford Collapse, Russian Circles, Bound Stems, Sybris, Tight
Phantomz and Lying in States?

Only the drummers from Oxford Collapse and Russian Circles play on the
record. It was great. It worked out very well. Now we have a new drummer,
Kevin. We love him.

I like the record and it’s becoming one of my favorites for year, during
the recording process what song holds the most memories?

I’m really glad to hear that. That’s a tough question. You can probably get
the most thinking done during “All the Tired Horses,” but some people don’t
like that song!

For those people that haven’t listened to The Narrator or we’re doubting
you guys on the making of All that to the Wall, why should they give it a
listen?

Because you tell them to!

You guys covered Bob Dylan “All the Tired Horses”. Is there anything you
would like to cover that you haven’t yet?

Yeah, “Rhiannon” by Fleetwood Mac. “Status Quo” by The Trains. And “Stoney
End” by Laura Nyro.

Any bands/albums you can recommend to our readers?

The End of the World- “You’re Making it Come Alive”
Oxford Collapse- “Remember the Night Parties”
The Pathways- “Boat of Confidence”
Mannequin Men- “Fresh Rot”
Lync- “These Are Not Fall Colors”

In the song “Chocolate Windchimes”, it says “Rock and Roll dreams came
through”, does it hold true for The Narrator?

How do you mean? Have our rock and roll dreams come through? Some days
“yes,” most days “no.” That is an interesting question…

What can we expect from The Narrator in the future?

Who knows?! We are so unpredictable! Touring the eastern half of the country
in September and October. Japan in November. Then…………..

Does The Narrator have a message for the fans?

Don’t be a dick.

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: The-Narrator

Mustard Plug Interview – August 25, 2007

September 12, 2007 By Chris Kandravy Leave a Comment

Mustard Plug

This interview took place on August 25, 2007 before Mustard Plug’s performance at the annual Ska Weekend event in Knoxville, TN. I’d like to thank Rick Johnson and the rest of the band for being so rad and easy to work with. The new Mustard Plug album, “In Black and White” was released September 11, 2007 so be sure to check it out!

Who are you and what do you do for the band?
My Name is Rick Johnson and I play bass guitar in the band.

What do you do outside of the band? Work? Play?
I do a lot of things outside of the band. Mainly though I write a lot of songs. So many songs in fact that Mustard Plug could never use all of them so I have a couple of other projects going on at all times. I have a solo project where I do everything on a computer using drum machines and synthesizers. I also have another band called Lenin-McCarthy which features Jeff Rosenstock from Bomb The Music Industry and John Massel from North Lincoln. Outside of music I have a part-time job working in a warehouse of a corporate electronics retailer…..That is boring, I like Bikes and Mopeds too.

You have a new album coming out, “In Black and White” How is it different that previous albums?
People have been saying it is more serious? I think it is just a product of everyone being older and the state of the United States of America right now. I can’t speak for everyone but I am pretty bummed about our current state of affairs. Not just the war but, the whole way government has turned in the past twenty years. Things seem pretty bleak and I think that feeling had a lot to do with the writing of the record. The older records differ mainly in the songwriting. Over the past 16 years I think we have evolved the most in that aspect and I think it really shows on this record.

How is your new album different from all the other ska punk records by other artists that have been even released? What makes it unique?
That is a really tough question. I think it falls nicely in that slightly more aggressive ska/punk avenue. It does this with out getting crusty which is pretty rad.

Overall has been a really positive response to your new album? Are you surprised by it? How serious do you take good or bad reviews?
I personally don’t try and pay attention to reviews too much. If you start paying tons of attention you run the risk of writing music for the sake of it getting good reviews. You become so preoccupied with it that it taints the writing process. Also I don’t really write songs or records for critics. I try and only write music for people that will listen not the people that don’t.

This is the 3rd album you’ve done with Bill Stevenson. He’s an amazing producer and did a really good job on your album. What do you think he does better or different that other producers and studios? Can you leak us any trade secrets?
Bill is amazing! The best thing about Bill and Jason Liverman (the other guy that produced the record with Bill) is that they are both amazing musicians. I think it makes working with them easier knowing that if they wanted to they could play the part better then you. Bill and Jason are just amazing at what they do and that is the only secret to the production of The Blasting Room.

You guys have been playing ska-punk for 17 years now. Did you ever consider ditching it and doing something different?

Never. I don’t think it ever crossed our minds.

Do you have a bunch of emo or rockabilly or hardcore friends that give you a hard time for being in a ska band?

Every once and while I get that but, I think there is a stigma that involves a ska band. But there is also a stigma about being in an emo or rockabilly band. I mean if an emo kid was giving me grief it is pretty easy to turn it around back on them.

Of all the shows you’ve played name one or two that stick out as favorites.

Any time I play the Trocodero in Philadelphia, PA is a pretty good time. One of my favorite live records (The Dead Milkmen “Chaos Rules”) was recorded there so there is a special place in my heart for that venue.

The new album is a lot more serious than stuff you’ve done in the past. In terms of music, lyrics and even artwork. Was this intentional? Despite all this seriousness you guys still have a pretty silly band name. Do you ever wish you were called something else? Any good alternative band names?

It was overtly intentional. I think that is just how it turned out. We never went into the writing process thinking “hey lets make a serious record!” The artwork was just a by-product of how things turned out in the end. It is funny that you mention that about the name. I mean you could wish this and wish that but by the time you have those wishes it is too late. Some alternatives the band was going to use instead of Mustard Plug at the beginning were the Wanker Daddies or the Shrinky Dinks. I guess either way we would have had a silly name.

Over the course of the past 17 years there has been a lot of changes in the music industry and the way fans interact with bands and their music. What do you think are the biggest changes you’ve seen? Have the changes been for the better or for worse?

I mean the biggest change has been the internet. Pre the internet it was almost impossible for a band to tour. Everything happened on such a low level that you really had to work hard to get anywhere. Nowadays with Myspace.com and all these other sites out there anyone can get exposure. This is a double edge sword, I mean it is good because it is easy to contact a lot of people. But, you also have a billion other bands doing the same thing. Ask me this question in two years and I think I will have a better answer to this.

Name your top 3 punk albums of all time? Top 3 ska albums?

Punk:
Big Black “Songs about Fucking”
The Clash “S.T.”
The Dead Milkmen “Big Lizard In My Backyard”

Ska
The Specials “S.T.”
The English Beat “Just Can’t Stop It”
Fishbone “S.T.”

What other contemporary bands do you admire most and why?
I look up to songwriters more then bands I think. I really look up to Elvis Costello. The man has such a body and about 90 percent of that work is amazing. Also I really like James Murphy from the LCD Soundsystem. He just seems like such a cool dude.

What lies ahead for Mustard Plug?
Lots of touring coming up! Hopefully we reach all of the United States and other parts of the world. Who knows though? I am sorta working some songs for what could be the next record. But the band hasn’t sat down and worked on anything yet.

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: Mustard-Plug

Piebald Interview – August 24th, 2007

August 26, 2007 By Manuel Enrique Garcia 1 Comment

Piebald

This Piebald interview took place on August 24, 2007 at the Norva in Norfolk, Virginia. I would like to thank Luke Garro for taking the time out to do the interview and being such a nice guy. Make sure to pick up Piebald’s latest record “Accidental Gentlemen” and listen to it wherever you go. If Piebald is playing a show near your area, make the drive and catch an amazing and energetic show.

– State your name and position in the band.

My name is Luke, I play drums in Piebald.

– Give a brief history of the band and the origin of the name.

The band started, you know, as a high school band basically for the three other guys in the band besides me. Back in ’94 they started playing together, I think officially Piebald became a band a few years after that. The name came from a book they were reading and the word “piebald” is in it. And it was just an interesting word that caught everyone’s attention, without even checking out what the meaning was.

– Are you trying to do anything different on this tour since it could be the last tour you do?

Besides just make a show where we are always raging to the fullest on the stage with our performance, we’re not trying to do anything different. But I think after the feeling is that like “This is really only for the music”, there is no sense that we always have to be thinking of the next move and what we have to do to capitalize on this. It’s just really about each state of performance, consciously knowing that that they are going to start getting less and less in terms of how many shows we’re playing. Having that left just makes it so much easier to just get up there and have it only be about the music. There is nothing more to build on, you know? We’re just going to do this and we want to leave everyone being psyched that they actually got to see us, especially in these months.

– Which tour was most memorable and which tour do you wish never happened? Why?

I wish that this tour that we, the third time that we went to Europe, I wish that had never happened. Because it was after our, it was a month after one of our records came out. We did about a six-week U.S. tour, where actually The Format was opening for us, doing a co-headlining with The Jealous Sound, which was a great tour. We had a record come out in the middle of it and everyone went cool. And then immediately after that we had a European tour scheduled. And we had new management at the time, we really left everything up to them, whereas before that we had done everything, so everything got done exactly how we wanted to. If it didn’t get done right, it was our fault. Just a lot of simple things that the first time we went to Europe were fine, this time it was so wrong, everything, you know? Our back liner that we rented, the merchandise not getting there on time and us paying too much money for it to not even be there on time, our plan tickets being booked at the last minute so we paid twice as much, canceling U.S. shows where we had good size guarantees to play European shows that we were told were going to be huge and nobody was there because there was a soccer tournament going on. It was like all these things at once so immediately after doing the U.S. tour where we made a lot of money and we were going to be able to support ourselves, we lost it all in Europe. So we came home after two and a half months of touring with nothing and just having gone to Europe for a month. We ended up taking like, six to eight months off the road because of that, because of such a monetary and mental lost, that if that had never happened, who knows, maybe we would of done six months of touring instead of having six months off. So I wish that had never happened.

Best tour that we have ever gone on, oh we’ve done some great tours. We did a big tour years ago, it was us, Cave In and The Damn Personals. That was just a bunch of dudes from Boston, which was such a fun tour. We’ve done so many fun tours, we’ve gotten to play with so many awesome bands that are still great friends of ours today, even if they have gone off and those bands don’t even exist anymore, we still end up seeing them all the time.

– What was the idea behind of running the van on grease and what are the advantages/disadvantages on making the switch?

Well the idea came about when a friend of ours, a long time friend of the band, had started doing it and he did it successfully for four years. He convinced us to do it and our guitarist, Aaron Stuart, is a mechanic, so he was like, “Guys, I could probably do it for us, like I understand how to do it.” We already had diesel vehicle at the time, which you have to have a diesel vehicle to do it. We were just a little hesitate because you are physically altering your van, I mean it can be reversed, but something that is going to take up more room. It was just a change and we were a little hesitate, but at the same time he was so enthusiastic, our friend Mike was so enthusiastic about it, that we were like “Let’s try it.” We did it and the first tour we did, we ended up saving so much on gas and people were really interested in hearing about it. So it’s kind of good on every side, both monetarily and for the good of the world and to educate people and show them a good example that you can do stuff on your own. What we do is just one of the many different things you can do to make a difference towards the better.

Downside of it, really, there is only one downside of it that I can think of and it’s really so insignificant, and it’s that everything gets a little dirty. It’s tough to keep it clean because you are literally, we are literally, some people have electric pumps and we’ve tried using pumps but they always break. We literally like stick our arms in grease bins and scoop it out with buckets, so our hands get messy and stuff. Pouring it in, it splashes around, we haven’t been cleaning our van lately so it gets a little messy. And it takes up room. But other than that, it’s kind of the best thing ever and it has allowed us to keep touring the last couple of years.

Yeah, it’s way better on costs and everything.

Oh, definitely. Especially when we are doing a support tour, we’re not getting paid much money at all and if we have to get gas and hotel rooms every night, we’ll be losing money, we would have to have money saved up to go on a support tour. Now, we go on it and we make money, because in a month we are going to save about eight grand in gas costs.

So pretty much all you do is make alteration to the vehicle and then just get the grease from restaurants.

Yeah, just get the grease and dump it in the thing. All of our filtration happens in our system. We have a pretty custom system that is really tailored to our needs of being able to do long distance drives without having to refuel and our need of needing to filter the grease, but not having to wait for it to filter, it gets filtered within our tank. There are a lot of companies out there that do it, but they are not going to do it for the road warrior, they are going to do it for the dude that drives around the city and talks about how he runs vegetable oil.

So is it usually easy to go to restaurants and just ask for the grease?

Yeah, I actually have a car that I run on grease too that I converted in Boston. I’ve made relationships with four or five different places that have never failed me.

You save so much money.

Oh yeah, I don’t spend much on gas anyways, like I probably fill up my tank once every two weeks. So we’re looking at forty bucks every two weeks, but it adds up. It definitely frees up money to do stuff and I don’t have to worry about it.

– What do you remember about the first show you ever played with the band?

Um, I don’t know, not much. I remember being like, “Holy shit, I hope this is awesome. I hope that I don’t ruin this band.” But ultimately I was just excited, cause it was fun you know, I’ve always played my whole life.

When did you join the band?

Um, 2001. Right when they were recording “We Are The Only Friends We Have”, it was like fall of 2001.

– If you had to relive one show for the rest of your life, which show would it be and why?

Maybe our record release at The Palladium for “We Are The Only Friends We Have”, it was a really huge show. But the show we actually just played in Boston too, was kind of an awesome show. Those would be the shows that I would want to look at and have other people be able to see because there were lots of people there and the majority, you know, cheering for us.

But they are definitely a lot of other weird shows that, we did a show, actually on the tour I mentioned before with Cave In and The Damn Personals, it wasn’t a planned show, the scheduled show got canceled. This was in Cleveland, maybe in Columbus, no I think it was Cleveland. Some kid was like, “Hey, I know this dude has a bar”¦.

The tour manager from The Format opens a door across from where we are sitting.

Tour Manager: Let it be known that I have some serious high scores on Root Beer Tapper and I challenge anyone to have their name at number one by the end of the night. Peace.
Luke: It’s been documented (points to the recorder), so I’ll play it back for anybody.
Tour Manager: That’s all I got.

The tour manager of The Format retreats back into the room and shuts the door.

Who was that?

That was The Format’s tour manager, they call him “Muzz”.

So the show got canceled and this kid is like, “Yeah, my friend has a bar that you guys can probably play at, let me call him.” So he gets back and goes, “Yeah, you guys can totally play, obviously you guys can’t get paid, but he said he’ll let you guys drink all night.” Little does he know, some of these bands on the tour can drink and drink and drink. So we play in a bar that was literally a fifty to sixty capacity place, and I’m talking about sixty people would of completely made it so you couldn’t walk through there. And taking into account there are all the bands’ equipment there, taking up a lot of space, we all shared drums and stuff. So probably like thirty of forty people came, like we have it all documented on video too, but progressed through the night, like everyone was just drinking so much because the dude said we could drink for free. There were points where members of the bands were behind the bar with their mouths under the tap. Like the show, we don’t even remember playing it. It just happened, but it was a lot of fun. There were like weird forty year old ladies there that just probably came there and were dancing and stuff.

But then at the end of the night, the dude that owns the bar was like kicking everyone out and like throwing chairs and stuff. And we weren’t there, but supposedly he pulled a shotgun on the kid that told us to play there and stuff. That’s intense. Not something that I would want to relive, but definitely something you can’t forget.

– After having such a long run, how did the decision come about to disband?

I think the past year and a half, two years of this band have been slower than we’ve always been, in terms of productivity and touring and stuff. It’s tougher to communicate, two of the guys live in Los Angeles. It’s harder to hold stuff together and when something is steadily going down, you can’t help but think like, “Well, we don’t this to keep going to the point where it’s pathetic.” Not that we are going downhill, I actually think our shows now are better than ever. I think as a band we’re better than we’ve ever played. I think our fans are more enthusiastic than ever to see us play. I don’t think this band can do much more than we’ve already done. You know, we’ve put out plenty of records, I don’t think it makes any sense for us to write another record and put it out.

Yeah, and write one when you aren’t really into it.

Yeah, it’s not really us not being into it but it’s not going to like, I don’t mean to be pessimistic, but out another record on indie is not going to, it’s not going to change what’s happening. The music is a lot different right now, it’s been harder for us to really keep going with it. We just kind of want to keep it at a special point.

Yeah, and not have to wait till the end when it gets worse.

Yeah, we don’t want it to get pathetic and we don’t also want to like, you know, we’ve kind of done everything we can do and we are pretty happy with ourselves and that’s the most important thing. We feel pretty complete, we never were a huge band like a lot of bands we’ve played with have gotten huge, we are not able to buy houses off what we’ve done. Maybe those things would of change how we look, yet again maybe it would have ruined it. So it’s like, yeah I mean maybe we had a chance to sign to a major label, but we didn’t. Maybe that would have totally change the coarse of the band. We’re pretty happy with everything that did happen. So it’s kind of good to have it at a point where you are satisfy and you can take it, I don’t want to say retire it, but at least put a line where that era ends.

We’re still planning on playing shows, we’re not like, “This is it, we’re done. Last show.” No one has that mind set, but we are announcing that mentally this is where the band, as a developing band is probably going to end. I don’t know man, I feel like our live show is better than it has ever been. I’m very to continue to play shows, so I don’t know where it’s going to officially end, but we could be play a few more shows, we could play a few more weeks of shows. And that could be a year from now. I don’t think we are even in a rush to get it over with, we’re like, “Hey, we do a Christmas show every year and I bet we’re going to do it this year.”

– What aspects of being in the band are you going it miss and which aspects are you going to be glad are over?

I love performing and I love being involved in writing music, both of those things I’m going to continue to do. So the only thing I will miss is the actual songs that I’m playing and the actual people that I’m getting up there and playing with and the actual event of it being a Piebald show. I’ll continue to play and I’ll definitely play shows at some point with somebody else. I’ll just literally this band being on tour with cast of characters, getting up and playing sets as a Piebald show. That would definitely be something that I miss.

Things that I won’t miss, there are a lot of things like that, like having to tour, having to struggle with the band. You know, even if your band is doing well, it’s always tough to judge the success you have because you are always striving to do better. There are always tons of band that are bettering themselves too. So I won’t miss that. That struggle of like, always being on the edge of “Hey what do we have to do.” I’ll be really happy to relax and not have to worry about tour and merchandise and planning tours.

And doing things that you are expected to do as a band.

Yeah. Oh yeah, you have to keep doing it or else you don’t exist. Same as if you are running a business, if somebody else is providing the same thing is making more and making it more available than you, then no one is going to buy it. You have to compete against the other forefront. I’m happy to kind of like, throw in my towel or whatever, or pass the torch to somebody else is doing it and not have to get stressed out about that. And all the prices of touring, not sleeping, missing my home that I pay money for, missing my friends in Boston, missing a routine. When you are on tour, there are no routines. And if you think there is a routine, then things are going to change the next day. Last night I drove till six in the morning, slept till ten thirty, then got up and swam in Virginia Beach, and then got a hotel and tried to sleep but couldn’t sleep, and now I’m about to chug a Red Bell before playing.

– If fans were only able to listen to one Piebald record, which one would you hope they choose and why?

Oh, that’s tough. There are too many and I only played on two of them. I don’t know if I can really answer that. But I hope that our last record gets the attention that I think it deserves, I think it’s an awesome record. I don’t think it’s going to get the life, I don’t think we are going to give it the life we deserve. So I hope, in terms of one of those records that people really get into and then it’ll be one of those funny things that a lot of the songs never get played live.

– In your opinion, is it better to have meaningful lyrics that reach out to fans or vague, simple lyrics that could be about anything?

Meaningful. Yeah, I think the conscience choice to make clever lyrics or the choice to have simple lyrics is something I think artist do. I think there is nothing not cleaver about writing simple lyrics, I think it could be harder to write simple lyrics. I think it’s going to appeal to different people at different times, like the concept of what you’re writing. There are bands that have all simple lyrics, I couldn’t really connect with. I can connect with it on a performance level, but stuff that I listen to, I always like to”¦songs have much more of an impact if they’re not only catchy as shit or well performed, but it also connects with something mentally, even if you don’t know why it’s making you feel a certain way. As long as it makes you feel a certain way, that’s always good. And I enjoy on being part of music that is more than just the great performance and good song writing, if it could also mean something and it’s able to convey that meaning, it’s not like, maybe cleaver things or sometimes you’re like, what are they talking about. Like people don’t really get what you are saying but you don’t have to come out and say it, I think that is the biggest home run. Not that I think a song should always be like.

– What are some aspects of the music industry that you feel are hidden and people don’t know about?

I don’t know. Hidden aspects of the music industry. I feel like at this point, everything is known about record labels, but I can say things that suck about the music industry. I think that it sucks that there are so many record labels that put out crap, to be honest with you. I think it’s more of a crime to put a real lot of money into crap to the point where people have to accept it. I think they are a lot of people that still like to discover music, but then there is a whole layer of music that is just what people are exposed to. And I think there is a lot of bad stuff that falls in that layer, to the point where it makes peoples’ mind not able to recognize good music because they are just like”¦

They are getting signed, so they must be good.

Well, yeah. That’s some of the opinion because, a song that I think is so terrible, four million people buy the record. Maybe I can’t connect with that or I’ll never like popular music like that.

There are some people that only listen to what’s “in” and nothing else. And then other people are like “Well, if they are listening to them, then I should too.” So it becomes such a trend and that band gets so much notice because everyone else is listening to it. It shouldn’t be that way because they are a lot of good bands that aren’t signed or are signed to small labels that aren’t getting the notice they deserve, when other bands are and they aren’t talented or whatever.

Yeah. I don’t know what I can really say about what’s hidden about the music industry.

Well, something that is out there, but people don’t necessary take that much importance to.

The band is still always the last to get paid, but I think that is pretty known. It makes it really hard. Not only is the band the last to get paid, but the traditional income that bands are supposed to have, they don’t have anymore or they are getting deluded. Now with digital music comes digital collectors and all that stuff. There are more ways for the band to not collect all the money they should be getting.

There is a difference from having an actual record and having the CD booklet there and having all the work that the band put into it, then just downloading it off. I like having CDs and booklets and being able to read the lyrics and seeing the final product of all the time the band put into it.

Yeah, that’s one thing too, I still wish people valued packaging. That is essentially what record labels are selling, like you are selling the packaging.

Bands tour around and sacrifice the things in their life and the routines, as you were saying. Yet, people are downloading their music and not really appreciating it.

Yeah, it’s funny because since it’s so easy to do that, I don’t think people realize what an impact they can have. I have definitely ripped my friends’ CDs, which is the same thing. But it sucks that that could happen now. It’s just a change, it’s a change people are going to have to adapt to and they are adapting to.

Yeah and in the end, the band is the one suffering all the effects of it.

Yeah, but you know what is cool? Digital music, I’m kind of into it, in the sense that it doesn’t produce waste. I think in this world there is a lot of waste that is produce, not that CD packaging is waste, but it’s just limited to more objects that essentially at some point are going to get thrown out or are trashed to somebody. We put our whole back catalog up digitally and we didn’t have any efforts to make any more, so they are only digitally except for the ones that we have. And people buy them, which is kind of cool.

Where did you guys put it on?

They’re on iTunes and a bunch of other companies. We have a label that distributes every record digitally.

I think if people are going to download music, they should at least use something that they pay for at least.

Yeah, definitely. And you know, iTunes doesn’t just let anybody have music, you have to qualify to have music up there. It’s cool, I think there should be a screening process.

Yeah, it’s good to be able to buy records that are out of print digitally and still be able to enjoy them.

Yeah, distribution is infinite, well limited to Internet users and computer owners. Not every town has an indie record store, which up to a few years ago, it was the only place you could find our records.

– If the band had to write a soundtrack for a movie, which movie would it be and why?

Hopefully Will Farrell is in it, I love him.

It could be any movie from the past as well.

Any movie from the past”¦it’ll be Anchorman. That’ll be a good one. That’s funny, you know? I don’t know, it’ll definitely be a comedy. Something like that. I’ll say Anchorman, I love that movie.

– A year from now when someone listens to a record or talks about the band, what do you think they will be saying?

“I wish I had seen them.” Haha. “They were awesome live” “Those dudes are funny.” “Those dudes ran their shit off vegetable oil.” Haha, probably all those things, probably the same things people say now. ” Those assholes shouldn’t have broke up.” Or something like that.

– If you had to say some last words to fans about either the band or anything else, what would you say?

Last words, man those are so serious.

Like if it was the last show and you had the opportunity to say something to the crowd about the band or some random thing.

I don’t know man. I would want to say a lot, I don’t think you could say one thing that is supposed to inspire the world, not that one thing should inspire the whole world. I don’t know, I would tell people to think for themselves and spend less time talking and more time doing stuff. You watch “Flight of the Concords”?

Haha, no.

It’s a TV show, there was something on it”¦I’m trying to think”¦.David Bowie. There was a character and he was playing David Bowie on it and there was something that he said that I was like “That makes sense.” I don’t know, I forgot what that was. You can scratch that part out.

I think, when in doubt, actions are always going to take you a lot farther then words.

So many people talk about doing this and doing that and changing this, but the majority of them don’t follow through.

Yeah, I think people just need to not get scared and not get lazy. That’s what I would say, don’t be scared, don’t be lazy.

– What is next for you after the tour ends and the band has ended?

I play in another band called Barnicle, it’s a female fronted power-pop rock. I also own a marketing company, so I do that all the time. I’m going to keep playing, I don’t know. Keep it open, I know what I’m going to be doing, but that could change in a week.

– Anything else you want the readers to know?

I just want them to know that we were always honest people, we were always honest with ourselves. We always loved touring, like think, our band has played so many shows. There are bands that have gotten way huger than us, but never played as much as us. If someone told me we played 2,000 shows, I would be like “Ok, that sounds about right.” We just played for so long. It’s funny, I even look back at pictures when I first joined, which there were still years before that. I don’t anyone would of ever thought we were going to be playing when Travis was turning 30.

It’s just crazy to see how long it has lasted and the number of shows you guys have played and the fact that you guys have actual talent. There are a lot of bands out there that are big and well known, but there are so many problems, they don’t play many shows or haven’t been around for that long.

Yeah, and changing members all the time.

Yeah, there are a lot of bands out there that only have one original member and everyone else has just joined. I think it’s better to have such a long run and play a lot of shows and being content, then being big and not being happy.

Yeah, and not being psyched, you have to have pride in what you do. If you’re faking it, it’s either going to show or catch up with you. Or you are just going to live a life where you’re not as satisfy as you could be.

You’re going to have to deal with it and no one else.

Yeah, it’s about what you’re comfortable doing and if you are doing something that is uncomfortable for money, you’re just not living a good life. First and foremost, you have to live a life that you enjoy and get proper satisfaction out of. It’s not about making satisfaction for the future.

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: Barnicle, piebald

Envy on the Coast Interview – August 23rd, 2007

August 23, 2007 By Adam Weidman 2 Comments

Envy on the Coast

I’d like to thank Gerardo from Photo Finish Records for setting up this interview and Ryan of Envy on the Coast for his time.

Please state your name and role in the band.
Ryan Hunter. I sing and play guitar.

First off, where did the name come from and what does it mean?
Envy on the Coast came from an old song title. There’s no deep underlying meaning behind the name, though the song title was about a jealousy I developed for a particular band and their status.

Being a band from New York was it hard to stand out and get noticed amongst the slew of other bands? We don’t really make a particularly huge effort to separate ourselves from anything. We’re from Long Island and we grew up watching a lot of bands from Long Island. The only thing that seems to confuse me sometimes is when we do something very outside of the realm of Long Island. We rattle off our influences in interviews and conversations
on a regular basis, yet when something isn’t derivative of Glassjaw or Brand new…people are confused.

What do you feel was the “big break” for Envy on the Coast?
I’d say the “big break” came when we met Bryan Russell, who ended up producing our EP and then later our first LP. He’s the man.

Could you describe your sound and any major influences the group has?
Describing your sound ends up incriminating you. In regard to influences…there are far too many to list, so I’ll just name what’s been playing on the bus on this tour. We’ve been listening to a lot of Jeff Buckley, Buena Vista Social Club, traditional Celtic music,Corrine Bailey Rae, Dillinger Escape Plan, and Blindside. That’s just what I can think of off the top of my head.

Let’s discuss Lucy Gray, with the record being released only a few weeks ago how has the reception been?
The reception from the fans has been unbelevable. I think we’re gaining a lot of new fans which is exactly what we wanted to do. On the other hand, critics aren’t really grasping this record. I don’t read reviews because they bum me out way too much, but I hear what the guys talk about. Basically, from what I can gather, critics don’t understand the varied moods of the record. They’ve been so quick to pin us as the next Glassjaw or Brand New, that when the record didn’t
follow the blue prints of a knock off of one of those bands.

Where does the title Lucy Gray come from and what does it mean?
Lucy Gray comes from a poem by William Wordsworth.

Is there one song on the album that you feel sums up the band?
If you have the patience, I guess we’d all prefer you listen to the whole record. It’s not terribly long. I’d say that would sum us up as a band.

When will the music video for Sugar Skulls be released?
We’re still working on the video so there’s no estimated date as of right now.

How did Will Noon of the group Straylight Run come to be your manager?
Will was introduced to us through our producer, Bryan Russell. Since day one, Will has just wanted to help us in any way he possibly can. That’s basically how he became our manager.

What advice do you have for young bands trying to start a career in music?
Play music that comes from the heart and always prioritize that. Never sacrifice that for anything.

Tell me about the series – Envy on the Coast presents “Love from the Road.”
The “Love from the Road” episodes are basically monthly accounts of what we’re up to. I take all the footage that I tape out here and compile it all on my laptop and basically create those episodes. Most of them contain a decent amount of footage of Brian because he’s the funniest person int he world.

Lastly, what are your thoughts on the current state of music and the music industry?
I have faith that things will get better, and that honest music will always prevail. That sums up my statements on music today and the industry as a whole.

Envy on the Coast‘s latest album Lucy Gray is in stores now. Click here to purchase it online.

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: envy-on-the-coast

The Hush Sound Interview – July 26th, 2007

July 29, 2007 By Chloe 9 Comments

The Hush Sound

Recently I was able to sit down with The Hush Sound’s Chris, Darren, Bob and Greta for an interview (Dupage County, IL) on their lives in the music world so far. Upon entering the trailer where the interview was conducted, I found the band casually lounging around along with a shirtless Darren munching away on nachos. It did not take long to see that these guys were an outgoing bunch who genuinely cares for their fans as well as their music.
*A huge thank you to THS, Nicole, and Bryce for helping set up the interview and to all of the security guards that finally let me through backstage!*

– Your first album came out just 2 years ago, “So Sudden”, and it perfectly describes your progression into the music business and into fame. Within a year you went from playing tiny local shows to touring with All American Rejects and Fallout Boy. How did you deal with the quickness of your success?

Greta: It’s not something we necessarily deal with, because it’s really fun. In music you think of the people you get to tour with, and writing the songs and becoming a better musician, so when you’re on the road it’s really enjoyable.

Bob: If you keep a love for music, than it’s not that big of a deal, it’s just something awesome to do.

– Going back to the duo days of Bob and Greta, how has your sound changed and evolved into the foursome band that we know today?
 
Bob: Well we have definitely learned about a lot more music. When Greta and I started, Greta had a small amount of musical knowledge, and I had a small amount, since than we have really made it a point to learn as much possible about different styles of music. And of course they had different musical backgrounds and now we have grown with each other.

Chris: Yeah, we have definitely rubbed off on each other.
 
Greta: Our tastes have rubbed off.
 
Bob: We have just learned a lot more music and been playing together a lot more, so we are a lot more…together.

– In the earlier days of the Hush Sound did you face any criticism or was everyone pretty supportive of you reaching your goals and trying to become famous?

Greta: Well we aren’t the kind of band that is all “Yeah, let’s be in a band to be famous!”, if we were just trying to be famous we probably would all be–

Bob: –Homeless (laughs). Well we were all just trying to have fun and play together and than we got offered a deal. Greta was planning on going to college, but we just wanted to play music together for as long as we possibly could.

Greta: The other thing is we’ve all been playing music pretty much our whole lives, it’s not like all of a sudden Darren picks up a drum set, plays one beat, and than gets signed to a rock band. It’s like, it’s a natural progression.
 
Chris: We didn’t just become a band or just in a band, we liked playing music in general before this. And if fame and fortune comes? That’s fine.

Darren: Yeah, it didn’t just happen; we played for fun before we became a band.
 
Greta: We definitely aren’t one of those see and be seen kind of bands. We’d probably rather stay at home and actually play than go out in a packed place and just kind of play.

– At previous shows you showed us a little glimpse of your new album by playing the song “Honey” from it, which hopefully you will do tonight?

Greta: No (laughs). It’s in a period of being worked on right now, so we actually aren’t going to play it. Bob and I are both singing it together now. It’s way neater.
 
– How is this album different than your others?

Greta: It is going to feel more like a Hush Sound record, not like in our last record where it was kind of being like a Greta song, a Bob song, it’s very distinct—our writing styles are very distinct— and I think that this record will be more like a collaborate effort, and hopefully just more energetic, more lyrically in depth, more everything.
 
Chris: More good.
 
Bob: More better.
 
Darren: More mature.

– How do you go about writing your lyrics? Do you have a special time or method to do it?

Greta: No it’s definitely whenever. I usually don’t actually write anything down, like I just keep a recording going until something happens and than I go back and think about them.
 
Bob: My best lyrics just kind of come out and than I just shape them later. I work a lot better when I write the song, then I write the melody, than write the lyrics. I almost hurry, than take my small time, than of course shape them later and tighten everything up; make everything final.

– So you always write the music before the lyrics.

Bob: Yeah, usually. Sometimes I’ll have an idea and I’ll be writing about it and than find a song or recall it at random.
 
Chris: Yeah a lot of times the melody will bring lyrics to mind, but it can all work the other way around; bringing a melody to mind.
 
Darren: Yeah. I was going to say that nothing is really constant in our band. It all depends.
 
Greta: Every time is like a different story.

– Is there a continual theme that runs throughout most of the music?

Greta: I don’t know if there is a continual theme.
 
Bob: I think there is but I just don’t think we can find it.
 
Greta: I guess what we are trying to go for essentially is having like a timeless record. I want to write songs that will still be hummed in 15 years. I hope that our lyrics don’t have that kind of nostalgic quality so that we can’t necessarily date them. Like apple computers…or Cadillacs—
 
Bob: —I think Cadillacs are pretty cool still.
 
– Do you have any bands or people in general that have inspired you?

Greta: Oh yeah. I mean this is a half hour long answer.
 
Darren: The Flaming Lips—

Greta: —Mo Town, Marvin Gaye, Ray Charles, Elliot Smith. A lot of 20’s and 30’s.
 
Chris: Yeah, a lot of classic rock and older music. 

Bob: One band that really inspires me is called This Is Me Smiling. I don’t know if you know them, but I just really admire the way that they all play with each other. They are an amazing band.

– What are some things you can’t live without on tour?

All: WATER.
 
Greta: My keyboard; my guitar.
 
Darren: We couldn’t live without each other…our instruments.
 
Bob: Chris can’t live without cream cheese, as was overtly taken from a recent article.
 
Chris: Right. I could live without peanuts but I can’t live without my cream cheese.
 
Greta: Chris can only live without peanuts.
 
– Are there any hobbies, aside from music, that you like to do now or did do when you were younger?
 
Darren: I was Darren the daredevil; I did little stunts. My friends would tie me up with duct tape and I’d like flip off of things.
 
Greta: I was into magic for a long time. Not the cards though, like actual magic. I was a magician.
 
Chris: I liked dragons. Dragons were amazing.
 
Bob: I used to think I was in the Truman Show forever. I remember doing things that would look cool on a TV show. I was on an archery team too. I played a lot of sports…football, baseball, basketball.
 
Chris: Arm wrestling.
 
Greta: Disco dance…karate…I played archery also.
 
Bob: Star wars.
 
Darren: Yo-yoing, video games.
 
Greta: Okay, pretty much any hobby that was ever a fad in America.
 
– My last question is for you Greta, how does it feel to be around boys constantly?

Greta: Aw I love these boys so much—
 
Bob: —Men.
 
Greta: I could honestly not imagine touring with a bunch of estrogen-emitting women all the time. I really love it. I have a brother and I grew up around him and all of his friends, so I’m used to that kind of camaraderie. They are way more laid back than a lot of my girlfriends, and that’s really nice.
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Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: Like-Vines, So-Sudden, The-Hush-Sound

Hawthorne Heights Interview – July 25th, 2007

July 28, 2007 By Andrea Hubbell 6 Comments

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When the Cute is What We Aim For interview didn’t pull through, and I was given the opportunity to interview another band in place of CIWWAF, I knew immediately that I had to conduct one with Hawthorne Heights. They’re just overall a great band. So I interviewed Eron Bucciarelli, drummer of Hawthorne Heights. Obviously I didn’t have time for any research, so the questions are leaning towards generic, but Eron gave great answers, so enjoy!

Thanks to Ashley, Vienna, John, Bri, and especially Eron for all of your help!

Could you please tell me your name, a little bit about how you joined the band, and what role you have in the band?

My name is Eron Bucciarelli. I play drums for Hawthorne Heights. We formed in Dayton, Ohio in 2001, but we were originally called A Day in the Life. I was playing in other bands around Dayton, and I ran into the guys in A Day in the Life. At that point, only Micah and JT were in the band. Their drummer quit and they asked me to join because they knew I was more serious about playing music, so I joined. Then Casey joined after that, and finally Matt joined the band, and at that point we figured, “we have all of these second generation members of A Day in the Life, so why don’t we just start over”? New name, new songs, everything, and that’s what we did.

What were your goals as a band when you all first came together?

We wanted to play music on a professional level. Music is our passion. It’s what drives us every day. We’ve all been out there, we’ve all worked regular jobs, and we don’t like it. We love music, and it’s what we want to do. So when we formed, we tried to find people that had like-minded goals, and that’s the reason that we had so many member changes when we were A Day in the Life. It took awhile for us to figure out who was serious and was going to dedicate all of the necessary time into being a professional band. So once we found that group of people, we changed the name, and started over as Hawthorne Heights, and we’ve been together as the same group of people ever since.

So you were more fueled by your passion for music than for fame or anything of that sort?

Absolutely. I mean, if the fame came, that would be awesome, but it wasn’t something that we necessarily thought about and I remember thinking when our first record was released, we were hoping that we would sell ten or twenty thousand copies, just so we could tour nonstop and be a band and make a living off of it. Things just took off and our goals were definitely exceeded, so we were happy.

So you’re saying that you were really surprised that you got as famous as you did and that you were successful in that area, right?

Absolutely. We never really expected any of this and the fact that, you know, this is the second time that we’ve done Warped Tour and we’re on magazine covers and MTV and all of that stuff, it’s pretty insane to think about. It’s definitely a dream come true, and we’re grateful for every second of it that we get to do.

When did you first get signed to a record label, and did you have different ones to choose from, or was it just one in particular?

From the moment we changed our name to Hawthorne Heights (that was summer of 2003), we sought out to get on a record label, because up until then we had released records on our own, and we did alright, but the only way somebody could hear our music was if they went to our show and they bought a CD there. So we wanted to be on a record label and we sent out demos to probably about thirty different record labels. We definitely had a bunch of interests in several different labels. Victory was the most aggressive in pursuing us at the time and at that point, we had never heard anything band about the label, so we thought that that would be the best place for us.

What genre of music would you consider the band to be, and do you think it’s changed over the years as you’ve been producing new albums?

I think we’ve always been pigeon holed as emo or screamo and I don’t really consider us to be emo or screamo. I consider us to be a rock band. We have emo influences for sure. We have hardcore influences and rock influences and pop influences, classic rock, metal, all across the board. But I don’t think we sound like a true emo band. To me, a real emo band is…

Just kind of hardcore screaming?

No, not necessarily that. A real emo band is like Sunny Day Real Estate or the Get Up Kids (I don’t know if you’re familiar). Those are emo bands and I don’t think we sound like those bands. I think we’re definitely influenced by those bands because that’s what we listened to when we were growing up. I’d say we’re a rock band.

Are there any other bands in particular that have really influenced you and your sound?

It’s hard to say any particular band because we all have such a wide variety of influences. The stuff I listen to isn’t the same thing that Micah or JT listens to. When I was growing up, I was listening to a lot of the old school New York hardcore and classic rock, like Led Zepplin and stuff like that, but then I’d go and listen to Quicksand. Our influences are just all over the board. There isn’t one particular band that we can pick out and say, “that’s what we’re trying to be like”. I mean, some bands do that, and definitely have that one influence where they’re just like, “Man, if we could be what that band is like, we’d love it.”

That’s good, though, because then you kind of have a blend that makes you a better band overall.

Absolutely.

When did you decide to become involved in the music scene and decide that you didn’t want a regular job, that you wanted to be doing this?

For me that started when I was really young. I grew up in New Jersey in a town called Princeton. It was right in the middle of the state. At that time when I was starting to discover music and go into shows, there was a lot going on, a lot of hardcore bands were playing in my town. There was a venue in my town specifically that had a lot of shows and that was awesome for me. I got exposed to a lot of music and I think it was around that point that I was like, “Wow, this is great. I want to do this.” I wanted to have some kind of involvement in the industry, whether it be putting on shows myself, which I did at that time, or being in a band, or working at a record label, or something like that.

So when did you really start to pursue that? Was that just right after you finished school, you decided to kind of go for that kind of thing?

No, I mean, before I went to college, I definitely was trying to get into a band and tour. That didn’t happen for me at that point before I went to college. I went off to college and at that point I figured, “Oh, I’m too old to be in a band”, which was kind of silly looking back at it, but at that point I sort of figured, “All right, I’ll get a job in the music industry”, and that’s what I was planning on doing, and then I started playing in bands and found some other people that were serious, and now we’re here.

So, you say the name changed? How did the band come up with the name Hawthorne Heights? Where did that come from?

To tell you the truth, Matt, our bass player, came up with the name. It doesn’t really mean anything. We used to tell people that it was a reference to Nathaniel Hawthorne, but that was just to try and make us sound smarter. It really doesn’t have a meaning. We just thought it sounded cool. It didn’t pigeon whole us to one particular style of music, you know, whereas if you look at a lot of other bands today, you can tell exactly where they got their name. So that’s how we kind of settled on the name Hawthorne Heights.

What about the original name?

A Day in the Life is a Beatles song. It’s one of our favorite Beatles songs. It’s on Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Heart’s Club Band. It’s the last song, and it’s an amazing song, probably one of the greatest songs they ever wrote. And we’re big Beatles fans. You’ve gotta listen to Sergeant Pepper’s, it’s probably one of the best.

So how was it when you first started playing shows?

As Hawthorne Heights, or A Day in the Life, or both?

As Hawthorne Heights.

As Hawthorne Heights, it was actually a little bit different because we had already toured as a band as A Day in the Life for a couple of years and released records on our own, so when we changed the name to Hawthorne Heights we didn’t really play out as much because at that point we knew what we wanted to do, where we wanted to be, and we tried to achieve that goal and in doing so, we spent probably three or four months just demoing songs to send them off to labels. We would write a song, listen to it, rewrite it and just do that over and over again, and it probably took us about three months to write just three songs, to sort of just fine tune what we wanted to sound like because we sound a little different from A Day in the Life, and we really wanted to figure out what we were going to sound like and who we were going to be. So we didn’t play very many shows at that time. We played a couple around town to just test songs out and we didn’t tour out as Hawthorne Heights as we did when we were A Day in the Life. When we were A Day in the Life, we would go touring every weekend and then come back and go to work the next Monday.

Did you get a good reaction from the shows that you did play?

We did, and we were getting a lot of good feedback from our hometown crowd, and that was encouraging. Regardless of that, we knew that we were writing better songs than we were when we were A Day in the Life, and we were excited about them.

What message do you really try to convey through your music to the world and your fans?

JT writes lyrics that relate to personal relationships a lot of times. He uses metaphors of love and heartbreak, even though a lot of the songs aren’t necessarily about that kind of thing. Some of the songs are about having a dysfunctional family and growing up with your dad not there and other songs are about the dangers of being out on the road and how fragile our lives are. But there isn’t really any political message behind our songs.

It’s just a wide variety of topics?

Definitely.

Which Hawthorne Heights song would you say is your favorite song?

My favorite song is probably our song, “This is Who We Are”. It’s the first song off of our second record. That’s only out of the songs that are released right now. We’ve written twenty-three new songs for our next record and I’m really excited about them. We have a lot of awesome songs on there that I’m so excited to hopefully play and record soon. So out of those songs, though, there’s a song called “The End of the Underground” and “Sugar in the Engine” which I really, really like because they’re kind of darker, a little more moody. They’re kind of along the lines of our song Niki FM in a little way, but it’s sort of Niki FM to the next level, and I really like them.

When are you expecting to have everything recorded and out and ready for release?

We’re planning, hopefully, on recording right after Warped Tour. That’s still contingent on several things, because we’re in the process of suing our record label, Victory Records, for several reasons, and there’s still some things that need to get worked out before we’re ready to go into the studio and release that record. We’re hoping to have it out as soon as possible, which could be most realistically early next year, February, I would imagine.

So that would be, what, two years after your second album?

Yeah, two years after “If Only You Were Lonely”.

So, basically, you’re not planning on releasing any other singles off of this album that’s currently out?

No, only because we’re in that lawsuit and they won’t release anything else. Otherwise, we probably would.

Aside from which song is your favorite, which song do you think gets the best reaction from an audience when you play at Warped or wherever?

There are two songs, I think: “Where Can I Stab Myself in the Ears”, which is one of the last songs off of our second record. Gosh, we’ve been fortunate, because it’s nice having two records. I don’t want to sound cocky or arrogant because I’m not, but we have two records now, so there’s a couple singles off of each record, so our whole set is just like the singles, so people know a lot of the songs, so it’s all set between “This is Who We Are”, “Where Can I Stab Myself in the Ears”, but I think only because we try to get the crowd to do a really big circle pit so it gets pretty wild. And then “Ohio is for Lovers”, because I think that’s the song that most people know us for.

How has it been being on Warped Tour?

Warped Tour’s great! Every day, the crowds are amazing, there are thousands of people watching you, even when you’re opening up the stage one day, which we did today. There are always great crowds. There are so many other bands that we know and we’re friends with, and other bands that we’re not friends with that are just great to listen to. I think that’s what makes Warped Tour probably just one of the best summer tours, just that diversity of bands. There’s so much going on for the fans and for the bands themselves. It’s like one big sort of community. It’s fun.

Okay, I guess I just have one more question for you. Sorry that I’ve been keeping you for awhile. What would you say to your fans that you haven’t yet had the chance to meet?

We are still very much a band. I think there were a lot of rumors going around when we sued our label that we were going to break up but we’re stronger for it. A lot of fans are concerned about us ditching all of the screaming but there’s some screaming on these songs. It’s not in every song but it’s still there. But yeah, we love you, and come out and see us sometime!

Well, thanks a lot! I did see you guys play earlier and I thought you guys were really good.

No problem, and thank you!

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: Eron-Bucciarelli, Hawthorne Heights, Warped Tour

The Rocket Summer Interview

July 16, 2007 By Tyler Hayes Leave a Comment

trsinterview.jpg

You’re about to put out a new record and it will probably blow up but what inspires you and keeps you moving?

I know that I play music to try to bring hope. I went through some rough times in my life where I feel like I was pulled out of a lot of crap supernaturally so when people say that this music has affected them in terrible times of their life, that’s what keeps me going.

What is the record “Do You Feel” about? Is there any constant themes running through the whole album?

There are definitely different themes on the record. But as far as the song Do You Feel as well as a few others the theme of wanting to do greater things for our world but not because our own daily issues get in the way is a theme that goes throughout the album. It’s something I’ve been dealing with in my own life so naturally it came out in this record.

I’ve heard brief things as to what the song “a song is not a business plan” is about but for those haven’t can you go into a little about what it’s about and how the song came about?

I wrote that song on a day where I felt a tad discouraged about my hard work and feeling the pressures to write music like_________ insert brand new cutesy emo band names that all sound alike that had just formed. I wrote it after my van broke down for the 100th time on the side of the road. Ha, it’s definitely got a hint of bitterness. But it’s something that I got over but was immortalized in a song ha.

You played all the instruments on your other records, is that the case for the newest one as well?

I played all of the instruments on “Do You Feel” except for the Horns on So Much Love and High Life Scenery. We got some slammin good dudes to play those, actually the guys who played on Stevie Wonder’s Sir Duke.

Is touring something that has become second nature or something that you get excited about? What are some of the hard things about being gone for 3 months at a time?

Touring is honestly my life. We are freakin road dogs. We play hundreds of shows a year and it honestly doesn’t really get old, it’s what I do. The only thing that gets old is when you get sick and need to go the DR. or need a check up or something and you have zero days off and you’re across the world. It’s harder to take care of yourself.

Who are some of the bands that you are good friends with have they influenced you music at all?

We’ve toured with a lot of great bands, hellogoodbye, Relient K, ash, the format. Tons of bands! As far as if they have influenced the sound of my music, probably not but they are great dudes who write great music so … maybe?

Let’s talk about “to write love on her arms” for minute. How did you get involved with the charity and why did you?

Renee, the girl who it was originally based on is a friend of mine so it was natural to get involved. TRS is very much a thing that is full of wanting to help so we try to get involved with things like this as well as invisible children and other things.

What are some of the records you’ve been listening to lately? What have been some of your favorites to come out this year?

I love the new Ryan Adams record and I LOVE the new Wilco.

Was the jump to a major label simply a progressive one in the time line of the band or were there more reasons? If so what are some of the things you hope to accomplish by being on a major label?

It was time I think. I think I’m ready for the challenges of being on a major and hopefully more people will hear the music because of it.

What are your thoughts on the music industry, what are the problems that affect you as an artist?

It’s definitely changing and I’m thrilled that I’m in a place where I can do this for a living. There are plenty of problems with it though so I don’t know where to start. My record comes out in 4 days that I have put my life into for a year; I have no room in my life for negativity about the music industry. I can’t afford it, must be all good vibes!

Everything is moving in the digital direction, do you have any thoughts on the DRM (Copy protection) issue?

I think if a record has affected you and you like it, then you should buy it. It’s not easy starving to make records. I would love to continue to make music and people; it’s in your hands.

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: The Rocket Summer

Boys Night Out Interview – July 13th, 2007

July 14, 2007 By Adam Weidman Leave a Comment

Boys Night Out

Thanks so much to Jerry from Warm Fuzzy PR, and Connor of Boys Night Out for their time!

Thank you for the opportunity for this interview, could please state your name and role in the band.
They call me Connor. I sing for the rock & roll outfit known as Boys Night Out. Thank YOU for the opportunity to enhance my typing and communication skills.

As it says in your bio, the self-titled album is a definitive statement. Is this the direction the music will be taking in the future?
It does say that in the bio, doesn’t it? Neat. Well, for us the ultimate goal when writing this record was to have a collection of songs that we would want to play over and over again; something that defines us as we are at this moment in time. Having achieved that goal, who’s to say what the future holds? I generally prefer to leave the future to its own devices and instead, focus on the present. Maybe the next record will be a collection of campfire songs. Who knows?

I’ve really enjoyed listening to the album this past week. Did you intentionally attempt to make a catchier, possibly more commercial records?
First of all, thanks for enjoying your listening experience. As far as an intentional foray into the “commercial” realm is concerned, I would say no. To this day I still think that most of what’s considered modern “commercial” music is – for the most part – boring and unoriginal. Obviously there are exceptions, but those exceptions just help prove the rule. Now, making a “catchier” record? I’m for it! Sign me up! I’ve always liked songs that I can sing along to, but that ultimately has something to say. This record is definitely more “chorus based” (hookier? Is that a word?) than our past efforts. In the end, if commercial radio wants to come hang out with us…hell…we’re down – but, we wouldn’t want to have to sacrifice our own voice to have a seat at their table.

Lou Giordano has been responsible for so many hit records, when you were writing the album did you feel that you wanted him to produce it?
Actually, working with Lou was a happy accident. Originally we had planned to do the album with somebody else (who ultimately had to back out in order to work on something more “lucrative”). After that, we learned that Lou happened to be available and enthusiastic about working on the same kind of record that we were looking to make. After we had looked into some of the other albums he had produced we decided that it would be a goddamn foolish mistake to pass up a chance to work with somebody of Lou’s caliber. He’s amazing at what he does, and he understood exactly where we wanted to go with this record. It was a great pairing.

What is the song writing process like for the band?
Generally somebody (Jeff, most often…but, more recently Dave and Andy as well) will bring the beginnings of a song to the rest of the band and we’ll all build something around the skeleton. One of my favorite things about being a part of this band is that everybody brings something unique to the table for every song. Once we have the instrumental foundations ready to go, the song is mine to do whatever I want – lyrically – with it. There are variations on that process, but that’s how it’s usually done.

Individually, what are some of your musical influences?
We all grew up in the punk rock / hardcore / emo / indie scene of Southern Ontario in the early to mid 90’s and some of us had even spent time playing together in various other bands. Our music has always reflected that musical upbringing. On top of that basic, underlying foundation we pretty much all enjoy listening to pretty much anything from old folk / gospel / country / music from the 20’s and 30’s to classic rock from the 60’s and 70’s to metal bands from the 70’s and 80’s to well… basically we dig music in general. On any given day, in our van you’ll hear anything from The Carter Family to Pantera. From Bob Dylan to Cap’n Jazz. From CCR to Third Eye Blind. From 7 Seconds to Joanna Newsom. We like jams…we LOVE jams.

Do you feel that an old vibe is back in the group with Ben Arseneau returning?
Definitely. It’s essentially like a family reunion with Shitty Ben back in the band. He’s the Bees Knees.

How has the current tour been? Also what are the future touring plans for the rest of the year?
So far it’s been a blast. The shows have been great and all the dudes in June, Emanuel and Olympia are always down to party. We had to cancel today’s show in Baltimore due to me getting my damn-fool-self sick and not being able to sing, but other than that it’s been totally radical. Once we finish this headlining tour we’ll be meeting up with Scary Kids Scaring Kids and touring with them until the end of August. After that we’re planning on traveling across Canada and then possibly heading down to Australia for a week or so. Basically our schedule is jam packed for the rest of the year.

How do you spend your down time while on the road?
It varies. Sometimes we’ll go out to a bar or two. Maybe have a hotel jam. Read a delightful novel. Play some Scrabble. Maybe even take in some fine cinema. Any time’s a good time for anything.

Is there a big transition from playing in Canada to playing in the U.S.?
Not at all It’s remarkably similar actually. Our Countries may differ politically or what have you, but a rock concert is a rock concert no matter what side of the border you’re on.

What gave you the idea to create the mockumentary “Dude, You Need to Stop Dancing?”
Uh…Well… we’re idiots and we like making fun of ourselves. We then combined that love with a parody of bands we’ve met and toured with who take themselves way too seriously. What you end up with is what came out of “Dude…”

Who created the concept for the new video for “Up With Me”?
That would be the brilliant and charming Marc Ricciardelli who also happened to direct the video. Visually, the video portrays – eerily well – what the song was saying musically and lyrically. Marc was also responsible for the video to our song “Medicating.”

I found Trainwreck to be one of the best concept albums made; do you have any desire to write another one down the line?
ThankYa kindly. That’s some pretty high praise, dude. Would we make another one, though? Perhaps. We’d have to have a really strong story to tell before we even thought about it, though.

What is the story behind the song “Let Me Be Your Swear Word?”
There’s no real story, really. It’s more of a collection of stories. I’ll leave it at that since I’ve never really been a fan of explaining lyrics too much. Take from that puppy what you will.

I cannot thank you enough for your time; do you have any final thoughts or statements for our readers?
You’re welcome. It was my pleasure. It was a good way to spend some time while I rest up and get ready for tomorrow’s show in Virginia Beach. Final thoughts or statements? Well…uh…check out our new record. Check out our website (http://boysnightout.com) for tour dates and come say hi. Check out the video for “Up With Me.” Also… remember kids music is everywhere. Some of the best music out there isn’t being featured in magazines or played on the television/radio. Seek it out. Rock and roll.

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: Boys-Night-Out

The Spill Canvas Interview – June 14th, 2007

July 9, 2007 By Reema Desai Leave a Comment

the spill canvas

I recently got to sit down for a phone interview with Nick of The Spill Canvas to talk about the band’s upcoming record, tours and more. Thank you very much to Nick for talking to us, and Sarah for setting everything up!

So firstly, where are you right now?
Nick: Sioux Falls, South Dakota…where we live!


Did you guys do any recording there?

N: No, we’ve recorded here before though. This is where we recorded the first record, but really right now its just kind of where we reside (laughs).

So is the recording for the new album done?
N: The new album is basically done. We’re done recording, we just haven’t done the mixing yet.

Where did you guys record it?
N: it was recorded in LA, in Hollywood.

Can you describe it a little bit?
N: Yeah, you know its definitely a lot different than anything we’ve ever done. We tried to just to concentrate on a lot of different styles that we’re able to do, and we kind of just went for it in ever aspect. We’re really excited for it and we hope people will appreciate it or at least, fans will enjoy it.


Was it easier this time around since you guys have done a couple of albums now?

N: Yeah, it was a lot easier to get things rolling. i think we wrote roughly thirty songs for this next record, and obviously we couldn’t choose all of them, but we definitely knew it was getting a little easier than the times before. It was pretty cool to have that advantage and know what our dynamics as a band were.

So the EP was released a little over a month ago. Why did you decide to put out the EP between the two albums?
N: Well, we basically had time when we were here when we were home over the holidays, and we started thinking that when we were going to be recording the new record it wouldn’t really be out until this fall. That would have been a little over two years in between the last record and the new record so we had time and we figured, why not put out something, a little something. Some new songs and covers, just something for our fans to have before the next record came out. It was mainly a big thing for fans. We just wanted to give back to give back a little bit.

The EP also has a couple of covers on it. How did you decide to put those on?
N: One of the covers is Gold Dust Woman by Fleetwood Mac and that one… we’re just huge Fleetwood Mac fans. It was pretty crazy to be able to do something like that. The other song was an acoustic number, Catch The Wind and that was by Donovan, who’s kind of like a Bob Dylan. That cover was actually recommended by the head of Warner Music Group. When he recommends something its kind of like oh wow. It was a very great honor to even get a recommendation so we were kind of like “oh, lets check it out”, and we listened to the song. We decided that it just worked perfectly for my voice, and everything just kind of fit well so that’s how that one happened.

Did you guys already know that you wanted to have covers on it, so you just picked songs or was it the other way around?
N: Yeah, basically it was just picking what songs. We went through a lot and, we picked a lot of more current songs too like songs from the nineties and stuff. We actually decided to go with something from the seventies, and a little bit early just because we wanted to see how well we could cross barriers like that. We’re just such fans of all kinds of music so for us to be able to bridge the gap, and get out of the realm of all the normal bands in our genre, and showcase that we were able to do that.

You guys were named one of the 100 bands to watch in 2007 by Alternative Press. What do you think about that?!
N: It’s awesome. That’s just such a crazy honor to me. There’s just so much good music out there, so to be able to be recognized as something that people enjoy, and something that somebody would actually consider good… it was just such an honor. We’re lucky to be a part of such a cool group of musicians and artists, so we could not be happier.

So a couple of months ago you guys designed a guitar hero controller that was auctioned for charity. How did that come about?
N: A bunch of other bands had done it, and we got approached via our label management. We just never really get the opportunity to do anything for cool charities like that, cause things have always just slipped though our fingers. It was one of the first things that we got to do, and it has just been so cool. We just slapped a ton of stickers on it and spray painted it a little bit. It just just a fun thing, because we’re a very quiet group of guys so it’s kind of like we don’t ever get out and do anything like that. It was just great do to something like that for once.

Do you guys play a lot of Guitar Hero?
N: Yes, we do! We played it so much in the studio.

Who would you say in the band is best at it?
N: Oh man, I would say Landon, our new bass player. He can play on expert level or whatever hard level, and he’s so good at it. I admire his Guitar Hero abilities (laughs).

What is your favorite Spill Canvas song and why?
N: Oh wow. Well, I have to make the question easier for me to answer, because I love pretty much all the new stuff that no one’s ever heard before, so that’s not really fair to everybody! Out of anything that’s already been recorded, I really love the song To Live Without It off the new EP. It just came out really naturally, and that’s kind of how a lot of the new stuff came out. I love Staplegunned so much too, I don’t know, it’s so hard to choose but those would have to be the two.

So you guys are going to be on Warped Tour this year. Are you excited?
N: Yes, very! We have the chance to do the entire span of the tour, and it will be the first time we’ve gotten to do all of it.

Are there certain cities that you like to tour in most?
N: Yes. Warped Tour’s definitely a little different. The cities on Warped Tour are so different. If it were a tour we were on with just a few other bands, we love playing the east coast, the upper east coast, northeast area. Anywhere in the west coast is amazing.


What are your tour plans after Warped Tour?

N: We’ll be doing another tour. We’re right now just setting up our first headliner to support the new record which is supposed to come out in the fall. We’re just kind of getting details for that, and I think we’ll know before Warped Tour what the headlining tour line up will be and all that stuff. Maybe get some tour dates in the works too, so we will know soon!

What would your ideal tour be?
N: Oh wow, there’s just so many bands that I’d love to tour with. If I had to choose, I would say Saves The Day just because they’re one of my all time favorite bands, and they got me into writing music. If you were talking, any style or genre, I would say Saves The Day, Van Morrison and probably Damien Rice. They have all been really huge influences on me, as musicians. It would just be awesome. Oh, and maybe U2 also.

What music have you been listening to lately?
N: I’ve been listening to the new Circa Survive a lot, I love that band so much. A lot of Van Morrison, the new Bright Eyes record; I’ve never really been a huge Bright Eyes fan, but his new record is definitely worth checking out. I’m also constantly addicted to The Format, they’re just such a great band.

How would you compare the music you listen to now to the music you listened to 5 or 10 years ago?
N: It’s definitely a lot more broad. I appreciate all kinds of music now as opposed to when I was younger, I was very strict on listening to only one kind of music, you know? Now, I just love all kinds, anything that’s good.

Well that’s all I have. Is there anything else you would like to add?
N: I don’t think so, I think I’m good. I appreciate it though.

Ok well thanks so much for talking to us.
N: Thank you, I appreciate everything.

Filed Under: Interviews, News Tagged With: The Spill Canvas

Set Your Goals Interview – May 27th, 2007

June 27, 2007 By Manuel Enrique Garcia 1 Comment

Set Your Goals

This Set Your Goals interview took place on May 27th, 2007 in the band’s van before their Richmond, VA show. Thank you to Jordan and Matt for taking the time out to do the interview and being great guys. Check out Set Your Goals on tour and make sure you own a copy of their latest record, “Mutiny”.

– State your name and position in the band.

Jordan: My name is Jordan and I sing in Set Your Goals.

– Give a brief history of the band and the origin of the name.

Jordan: Set Your Goals came from the CIV album, Set Your Goals. We picked it up when we finished recording a demo. The song clicked, the whole album clicked, but mainly the lyrics of the songs. What we wanted to do with the band at that time and them being an influence on our music as well kind of worked out. We started in 2004 in Mike’s garage, jamming out some songs for fun. Slowly but surely, it became more of a serious project for us. And now we have been doing it for going on three and a half years.

– How would you describe this tour compared to other tours?

Jordan: This tour compared to other tours? Um, well we got arrested yesterday and that has never happened before. We were enjoying a smoothie snack in the mall, some of the employees had come to the show the night before. So we started singing and chanting a song for them and we got arrested on disorderly conduct on being too loud in the mall. It was pretty ridiculous but the irony of it is that we’re on the Snacksidents Happen Tour, so it was a major snacksident. That’s kind of different, but besides that, it’s a different line of bands. We’ve done a lot of cool tours where it has been different styles, this one we had to come out with some friends of ours, a band called Fireworks, we got to do a full run with them. Along with Driving East, they’re from Fairfax, and then Just Surrender. It’s the first time on tour with all these bands, but all bands that we have been fans of.

– What do you love and hate seeing happen at one of your shows?

Jordan: Love when kids get along and sing along, all kinds of different people can come out and enjoy themselves. It obviously sucks when you have little tiffs sometimes, but it rarely happens. I think people assume it happens more often then not, just because of the kind of music we play is appealing to so many different kinds of people. It really doesn’t happen all that often, but we get bummed when it does, we have to stop our set and make sure everyone is all right. We just like seeing people come out, we like people being able to come up and talk to us at shows, being the approachable people we are.

– Are there any plans to record a new record soon? If so, what can the fans expect differently?

Jordan: We don’t have any plans, we don’t have any recording dates right now. We would definitely like to start writing some new material. We’re still so focused on “Mutiny”. Going out into Warped Tour with that, we really want to push again like we did last summer, because I think we are going to reach a bigger audience and people that haven’t heard any of the songs before. We are definitely thinking about that we would like to put another album out, we feel that we owe everyone at least one more record, if not another one after that. At least one more because so many people have seen our success this far, we want to give back and give them something else.

As far as the new material goes, it would just be, the way that the EP evolved into what “Mutiny” became. It’s going to be the same with “Mutiny” going into another record. Lots of the same element and maybe something new in there. It’s really hard to say right now. We’re just on tour so much, it’s hard to write.

– In your opinion, how has the band progressed since it was started, musically and lyrically?

Jordan: Um, lyrically we’ve done it the same way. We try to think of stuff that people can identify with, like real life situations. We’ve gotten to write about a lot more things than we did on the EP, obviously there were more songs and more material to cover. We’ve gone through a lot more as a band. Musically, like the EP times ten. We took the hardcore elements, and we would write hardcore songs. We took the rock elements, and we would write rock songs. And kind of throw it all in there. We also have been getting into a lot more current artists, I guess you could say. You know, when we started it was all about, we wanted to pay tribute to bands that kind of started it for us. And now current artists are even influencing us.

Like who?

Jordan: Like lately, we have been listening to Memorial a lot.
Matt: The new Anberlin.
Jordan: The new Anberlin is really good, yeah they did a really good record. What am I rocking this year? I’m into stuff these guys aren’t into like this artist Regina Spektor, I think she’s awesome. Have you heard of her before?

Yeah, she’s really good but really different.

Jordan: Ah man, she’s so out there, that’s the main thing I like about her. She tells these really cool stories. So I got into that and then, I don’t know, just all kinds of stuff. Do you have any more that you’re into?
Matt: I can’t think of any.
Jordan: Ah, I can’t think of any. I know I’ve gotten a bunch of new records but I can’t think of anything that’s come out.
Matt: I like the new Brand New.

Yeah, it’s way different but still really good.

Jordan: It’s so good. Oh, this is Matt. Say your name.
Matt: Hi, I’m Matt, I sing.

-What do you see as the biggest issue with the music industry?

Jordan leaves the van to put away some weights he was using before the interview.

Matt: I think as far as sincerity and the personal aspect of the business, it has sort of gone downhill. I don’t know, I’m obviously seeing a different side of it, now that I’m in a band and we’re actually doing bigger tours with bigger bands and meeting a lot of industry people. It seems like when I got into it, it was a lot more personal and people helped each other out. Now, it’s all about business. No one is out to help anyone else out, they’re just out for themselves. I think that kind of sucks.

And even with a lot of the bands that aren’t that way, end up being that way.

Matt: Yeah, because it’s acceptable and they see everyone else doing it. That’s my biggest issue, you know? We’re not out here to make money, we’re just here because we want to play music we want to have fun in. If we didn’t do that, then we wouldn’t be on tour. And I feel like there are a lot of bands that aren’t doing that.

Jordan enters the van again.

Jordan: All you hear, when you get to the level we’ve gotten to, is “sound scan” and all these terms over and over. Part of you does want to pay more attention to it and we have to be a little smarter on the business side of it. But at the same time, a tour like this is such perfect example of how tours should be. Even the Anti-Flag tour was a good example, because that was a really high profile tour. But they still kept it fun, it wasn’t about, it was like, yeah you had your responsibilities, but after you executed them, everyone would just let loose and have a good time. And now it’s just about the music again. It’s a good balance.

Matt: I’ve talked to other bands that have been on tour, where if they don’t talk to anyone else on tour, then they just show up, play, and go to the next show.

Yeah, and they don’t talk to their fans or do anything else.

Matt: Yeah, it’s so impersonal. Why would you do that? I just don’t understand it.

Those are the people that buy your records, go to your shows, buy your shirts, and spread the word.

Jordan: Yeah totally, it sucks.

– What is your opinion of the people that question SYG being a “hardcore” band?

Matt: Yeah, the whole “hardcore” term gets thrown around a lot. We didn’t set out to start a hardcore band, we set out to start a more melodic band than most of the hardcore bands. We were in the Bay Area scene every week, I don’t know, I’m trying to sum this up in the right way. We didn’t set out to have that label. We are all hardcore kids, we all grew up, met each other through hardcore shows. Obviously there is going to be that association. We’ve toured with a bunch of our friends, hardcore bands, and we all enjoy hardcore music, but as soon as you put that term in, it just sort of gets thrown around a lot. People will start saying you’re exploiting hardcore or you’re not hardcore enough. It’s like, we’re not trying to label ourselves and say, “Hey, we’re a hardcore band.” We’re writing the music we want to hear.

I think if people are attacking you for not being a hardcore band, then they have something else to worry about, like attacking a band simply because of the genre that is put on them by the people.

Jordan: I don’t see why people put so much thought into it, if anything, they are putting so much of their thought and they are giving us so much attention. They could be doing so many other things with their lives then worrying whether we’re a hardcore band or not. Why should it anger them so much?

Yeah, even if someone labeled you as a rap band.

Matt: Yeah, I don’t like to label us. What’s the point of that?

The music is still the same, the message is still the same.

Jordan: Yeah, totally.

– In your own words, how would you define what “hardcore” is?

Jordan: Hardcore is an idea, it’s a subculture. I don’t know, to me it’s punk rock. It was a place for me to go in high school when I didn’t want to go to parties and I didn’t want to go to football games. I just didn’t identify with that social click. It was something new and something we could call our own thing. I remember going to The List, I remember when I found that. There is a list and it has every show happening within an hour of you. When I found that, it was my personal savior. I was so bored in that time of my life and I didn’t feel like doing all this other stuff, I would just sit at home and play Playsation all day. I found that list and I started going to shows left and right. I would find one band that I recognized on the bill, and then I would learn about all these other bands. And then every show that they would play, I would go to show.

Matt: Same here. That dude that does the list used to come out to every show and hand out the list. I came to other bands and learned about other shows. I mean, hardcore to me is a lot like punk. The attitude of not being able to relate to what is going on around you, society, school, or whatever. Just going to a show and feeling like that is the place you actually belong, something you can relate to. It’s basically the same thing as punk, just a little more aggressive.

Jordan: Yeah, I was going to say that it’s a little bit more aggressive and a little bit more dedicated. We play with a band called Resilience from the North Bay, where we live, and they’re a punk band, but I consider them more of a hardcore band because they’re a band that gets out there and tours and makes something happened. And that to me is what hardcore is, getting something done.

Matt: Without punk I would of definitely not gotten into hardcore.

– So far, what has been the biggest achievement in the band’s history?

Matt: There are so many already.

Jordan: I don’t know what the biggest is but this year alone we have done the highest profile tour to date we’ve ever done and it turned out to be one of the most fun tours. It was the Anti-Flag Tour. That was a big accomplishment. I’ve always wanted to be at that level where it’s not like a rock star level where you are pampered, you still have to work. Even that band works everyday. But you are also comfortable on tour. We had meals everyday, we were able to afford gas to every show, we got to meet and greet a ton of new people. I think that was a big achievement. Then the whole “Mutiny” record for me was a big milestone for my life. I always wanted to do a good sounding record, work with a really cool producer. It was a huge accomplishment in my life.

Matt: Funny you ask us this because about a year before we started this band, I made a checklist of all these things I wanted to do before I die. One was start a band, one was take that band as far as I can take it, release a record, tour the world. Here I am a few years later and I’ve done a lot of things on that list. One of the biggest achievements for me, personally, was playing with Gorilla Biscuits. That’s my favorite hardcore band of all time. The fact that they were doing a reunion tour and I not only got to go to eight of the shows, we played with them. I don’t know, it was unreal for me. Best night of my life for a week straight.

– If the band had to revolve the new record’s lyrics on a book, which book would it be and why?

Matt: Oh man, I don’t know. For me it would be Slaughter House Five because that’s one of my favorite books ever. Maybe 1984.
Jordan: Why Slaughter House Five?
Matt: I don’t know, there is a lot of social commentary in that book that I agree with. I think it would be a cool way to open people’s eyes to the way the world is. I don’t know, the way that book is written, I don’t know. Haha.

Jordan: This is like really cliché, but last year I got really back into literature a lot more, so I haven’t, like in high school I would do require reading. The first few years out of high school I didn’t do any reading and last year I got back into it a little bit. So this would be really a really cliché book to mention but I would say right now A Catcher In The Rye. Just because his ideas were so philosophical, but so relative. It was just easy to get. Anyone could read it and be like “I totally get this.” Everyone feels like they’re Holden Caulfield.

Matt: He’s a character everyone could relate to.

Jordan: I actually wanted to write a song called “Who is Jane Gallagher?” I remember when I finished reading this book, I was like “I really want to meet this girl. Who is this girl that he is so in love with but can’t get to.” So yeah, I really like that book.

– What is main goal behind the band and what how do you hope the band is remembered in forty years?

Matt: I would like to be remembered as a band that actually stood for something and made a positive impact on the music scene, whether it be with our lyrics, with our music, with our shows, or something we did that made the music industry better. If we were able to improve it in any way, I would feel honored.

Jordan: And like to be view all those bands and it be the reason why we started, to be able to do that for a younger generation.

Yeah, someone starts the band because you guys influenced them.

Jordan: Yeah, and keep it going.

Matt: Like Jordan has said in a lot of interviews, to be a sort of gateway drug to bands influence us.

Jordan: Yeah, that’s the best analogy we can use.

– If you had to compile a list of things that the fans don’t know about the band, what would be on the list?

Matt: Joe can’t hear around corners.
Jordan: Haha. We did a Valentine’s bulletin and I wish we had the list right now, you could just summit that. We just made all these inside jokes about Joe.
Matt: Oh yeah, for April Fool’s Day. It’s pretty outrageous. Some lesser-known facts about our bassist Joe.

Jordan: Everyone sort of has their own little offbeat. Dave is into fantasy stuff, I guess he is like a fantasy nerd when it comes down to it. Like Magic The Gathering, stuff kind of like that, I’m not sure if he plays Magic cards. He’s all about reading dragon novels.

Matt: A lot of people are surprised when they find that half of us are really into metal. Like, “You can’t listen to metal, listen to your own music.” What you play doesn’t reflect on what you listen to at all. A lot of people are surprised about that. Kind of funny to me because why would you want to listen to what you play all day. You hear the same style of music all night, every night. You want to get in the van and listen to something different.

You can’t just focus on one genre and be like “I’m not going to listen to anything that’s not hardcore.”

Matt: Yeah, totally. We’re pretty open-minded with our musical tastes.

– What moment in your life made you realize that making music was what you were meant to do?

Matt: Ah man, I was probably like five and I listened to Michael Jackson. I was like “I want to be a rock start!”

Jordan: I wanted to always do, I did musical theater a lot when I was younger, when I was in sixth grade till like tenth. I did community and school related theater, when I was younger, you sort of always get into what your parents listen to. So that kind of turns you onto music on the first place and then it started evolving from there. But to be in a band, which was such a different approach than doing live theater. It’s when I started seeing, it’s when I went to Warped Tour and saw Less Than Jake and Bouncing Souls that is what started me, those kind of bands.

Matt: Yeah, ever since I can remember the music I was hearing, my parents were playing me Depeche Mode, Billy Idol, The Cure, Police, and I loved those bands and now they are my favorite bands. Very grateful for that, they got me into music that was so, in my opinion, really good.

– If you could manufacture a show, the crowd, and the bands playing, how would you describe the show?

Matt: Alright, I would like to play with The Beatles, just to do it, back in their day. Or like Led Zeppelin, I bet they were really intense live.

Jordan: That would be cool, to see a much older band perform punk rock, soul, rock and roll. Led Zeppelin was a good call. You know what band was awesome, an imaginary band? Have you ever seen Almost Famous?
Matt: Yeah, yeah.
Jordan: The band in there, Stillwater, they had a song called “Beaver Dog” and they wrote it for the movie. Dude, this band was a good band, I wish this band existed and played shows.
Matt: That movie is based on Cream or Led Zeppelin.
Jordan: That’s tight.
Matt: I’m sure whoever read this later would know.

Jordan: Yeah, all those Rolling Stones kind of bands would play the show.
Matt: That era was just great for music.

– How do you hope the band impacts people’s life? What impression do you want to leave fans with?

Jordan: It’s kind of similar to the one question about how we want to be remembered. We’ll get messages from kids daily, telling us their story. They will tell us their story and the big one is that a song helped them get through so many things. So I’ll say that hopefully we can help people get over stuff. If you don’t have someone to talk to, then you have someone to listen to.

Matt: If someone listens to our record and afterwards feels motivated to go start a venue, band or record label, just to help out bands, instead of just to make money for themselves, then I feel like we’ve done our job. Even if someone listens to our record and is put in a good mood because of it, if we can teach people to relax and have fun and not take seriously, even that is an accomplishment.

Jordan: Yeah, that’s definitely a big thing. I think that fans doing anything to spread the word, like what you guys are doing, whether it is online or print. We’ve done everything from alternative press to high press magazines to high school and junior high school newspapers. We would never turn anyone down, without that, you don’t have all the works printing about music. We are always able to drop bands in our interviews, that’s another thing, I hope people start researching bands more, new and old.

I’ve been writing for magazines for over two years and people always ask me how much I get paid and I tell them that I don’t and they don’t understand. I do this because I want to spread the word about bands and help out as much as I can.

Jordan: Yeah, exactly. I’ve done my fair share of stuff like this, I’ve done stuff for magazines before. I did a lot of this stuff before we started the band. I remember being like “Ugh, this is going to take so long.” But I will pick my bands carefully.

– Anything else you want the readers to know?

Jordan: For sure the bands we are on tour with. Give it up for Fireworks, Just Surrender, and Driving East. For starters, if you visit our Myspace page, you can see a bunch of bands we are into right now in our top friends. Check out their top friends from there, it’s like an easy click networking. Thank you to DrivenFarOff and you for posting this and the new articles, I always appreciate that.

Filed Under: Interviews Tagged With: Set Your Goals

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