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DS Interview: Rebuilder’s Sal Ellington on “Local Support,” the band’s reenergized new album (and label shopping, and #thebiz, and Salfies, and much more)!

The list of things that can get in the way of a band releasing new music out into the world is a long and winding one. Band member changes, creative lulls, global pandemics, Adele misreading the market and pressing like 500,000 copies of an album that’s destined for thrift store shelves, national social and political […]

The list of things that can get in the way of a band releasing new music out into the world is a long and winding one. Band member changes, creative lulls, global pandemics, Adele misreading the market and pressing like 500,000 copies of an album that’s destined for thrift store shelves, national social and political unrest, record labels going belly-up at the last minute due to the indiscretions of someone in their orbit, etc. Or, if you’re Boston punks Rebuilder, some combination of all of the above.

In what I guess is the interest of full disclosure, I’ve known and been friendly with the foursome (Sal Ellington and Craig Stanton -vocals/guitar, Daniel Carswell – bass, and Brandon Phillips – drums) that is the core of Rebuilder for just about as long as Rebuilder have existed as a band. Their 2015 debut full-length, Rock And Roll In America, is one of my favorite albums that has come out of this area since I started writing for Dying Scene a dozen years ago, and their follow-up EP, 2017’s Sounds From The Massachusetts Turnpike, is even better.

And yet, as wonderful and honest as those records were and as formidable and authentic a live band as Rebuilder have been, there is also the sense that that could have – probably should have – been more successful if not for being seemingly snake-bitten at many turns. The music industry being what it is, the economics involved with being in a band that takes off when you’re closer to 30 than 20 are different now than they were a generation ago, and so when label support is either lackluster or never materializes, or pre-Covid tours fall apart (looking at you, Europe circa 2017), it can test the intestinal fortitude of band members with growing responsibilities and wavering desires to continue the “grind” well into their thirties.

With some of that as a backdrop, Rebuilder set to work on the follow up to …Mass Turnpike several years ago. What eventually turned into Local Support – which was officially released on August 11th on Iodine Recordings – became a labor of love and devotion in the very truest senses of those words. After years of false starts and working through both internal and external issues, the band reconvened and put out what sounds like their most focused collection of songs yet; eleven tracks that are about as honest and soul-bearing as you could ask for, with myriad influences woven through the mix, creating increased color and texture that broaden the scope of their pop punk infused roots. Panic State Records, which released their first two records, has folded, so after an extended period of shopping the record, they finally landed with a new label home, associated with a certain Pittsburgh political punk band. And we all know how that turned out. At what was seemingly the 11:59 hour mark, Iodine Recordings swooped in and saved the proverbial day and the album came out – at least digitally – as expected on August 11th.

Rebuilder plays their long-awaited album release show tonight – September 1st – at the Sinclair in Cambridge, MA, and they’re playing alongside a powerhouse lineup that includes No Trigger, Choke Up, and Trash Rabbit. Tickets are still available. Keep scrolling here, not only to listen to Local Support (seriously, you should do that…it’s great!) but to check out our long and far-reaching interview with Sal Ellington, the band’s one-of-a-kind co-frontman. Sal has been in and around the music industry for most of his adult life – hell he’s even got a degree in music business – and he’s got a very unique take on the state of the industry that he delves into in his periodic #TheBiz Instagram feed. He’s also better known in some circles for his “Salfies,” which grew out of a crude tour joke and ended up becoming a mechanism for helping to tackle years of fear and doubt and insecurity. This was a fun and compelling one…we talk a lot about the various starts and stops that went into the writing and recording process, the state of the band’s various members and their renewed commitment to the cause, the use of songwriting as a way to process mental health struggles, and obviously the snafu with their previous label and trying to find a new one at the very last of possible minutes. Enjoy!

(The following has been edited and condensed for content and clarity’s sake. Yes, really. It also picks up semi-midstream but you’ll catch up pretty quickly.)

Dying Scene (Jay Stone): Well Iodine Recordings is putting the record out. How did that come about so quickly? Obviously, this whole situation has been shitty for everyone involved for the last few weeks.

Sal Ellington (Rebuilder): It has been a fucking nightmare.

So that’s an interesting place to start, and I wasn’t sure how comfortable you were talking about some or all of that…

You can ask me about whatever. Part of (Iodine) taking it over, was for the record to come out on the 11th. I wanted the record to be out before the record release show weekend. The set for that show is heavy on new stuff, and it doesn’t make any sense for us to go out and play a whole bunch of new songs if nobody knows them. When we were originally in talks with A-F, they wanted it to come out on September 1st and I said we needed to move it back a couple weeks so that people have a chance to hear the songs and get to know the songs before the show. So that’s still the plan with Iodine taking over. However, I think the delay will be in getting the pre-orders out for people. The pre-orders were involved in this snafu. The record plant reached out to me and were cool. They said “Hey, we saw everything that happened. Is anything changing with this release?” And we said, “Yeah, is there any way you can take the (A-F Records) logo off?” And they could, so they took the logo off and kept pressing the record, which was awesome. I’m stoked that they did that. However, it delayed when it was going to get in the hands of either A-F or us.

With the logo now off of the record itself, because A-F used to do things piecemeal, we now had to talk to whoever was doing the jackets, and I think the jackets are too late to be redone. I think the jackets are already on their way to us, and I think that I just connected with the people who did the jackets this morning and they said “Send us the new artwork, we’ll see what we can do.” Literally an hour ago I got a notification that said something like “The jackets are being shipped to you, look at your shipping times.” So, we might be too late for that part now. So I said to Iodine, if we need to do new jackets, if that’s the one thing we have left, then we need to find someone to rush order new jackets because we have a tour that we haven’t really announced yet that’s happening in September, so I need records for our release show and I need records for the tour. That’s basically where we’re at for now; trying to make sure that we have records for both of those things, which we will, it’s just a matter of are they going to have an Iodine Recordings logo, or are they going to have a Rebuilder sticker covering up an A-F Records logo…

I was going to say, can’t they print out Iodine stickers that match the same color and slap them over there? I mean, it’s a pain in the ass, but I feel like that’s not super uncommon and it’s less of a pain in the ass than printing all new jackets. 

Yeah, I ordered the stickers already, and I think they’ll actually be at my house today, so I have to have my roommate ship those to A-F because there are pre-orders that need to go out. But it’s one of those things where Iodine was like “You’ve worked so hard on this record, we don’t want you to have to put the record out with a sticker over it, making it look haphazard and unprofessional, so if all we have to do is order new sleeves, then let’s just do that. 

What a shitty situation but at least you’re rolling with it and making the best of it. 

Yeah, I think we’re trying to make the best of it and I think it’s one of those things where none of us wanted to deal with this. This is not what I had planned for the release of something that I’ve spent so long working on. I think that Chris Stowe, who runs A-F Records, certainly never wanted this to happen either, as well as anyone else who is attached to any fallout from Anti-Flag, from the victims to the people who work for the band. There are people who have lost their careers due to this. We didn’t lose our career, so I feel like what we have to go through is annoying for us, but it’s not this life-changing thing.

Oh for sure, you have to compartmentalize that stuff. And it seems like A-F was just gearing up to put out a whole bunch of new things between now and the rest of the year, and so there are a handful of bands who are in similar situations where the gears are already turning and things are too far along. 

It would have been one of those things had it just been an announcement that we had signed to A-F and there would be an album in the Fall. We could have just made an announcement like “We’re just not on A-F anymore, we’re going to take some time to figure out who is going to put it out,” and that’s it. Or if it had been a year after our record came out, we could have been like “It’s terrible what happened. We’re not on A-F anymore, any copies that we make going forward from this are just going to be on our own.” Instead, we’re right in the middle. (*both laugh*) Things are literally shipping now, and every single hour of the day for me is spent trying my hardest to basically do chaos control on this thing as well as doing my actual job, and trying to finish doing this tour, and all the stuff that comes with it. Yeah, it’s not what I envisioned for this record.

Seriously, first full-length record in eight years or whatever it is and this is the hand your dealt.

Yeah. I know it’s our second full-length, but I always felt like (Sounds From The) Massachusetts Turnpike was our second real record. It’s not as many songs, but I do always think about that when I think about that record. So then this is our third record, for sure. I think it’s our strongest, and I do really, really love this record a lot, and I hope people do too, which is why I don’t want anything distracting from this record or taking away from it. Behind the scenes, there are a lot of things distracting from this record and it’s like…thank god I don’t post every single minute of every single day what’s going on with it, because I can get mentally fried with it. But I just want people to know that the record is coming out, it’s going to be a bit delayed getting to you, but it will still be out digitally on all the streaming sites anyway. You’ll just have to give it a bit til you get your copy in the mail. I hope that people understand that the delay in getting their copies in the mail is that we now have to deal with all the bullshit that came along with this. What the customer has to deal with is getting the record a little bit later than they would have They’ve had to deal with that with records that didn’t go through anything problematic, they had to go with it just because Taylor Swift put out a record and bumped other people’s. 

Oh for sure, everyone is used to that since Covid. I can’t remember a record coming on time. Except maybe the Dave Hause record because I don’t think he announced the record until he had the physical copies or something like that, so that when people pre-ordered it they were just sending it out from Tim’s garage. But that’s a different way of doing it.

It’s funny because Dave was one of the people who early on called me about this record. He knew I was trying to find a home for this record so I sent it to a ton of friends and asked what they thought about it and who should put it out…all those questions you go through every time you put our a record. It’s almost half a year or a year of pitching it to people when you don’t have a home for your record. And I sent it to Dave and he said “Well, what do you want to happen with this record, man? Where do you want it to go?” And I said “Well, these are the labels I was thinking of. This is where I think it should go because I want the most eyes on it, because I think it’s important.” And he was like “Yeah, man, but why don’t you just release it yourself? That’s what I do with my records?” And I was like “Yeah man, but you have a huge audience, you know?” And he was like “Well, how many records did you sell when you did it on your own for the live record.” So I told him and amount, and he was like “Alright, I do probably the same number, just scaled up by X amount. It’s all a matter of how you scale it. I think that you guys could do the same thing. Put out the record on your own, it’s going the mean the most to you anyway. Pay for the PR and do it that way.” And I would have done it that way, for sure. It’s nice to know that we can do that. I just think that we went with A-F because they have a great presence at FEST, and we always do really well at FEST, and Chris Stowe who ran the label is a great friend and has always supported bands who have been on it. We’ve had friends who have been on their label and they did well. It wasn’t going to blow us up, but it’s people that believe in the record, so that’s why we decided to go with them. I think Dave was right, we could put it out ourselves, but having it in the hands of people who believe in it was the way to go. That’s why now, working with Iodine is working with people who believe in it and believe in our band. 

Did they reach out to you after the A-F thing or did you hit them up?

They did. They reached out to us.

That’s got to be a good feeling. 

For sure. I was like “I’m not going to start reaching out to labels when this is supposed to be out in less than a month.” Like, how do you sell that to anyone? (*both laugh*) Hi! I have this record coming out and now it’s attached to this controversy, do you want to put it out now?”

Right! “Hey, do you want to wade into this shitstorm?”

For sure. But I know that Iodine has worked with Jay Maas who recorded this record, and they talked to him about it and asked if he thought Rebuilder would be interested in having them help put the record out. And the thing is, nobody HAD to come to us to help with our record, so the fact that they did come to us and say “Here’s what we can do, let’s jump on a call immediately and try to make this happen,” I really appreciated that. 

Had they heard it at that point?

I think they had. I think Jay had sent it over when we were looking for a label, but I don’t think that we ever had the conversation because I think once they saw that we were talking to A-F, they were like “Yeah, that makes sense.” There are more bands already on that label with our sort of poppier punk sound than there were on Iodine. But I’m glad they had seen a position to help and that’s what they jumped on. So I think they had heard it already, I just didn’t know if they liked it (*both laugh*). I never really know. You always hear things like “Iodine liked your record” and it’s always like, “Well, what does that mean? Does that mean they think it’s a cool thing that we’re creating, or does it mean that they want to be a part of it?” I remember early on, someone was like “Oh, so-and-so at SideOneDummy really likes what you’re doing.” And I was like “Wow, that’s cool!” And then that was the end of the conversation. (*both laugh*) I was like, “Okay, so what do I do with this information?” (*both laugh*) Like, “Oh good, another thing to think about…” I’m pretty sure I did think about it for a solid month straight before I just finally stopped.

I’m really excited for people to hear this record. I’ve finally had a chance to dig into it the last couple of days, and it’s really good. I don’t just say that because I’ve known you guys forever; it’s really a good record. I know that it’s super cliche to say that you hit another level or whatever, but I feel like you really pushed yourselves. It’s really good.

Thanks! Yeah, I do feel like it’s our most diverse record in terms of what we were trying to accomplish on it. I just never know if that’s going to mean anything to an audience or in general. I always feel like we’re a band that’s still growing. We can’t just announce a show and have it sell out right away. And because I think we’re still growing, I get concerned with, like, “Are we allowed to do this? Are we allowed to be weird and different?” I think a band like Turnstile can do that and it’s a home run, you know what I mean?

Yeah, but it wasn’t a home run until they did it. They took some chances and it worked. I like when people do that. Obviously, it’s fine to have a sound or something that keeps you grounded, but I like that people continue to grow. You’re not 20 or 30 anymore, you know?

I think it’s cool when bands take chances. There are definitely times when bands take chances though and you’re like “Well, I wish they hadn’t done that” and I don’t want to be on that side of it, you know? 

That last song especially, “Disco Loadout,” it’s got pedal steel on it so obviously it’s an Americana song, and yet it’s got horns on it so obviously it’s a ska song, and yet, it’s very much a Rebuilder song. For some reason, those things fit contextually with that song, but it doesn’t sound like any other Rebuilder song. 

What’s funny is we had probably played that song a couple of songs live back when …Mass Turnpike came out. Around that time, anyway. When we were looking at what songs would be on …Mass Turnpike, that was a song we liked a lot, but you need the journey to get to that song. To end an EP on it feels like you didn’t give people enough time to get there and to understand it. In the Rebuilder Venn diagram, it doesn’t fall smack in the middle. But I always had the ambition for how the song should go, with the pedal steel and the horns and everything. It really needed to be recorded and heard for people to listen to it and get it. Craig (Stanton) was like that too. He said, “I really didn’t see this song coming to be the way that it was, and I’m glad that you followed through on it.” I’m super happy with how that song came out. I think it’s super cool. I think it’s a really ambitious song but at the same time, I think that the skeleton of the song is still a good song. I’ve always thought that you know that a song is a good song if you can listen to it as a country version or a punk rock version or a ska version, it’ll sound good however you do it because the songwriting stands up. That’s how I view that song. 

Between that one and “Look Down Club,” I think I might have a couple of new favorite Rebuilder songs. That “Look Down Club” is a cool song.

I like that song a lot. I think that was an older one too. I think we at least had the idea of that song around during …Mass Turnpike and it was in the column of “this could be on a full length.” But we didn’t have the key parts written until the end. We always add keys at the very, very end, and I think the keys made that song sound so cool. I think it’s a very cool song to open up Side B.

Yeah, that big intro to it…if it wasn’t going to kick off Side A, it makes sense to have it kick off Side B. Or to kick off a show. Starting that side of the record with “Look Down Club” and ending it with “Disco Loadout” is pretty gnarly. 

Yeah, and I think Side A has, I think, so many bangers and so many hooks that we needed Side B to have its own weight, and I think it has its own weight in a different way, for sure. That song could open a set, but I think you could also close a set with it too. It fits so many things. It’s super cool. I like a lot of the guitar work we do on it. In the studio, you cn adjust add more stuff on top of it and keep adding, which is what I love to do. Then it just kinda takes on its own thing.

At least vocally, this is a very “Sal” record. It’s much more you than Craig out in front; I feel like Craig has maybe two that are essentially his, at least vocally.

One of the things that happened with this record was, I think it was right before the pandemic, the end of the year before, we kinda had the idea to record maybe seven of the songs that we had? I think we had been doing a lot and we basically got to a point where everyone in the band was kinda burnt out from having to grind really hard and maybe sometimes not have a lot of reward for it. You can only grind so hard and not get anything for so long before you think “why do I keep doing this?” But I think we’re all friends who love playing with each other and it’s fun for us to do. As much as I wish we made enough money from this band where this was everyone’s full-time job, and then we can focus on this and, yes, life happens but we’re able to provide for our lives because of this…we can’t do that.

So when life is happening, like, for example, around the time that Daniel (Carswell, bass) was newly sober and he wasn’t really super in love with having to be on tour and go into clubs and be around people who are drinking all the time, because he was still trying to figure out how to be sober. And Brandon (Phillips, drums) had taken on a new job and he and his wife had already had talks about having a kid. And then Craig I think around then joined a local hockey thing that he started being a part of and he didn’t really have a lot more songs to contribute to this, and he wanted to do something else. My goal was that I wanted to keep doing Rebuilder and I wanted to do this record, and I was about to have a complete mental breakdown from everyone being like “This is where we are in life, and maybe where we are in life isn’t aligning with where you want things to be with Rebuilder right now.” I was like “Well, let’s go into the studio and record what we have,” and that got cut down from like seven songs to I think five songs. No, it got cut down from eight to five, and I think there were three songs that Craig thought needed more time to develop, but he thought the other five were strong. We did go in and record those five and we got them down and we did that whole session and then the pandemic happened. The record got put on the back burner because we aren’t practicing, we aren’t seeing each other. Everything else takes on precedence ahead of making a record.

So then me and Daniel are living together still at the time and in my mind I still want to finish this record, whatever that means. I don’t even know who we can play with or anything. It was a solid year of making more demos in the house with Daniel and then when the riots happened with Black Lives Matter, after George Floyd, I was like “Well, I don’t want to work on demos for this record anymore because I’m too caught up in what’s happening socially.” So I wrote “Monuments,” and we went in the studio and recorded that. Brandon couldn’t play on that because he was still living in his in-law at the time and we couldn’t really get together, but Harley from Choke Up was free and he had been playing with us at times anyway, so he came in and we recorded it and we put it out and we raised money for Black Lives Matter. Then, during that time, months later, we went back in the studio, and I had some demos of me, Harley and Daniel, and it was kind of the first time I had written songs that I wasn’t bouncing off of Craig, and I didn’t know if I was confident enough in my songwriting ability to just depend on myself. But, at the same time, I kinda had to be, you know? So “Telephone,” “Hold On,” Brokedowns,” those were all songs that came from that session with Harley. So we went in and recorded those, and I think we only recorded basic drums, guitar and bass. I don’t even think we did vocals yet. But then, me, Daniel and Brandon got together months later and worked on the other three that we had cut out of that original five-song session. We worked on those and then went and recorded those.

At this point, it’s like two years later. I had run into Craig and he talked about “Monuments” and how he thought it was a cool song and how he wishes he could have played on that song, and I said “Well, I thought that you didn’t want to” and he felt like time had passed and he felt different about things, and I think by that point we had done that livestream that we did. I had texted everyone like “Hey, me and Daniel want to do this, we don’t know who’s around and it’s pretty ambitious to do, but me and Daniel will do a lot of the heavy lifting but if you want to do it, it could be cool.” Everyone was obviously very into doing it, and I think going forward from that, I think it makes sense to keep running it that way. If there are things that come up that seem cool, whoever is in is in, and whoever has things going on, that’s fine. We’ll either have someone else come help us or we just won’t do it, but we’ll have other cool opportunities for us to do. I think by establishing that idea into the band, it makes people feel like they can participate but they don’t have to make it their whole entire life.

So, once we did that, I told Craig “Well, we’ve gone in and pretty much recorded the basics for the second half of the record and I have these new songs that you haven’t heard yet, so if you want to be on it I would love to have you, because I love your guitar work and I love your ideas and I love what you can bring to the table.” I love Craig’s vocals in the band. I think me and him complement each other well, and I always want him to be there at all times. I can’t force people to be there, and life is always going to happen, especially if this isn’t your full-time job and there is no money to be made on this. You can’t drop things to do this all the time. So we went back in the studio and showed him the skeletons of the songs and told him to add in the parts that he thought were good and he did backup vocals. The result is this record. It’s a weird record in terms of how it got made, but I think how it got made is what makes this record so important to us. So many things have gone on for us to make this happen.

On a lot of different levels, yeah.

On a lot of levels, right. So many! And Harley jumping in and playing drums, JR from Less Than Jake and Chris from Bosstones jumping in and playing horns on it

Or for some of us, it will always be Chris and Pete from Spring Heeled Jack (*both laugh*)

And then Casey Prestwood from Hot Rod Circuit plays lap steel guitar on that track. I remember him from a Drag The River show that I saw over ten years ago, and I was like “He’s so good, I wonder if he still plays…” so I was like “Hey, we don’t really know each other, but I saw you play this legendary show in my mind…do you still play lap steel?” and he was like “Yeah, man, I can do that for you, no problem.” Kailynn West sings on “Wedding Day.” So we reached out to a lot of friends to really make this record happen. I had to trust myself on a lot of decisions and push myself to finish this record, and I’m happy that at the end of it, it’s still the four of us here making this record and contributing however we could. And I feel like Harley is an extension of our band at this point because he has helped us out so much and I love having him there. So the reason there are only two lead-vocal Craig songs on the record is because he wasn’t there for some of the writing on it. So it was important to me that once he was back in the mix, that he sang a lot of the backups on it. I think live, there will be a lot more shared vocal stuff, because live, I can’s sing all those songs all in a row the way they’re written and have a voice by the end of the night. (*both laugh*)

I made note a couple times that you really push your voice on this one. 

I’ve been taking vocal lessons for the last two years now. I do a vocal lesson every two weeks, and I started that because I knew that Craig wouldn’t be able to be there for some of the shows and I would have to sing a majority of the songs, because we didn’t have someone else who could sing his parts. And that would be a lot for my voice to take on, especially if the songs weren’t written with the intention of one person singing them. Even a song like “Get Up” or “Anchoring” has some back-and-forth spots that, when we’ve done it live without Criag for the couple of shows that he hasn’t been able to be at, it’s been difficult. So, I reached out to a vocal coach and every two weeks we FaceTime. I still do them, because it’s good to have. But I do remember Jay (Maas) saying when we were recording that “I think your vocals sound better than I’ve ever heard them, and I think the lessons helped a lot.” I was really appreciative of that. 

I think I would agree with that. I think with a song like “Hold On,” which is obviously an important song for a lot of reasons, it being the first single from the new record sets that bar, and you really push it in that song especially, to the high end of the register for you. Even though that song is drop-tuned, right?

So that’s the trick! This is so stupid…(*both laugh*)

No, I love this shit!

When we learned the Blink self-titled record, there are a couple songs that are tuned in C#. I think “Violence” is one of them, and I think “Stockholm Syndrome” might be. I remember how cool I thought it sounded, so I thought “Well, maybe I’ll copy Tom DeLonge and write a couple of songs in C#.” Also, “Wrestle Yu to Husker Du” by The Dirty Nil is also tuned down to C#, and I was like “This is why the singer of Dirty Nil can sing so high on that song, because he’s playing drop-tuned, so it’s giving you more of a range to sing over it.” So I was like “Oh, that’s the trick! That’s why it sounds like he’s belting the song out!” So with “Telephone” and “Hold On,” those are the two songs that I wrote in that tuning for that reason. 

Oh “Telephone” I don’t think I knew, but “Hold On,” for sure – that big riff at the beginning of it. Is that fun? It seems like you were obviously pretty inspired to write during everything that was going on anyway, but did trying out new tunings like that open up any creative parts of your brain and, like, “Oh, there’s a whole new register of songs I can write!”

Oh yeah, it’s so fun. Everyone knows the Drop-D trick, for sure, but when I tuned down to C#, I retuned the whole entire guitar down a step-and-a-half. I think it sounds really cool

And now you can play Korn covers! 

(*both laugh*) For sure! It gets my creative juices flowing a lot more, for sure, to get to think of things in a different way. The cool thing is that Craig bought a guitar pedal that you just hit and it down-tunes you to whatever semi tone you want to. He tried it and didn’t love it, but he thought it would be cool for me because I do a lot of big, open chords. So I tried it and I was like “Damn, for a live setting, this is fucking fine with me!” So when we play live, I have that pedal and I use it for those songs. I don’t have to retune, I just hit the pedal and what you hear from there is drop tuned. Then I can still just have my backup guitar as a backup, because that was the fear. What if you break a string and then you have to go to your back-up guitar, and then you have to figure out how to…

…capo punk rock songs at the third fret or whatever. 

Yeah, exactly. It’s a super cool pedal. I think there’s definitely some give-and-take with the tone a little bit, but it’s so negligible that I’m fine with it. 

I think the last time we talked like this was maybe right around the George Floyd events. I don’t remember if we talked specifically for “Monuments” or anything like that. But did you stay pretty creative, or did the not really knowing what was going to happen with the band make so that you didn’t even bother writing during that time?

I want to say that I was super creative throughout the whole thing but a lot of it was just very depressing for me, especially around the George Floyd time. I would sit there and try to write something, but I was forcing myself to write when I wasn’t feeling inspired. All I was thinking about was “Do I have a career anymore? Maybe I don’t have a career anymore! Did I make all the wrong choices that led me to this point where I don’t own a career or own a house? Did I set myself up for complete failure? That’s how I felt throughout all of it. And then, when the George Floyd thing happened, I wrote “Monuments” faster than I’ve ever written any other song, and we recorded it faster than we’ve recorded any other song. From inception to recording it, it took about two weeks, which is the fastest Rebuilder has ever done anything! That snapped me back into doing something, because I felt like I wrote because I didn’t know how to…there’s only so many posts you can make (on social media). I don’t know what to say, and I don’t ever know the right things to say at all, really. All I really know is how I feel, and I don’t know if that’s the correct thing. Writing “Monuments” helped me put all of my feelings into one thing and try to do something good with it. I can’t fix it and I can’t make it go away, but I can contribute in some way to making it better. That was when I got a little bit more creative, and then when we went in with Alex-Garcia Rivera to record a Mavis Beacon song for Jeff Poot, because he had a brain aneurysm, we thought it would be fun to cover his song and send him some money. That was another thing where these things seemed so pressing and so much more important than what our band is, that that was when I was like “Oh, I feel like I can be creative now because there’s a purpose.” That made me start doing things again, because otherwise, it didn’t feel like there was ever going to be a purpose other than just being less bored. 

I think that if you look at it from 10,000 feet though, I think that a lot of the songs that tackle mental health issues are also a way of sort of doing the same thing. Those songs are written for a purpose and people hear them and hopefully they resonate with them and identify with things in them, and that helps them either call somebody and get help or realize they aren’t alone. And so I feel like some of the more mental health-related songs sort of accomplish the same sort of purpose, at least for me as a listener.

Yeah, I hope so! There was still a record to be worked on and finished, so once I was in the mode of “We’re going to go record and we’re getting in a room together,” even if it was just me and Daniel and Harley, if felt like there were things going on. Especially with tracks like “Wedding Day” and “Staying Alive” that take on a lot of the mental health things. I always say that when you hear songs like “Staying Alive,” you’re like “Is this a big, desperate cry for help?” But Rebuilder takes so long to get anything out into the world (*both laugh*) that whatever was going on, by the time you hear it, that is years and years and years removed. “Staying Alive” is a song that was written on a reflection of a time where I had another complete mental breakdown a little after college, when I was probably 24 or 25. I’m 38 now, so whatever was going on at that time, I’m thankful is way behind me, where I can write a song like “Staying Alive” and have it be really heavy and serious, but it’s not a thing where I can’t play that song because it’s too new or too painful. Like, I can write the song because I can talk about what I was feeling at that time, and what I still sometimes feel now, and have it not be so reactionary to my life at that moment. I can guarantee you that there’s a book somewhere with the lyrics to that song written over and over and over again until I felt it was what it should be.

There are times where I look back on lyrics from my first band where I’m like “Oh my god, I wish this person didn’t put this song out. I wish he thought of different words to put in because it’s so cringy.” I just don’t want it to be that anymore (*both laugh*). So it’s a good thing that it takes a while for this stuff to come out, since it allows me to sit with things even for a year and say “Eh, I don’t know if that’s right.” I’m happy with how “Staying Alive” came out because after revising it so many times, it doesn’t read as corny. I didn’t want it to be too corny or too much like an emo song. I wanted it to be a serious song dealing with serious matters but also feel like by the end of the song you don’t feel like “Oh this situation is terrible.” 

When people who know you from Salfies or from #TheBiz or from that side of things hear those songs filled with references to the more mental health-heavy stuff, does that strike them as weird because you don’t always present to them that way publicly?

No one brings it up. I’ve never had anyone be like “that’s weird that you would write this song when you do all these really fucking dumb things on the internet.” I just think that they must think “This is wild. This kid must be the most bipolar kid in the fucking world.” (*both laugh*) I always imagine that they think that. But I have also thought that the funny thing is that it also goes very hand-in-hand. There is a lot of crossover (“Staying Alive”) and Salfies than you would ever, ever imagine. 

Really?!

Yeah. The way that I felt in a song like “Staying Alive” and everything I felt in it and all the anxieties and all the times where I just did not want to be alive, is because I had no confidence in myself and I always was very, very concerned with what people think about me. And I still have that. I don’t think that ever goes away. But I remember when I first took a dumb Salfie in a bathroom and sent it on Snapchat to my band members while we were on a tour and thinking it was so funny and seeing the reactions from everybody being like “Oh, what the fuck!?” All it took was somebody saying “I hope you don’t do this the whole tour” for me to be like “Well now I have to.” I was doing it and thinking it was funny but it was still an internal thing and no one knew about. I remember a girl I was dating at the time I had shown that picture to, and they weer so disgusted. It made me feel really bad. They were disgusted in a bad way, like “Please don’t ever take pictures like this, and don’t show anybody this, this is so embarrassing for me and I don’t know why you would do something like this.” I remember thinking to myself “Well, note to self, don’t show your girlfriend these pictures…”

I kept doing them obviously, and during a Bosstones tour, Adam Shaw, the tour manager, had asked about Rebuilder and I sent him that picture and I was like “We just finished a tour, here’s a picture from tour!” and he thought it was hilarious and sent it to all the guys in that band, and they thought it was funny or some of them were disgusted. Dicky was one of the people who loved it. He coined the term. He texted me and was like “No Salfies this weekend, please!” and he was like “You’ve gotta make a Salendar calendar, that would be so funny!” That encouraged me to get more creative with it, because I thought it was so funny. More and more people started finding out about it and bringing it up to me. I remember I was at a restaurant with the girl I was dating at the time and I remember a friend of mine came up to me and said “Oh you must be so proud of the Salfies” and they got fucking pissed! They were so bullshit! They were like “Why do people know about this?! Why is this becoming a thing?!” After we broke up, I think one of the things I did was like “Well, fuck it – now I don’t have anyone standing over me and making me feel self-conscious about doing this, I’m just going to post it on Instagram.” I think I posted the archives that I had on my phone on Instagram like the day after we broke up, and people being like “OH MY FUCKING GOD!”

I remember people seeing it and it becoming a “thing,” like “we need more Salfies!” and thinking it was so funny, to the point that Jimmy Kimmel had seen them. Due to “circumstances,” after a Bosstones show I was out at a dinner with Bob Saget and Jimmy Kimmel. Someone introduced me to Bob Saget and he was like “Who’s this?” and someone said “This is Sal” and Jimmy goes “Yeah, let me show you a picture of him,” and he had a Salfie on his phone and showed it to Saget and he laughed and said “This is amazing, I want to show this to Mary-Kate (Olsen)!” I was sitting there thinking “What the fuck is my life right now?!?” (*both laugh*)

It blew my mind completely, and from that point, I hadn’t felt like I’d described in “Staying Alive.” I hadn’t felt that way in a long time and I remember not feeling that way and thinking “I don’t give a fuck anymore. I don’t care, and I can’t believe that this is the outcome that came from me posting dumb pictures of me naked behind things on Instagram.” But then, the person who felt that way could never post pictures like that, you know? Now it’s a whole thing and I think it’s so stupid, but even now, there’s times when I meet people and they’re like “Oh my god, you have to look at Sal’s Instagram, it’s a whole thing.” I’ve had people say to me “I wish I could do that, I don’t have the fucking balls to do it. That’s crazy.” And I’m just, like, yeah, I don’t know how I got to this point, but I’m glad I did, because I don’t ever want to feel the way I did before. Ever! I never want to feel the way I did in “Staying Alive.” It’s a terrible feeling and you feel like you have no hope and you have nowhere to go and you’re not good enough and you have so much self-doubt. Now, I feel like that isn’t as aggressive in my life anymore, and some of that is thankfully due to thinking it’s fucking hilarious to put a Santa Claus in front of me and stand behind it naked, you know? (*both laugh*)

I think even with #TheBiz stuff, the way that you present to people is that “This kid is smart, and he’s funny, but he also doesn’t really give a fuck and he’ll tell you exactly how things actually work and he’s super confident.” So to know that some of that comes from the place of a person who has overcome so much fear and doubt and insecurity and anxiety is pretty awesome, I think. 

I’m glad it comes off that way. With The Biz stuff, I think that the music business is just hte most ridiculous business in the world. It’s such a fucking joke. As someone who has been in it my whole life – who literally has a fucking degree in it – I think it’s funny to point out this stuff. It’s always crazy to me how much the general public doesn’t know about things. When we signed to A-F Records, people were like “Congratulations on A-F!” I got those texts a lot and I didn’t really know how to respond to them. In my head, I was like “Well, it’s not Warner Brothers, you know? What are these congratulations for? It’s not Sony Music, you know? It’s a small label. I’m happy for it, but it’s a small label.” So I responded to a lot of people “Thank you! They gave us a million-dollar advance.” I think nine out of ten people believed it every single time. They were like “Whoa, that’s crazy!” And I’m thinking “Fuck…they really don’t know how this thing works.” I think things like that are funny, and it means so many different things. One, people have no idea what a million-dollar advance means. So let’s say it were true: that would mean that I now owe the record label a million dollars before I ever see any money ever again.

Right, you have to sell a million dollars worth of records.

Yeah, to get that back, or to make any profit after that. And let’s say we did start making that back. Now you have to split it among all of these people. So it would be a nice cushion for a while, but it won’t be forever. So even that statement, there’s so much weight that comes with what it actually means, and people have no idea at all. So it was funny to say and have people say “Wow, that’s crazy!!” (*both laugh*) I love always posting about The Biz with different artists and having them be in on the joke too, or when it comes to merch and a lot of people talk about merch cuts and how they’re bad, and I think that you can’t have “Save Our Stages” and “Fuck The Venues” all at the same time, you know? (*both laugh*) People are like “I don’t want to pay the merch cut, but let’s make sure this venue doesn’t go away!” It’s so contradictory. And I’m not even saying that I think merch cuts are necessarily a good thing. All I’m saying is that they exist and they go to keep the venue open, so maybe you’ve got to think about what you’re arguing for. 

I do think there’s a difference when it happens at what’s seen to be an independent venue versus what is seen to be a corporate, LiveNation venue, where it seems like the corporate overlords have their hands in everything and realistically LiveNation could do without your five dollars on that t-shirt and they’re collecting it in the name of profit. Whereas with a locally run place or a smaller venue might not be able to keep the lights on without it. So to me it seems like there’s a distinction to be made. 

Oh for sure. Absolutely. I’m all for there not being merch cuts, and I say that as somebody who makes money off there being a merch cut. I literally run a merch vending business where the money I make for a living sometimes is because of a merch cut. I get it, and I would happily give that up for there to just be no merch cuts across the board, because I don’t think a venue should share in 20% of merch sales. People get really emotional about it because it has to do with music, whereas if you just thought about it like a business thing, then it’s totally different. If you go to set up at the flea market, you’ve got to pay a flat fee to have your table set up or sometimes you have to pay a percentage to have your things set up, so for me, it’s the cost of doing business. And for me, if you’re a band that agrees to it and you sign a contract that says you agree to hand over that money to the venue, you shouldn’t put up a fight at the end of the night with the person who is still in college and is an hourly, paid employee who is just going to you to settle up. Don’t be a dickhead to that person. That’s basically you being a dickhead to your Amazon driver because you don’t like Jeff Bezos, you know? Why are you yelling at the Amazon driver, he’s not the one getting the Jeff Bezos money, he’s just getting his hourly rate and doing his fucking job. Go yell at your agent who said “yeah, that fee is fine.” Go yell at him!

I think you have to look out for your fans above all. Take a look at a band like Dropkick Murphys. They have always kept prices of t-shirts relatively affordable for people going to a show. Dropkick have played small clubs and they have played huge arenas. Their cost of a shirt is usually between $20 at the cheapest and $30-35 at the most expensive. I think if you went and saw them at Fenway Park opening up for the Foo Fighters or whatever, the price of a t-shirt was still a $30 t-shirt, rather than them being like “Well, it’s Fenway Park, and Fenway Park is going to take a lot, and we don’t even get to sell it, and the cut is like 25-75 or 30-70. It sucks. It definitely sucks. But at the end of the day, you have to worry about your customer. You shouldn’t give a fuck about the venue. It sucks that they’re taking that much, but you have to think about your fan. It sucks as a fan, when your only option of seeing you where you are is at a big place because that’s the only place you’re playing, and I have to pay $50 to buy a shirt when the kid in the next state that saw you at a smaller place got to pay $20 when it’s the same exact fucking shirt and I didn’t have the option of seeing them at the smaller place. I have no idea what a merch cut even is. All I know is that Rebuilder got a million dollar advance and now I’m paying fifty dollars for a t-shirt (*both laugh*).” People don’t know. You’ve got to care about your fanbase and do what’s best for them, because at the end of the day, you’re the one that is going to look like a dickhead and create more of a problem.”

I’m going to tell you the only time I’ve used my degree. (*both laugh*) I went to Berklee College of Music for this moment right here. This is what the college set me up for. I was selling merch for Dinosaur Jr. at Roadrunner. This guy came up to me and said “Do you work for the band or the venue?” And I said “Both, why?” And he was like “I just want to know.” So I said Okay, I’m going to entertain this for now. Both.” And he was like “How does that work?” And I said “Well, the band hired me. Sometimes you work for the band. I tour for a living working for acts. But I also live here and I need a place to work when I’m home. This is a venue I work at. And sometimes, both of those things happen at the same time.” And he goes “Well, you know, I’m just asking because venues really screw over artists all the time!” And I was like “Excuse me?!” And he goes “You know, the venues just take money from bands now, and they don’t let bands make money.” I’m like this guy read a post from his favorite band saying “fuck these venues taking merch cuts” or whatever and doesn’t even understand what that means.

So I said “That’s such a general statement and it’s not exactly true.” And he goes, “Yeah it is, I know! I’ve been going to shows for twenty years.” And I said “I have a music business degree, and this is how I make all my money and I literally went to school for this.” And he’s like “You went to school for this? Where did you go?” And I said “Berklee. Years ago. I’m fucking 38.” And he’s like “Oh, well, you have a degree in it, so I guess you know. Sorry.” And he walked away. And I was like “Well, that’s the one moment, that one guy right there, is the one time I’ve used this degree.” And yes, there are things that suck for bands. If you’re a small band on an opening tour, you’re getting paid $100 to $200 a night for that opening slot and then you have to pay the merch cut on top of that, it sucks for you. I suggest you lie to the venue, but be extremely nice and kind and respectful and like “Well, this is what we made tonight. We made $100.” I hope that they feel bad for you and don’t take anything, and I hope that you can do a good job playing that part every night to do what you need to do as a band. That’s just the way I look at it. 

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DS Interview: Roger Harvey on songwriting and influences and his new EP “Cowtown” and more new music to come!

If you came to me a year and a half ago and told me that a decent handful of Americana/country artists would occupy some of the top spots on my Spotify “most played”, I’d point you to the nearest mental institution. But here we are, thanks almost solely to an equal combination of Jason Isbell […]

If you came to me a year and a half ago and told me that a decent handful of Americana/country artists would occupy some of the top spots on my Spotify “most played”, I’d point you to the nearest mental institution. But here we are, thanks almost solely to an equal combination of Jason Isbell and Roger Harvey.

I’m pretty close-minded when it comes to my music choice; I know what I like and I rarely deviate. Guys like Isbell and Harvey, and others like Austin Lucas and Northcote have scratched a musical itch of mine that completely blindsided me. Harvey’s one of those artists whose songwriting I was totally enamored by, and after randomly seeing him open for Gregor Barnett of the Menzingers one night, I bordered on obsession and found all the music I could from the guy. So I was thrilled, to say the least, when I started seeing posts around the New Year hinting at new music.

I’ve pretty well exhausted Harvey’s catalog up to this point, so I was anxious to get my hands on more of the honest, hopeful, simplistic, yet captivating music that drew me in in the first place. Well Roger Harvey’s new EP Cowtown lived up to, and succeeded, the anticipation I had for it. I think the man himself described this new release best in one of his monthly newsletters titled Rog Sez: “On March 17th, I’m releasing new music. Cowtown, 3-songs about where I come from and the possibility of a better world. I’ve been writing a lot about this lately.”

Getting to do this interview was extremely fulfilling. I had been eager to pick the mind of Harvey, whose lyrics are poetic in nature, and are able to convey powerful stances on current issues, but in a simplistic way that embodies hope and positivity. After exchanging a handful of emails, I’ve concluded that Harvey is wise beyond his years. I envy the hell out of both his hopeful outlook on the world, as well as his ability to embody that through word and song.

We talk about all kinds of great stuff, and on more than one occasion I had to stop and process his responses because of how wise and well-versed my questions were answered. Although this one was done over email rather than Zoom, I can still confirm that I had a blast doing this. Below you’ll find links to the new release, links to a couple other notable songs mentioned in our interview, as well as tour dates and whatever else can help get you acquainted with one of my current favorite artists. As always, thanks so much for reading this far. Cheers!

Featured image credit: @Cowtownchad

(Editor’s note: The following has been edited and condensed for clarity’s sake because a good chunk of this interview was just two guys shooting the shit.)

Dying Scene (Nathan Kernell NastyNate): Tell me a little about the three songs you’re releasing Friday. I know with “Two Coyotes,” one of my personal favorites of yours, featured Rozwell kid guitarist Adam Meisterhans, of whom I’m a huge fan of. Are there any guests featured on these new ones?

Roger Harvey: I recorded these 3 songs outside of Philly at a studio called Gradwell House and then passed them down to Justin Francis in Nashville for finalizing. My friend Mike ‘Slo-Mo’ Brenner pushed me towards and led this session. We had been playing these songs live on the road at shows last year and he wanted to get them down together. Mike is best known for his work with Jason Molina but has been a part of so much great music. I admire his attitude and work ethic and love collaborating with him. Working as a solo artist can be trying and having good people in your corner to push you in the right direction is essential. I’m lucky to have so many good people in mine. I asked Mike once on a long drive what kept him going in music through all the years and he responded: “Striving towards excellence. It’s the one thing that never goes out of style.” I think of that often. 

In our emails you mentioned these being a part of a couple records hopefully coming out later this year. Any details on those that you’re ready to reveal? Possible release dates? Are those going to include what’s on your most recent release, Last Prisoner, as well as this upcoming one?

I recently finished a 14-song record in Fort Worth, Texas with my friend Simon Flory of traditional folk songs. We rewrote many of them to modernize & convey the lasting meaning of the songs in our current context. We’re finalizing the masters and other conceptual pieces and working to release it later this year. Additionally, I have a record of songs about where I grew up in Pennsylvania that I’ll be recording this spring. Many of the singles I’ve released fit in with that narrative and I’ve been on the fence of wanting to re-introduce singles I’ve released on that record or if I just want to move forward with new songs. I’m sitting on so many songs after the past few years of slowness and have been reckoning with a lot of big change in my personal life that has kept me writing. I’d like to get them all down regardless just need to conclude what tells the story I’m after the most effectively. 

Starting with the opening track Cowtown, the message you’re conveying seems pretty clear, and I find my understanding of the song to be pretty relatable to the 5 years I spent living in a small East Tennessee town. Coming from your end, what message are you conveying or what story are you telling with this one? Is there one particular town or experience you’re referring to when you sing “nothing to do here but drink and fight”?

Like most things I write, it is about a specific place to me but I also recognize that it could be relatable to really anywhere. To me, it’s about where I was raised but I’ve been incredibly lucky in my life, through music, to have gotten out and seen a lot of the world and with that comes the understanding that our struggles and experiences as people are often more similar than different. I hope people can relate to the feeling in the song no matter where they came from. You’re only trapped here, if you choose to be.

Correct me if I’m wrong, but “Talkin’ Hard Line” seems less like a story you’re telling and more like ideal circumstances where love brings us together, and the song seems hopeful in that this can be achieved. In a time when people seem so divided and harboring so much hatred, whether it be politically or otherwise, is that the direction you had in mind for listeners to perceive this?

That’s exactly what I’m talking about in this song. It’s a hard subject in today’s world, specifically in today’s America, because of how polarized everything has become. Hate doesn’t deserve a pass, but empathy is important and love is the only way out. Figuring out what that looks like in practice when our own families & friends get so divided and people’s ideas get coopted by grifters who play on their deepest fears is something else completely, but if we can learn to lead with love I think that that’s a start. 

Walk me through how you arrived at choosing to cover Susanna Clark’s “Come From the Heart.” Even though I’ve been in Nashville a while, I’m still not super familiar with country music, so I didn’t immediately realize this was a cover. I think that’s interesting though because you made the song your own and the song couldn’t be more fitting for you based on your prior releases. Although the original sounds in no way like punk, I think the lyrical content and its focus upon honesty makes it very similar. Reminds me a lot of Tim Barry’s “40 Miler” when he sings “music should sound like escape not rent”.

There are so many songs that say what “Come From The Heart” says. I love the simplicity of it. I struggle with that as a songwriter and often have to remind myself that simple songs are often the best ones. Conveying a message like people talk and feel is what gives music power. Things don’t have to be complex to be deep and to resonate. I love this song & specifically fell in love with Guy Clark’s version on Old Friends. Susanna Clark was an incredible artist and had such a unique impact on the world around her through living the way she did. From writing songs like this to painting the cover of Willie Nelson’s “Stardust.” I admire her creativity. 

Although it’s not on this upcoming EP, I did want to talk about “Weird Hill to Die On” because it seems more applicable than ever in today’s climate. I saw you in Nashville when you played with Gregor Barnett and you explained it specifically referencing the incident at the Capitol, but could you kind of reiterate its connection to that event, as well as its overall meaning? It seemed like you changed it up a bit with this one and sang from the point of view of somebody who’s bought into that nonsense, was there reasoning behind that?

I wrote “Weird Hill To Die On” in the aftermath of January 6th as a way of processing what was and is going on in our country. It strange to have conspiratorial thinking move from the fringes to the mainstream and it seems that we haven’t really figured out a way to reckon with it as a society. It can be tiring to navigate a divided world, but our fatigue of that doesn’t change the fact that this is our world. I’m often at odds with how to move through it all. “Talkin’ Hard Line” is about that too but “Weird Hill” attempts to bend the perspective from the other side. 

I wanna talk some about influences because at times, I feel like I can pick out a few key ones that I think heavily influence your sound, and other times I feel like I have no idea. Such storytellers as Woody Guthrie and John Prine, and even Springsteen seem to be some obvious ones. Feel free to correct me on those if I’m wrong, but who else would you cite as strongly influencing you? One of the things I love about listening to your music is your lyrics develop in a way that a writer’s or poet’s might. Are there any non-musician writers that influenced you in terms of storytelling?

I have a lot of heroes. I love music & words. The things I’ve always been most drawn to are ideas and actions. People I can look to as I attempt to draw my roadmap to get to how I’m trying to grow. I like people that write like people talk. Woody Guthrie was my first songwriting hero. I’m a huge Willie Nelson fan too. I love Carl Sandberg’s writing. [Sandberg’s Poem] The People, Yes.

I know you’ve done some work with Tim Barry, I kind of put you two in the same category of elite storytellers through song. Musicians of that nature seem to be a dying breed, did the lyrical storytelling come naturally for you from the beginning or did you strive towards writing in that way? Do you think there are any similarities in either influences or upbringing between you and a guy like Tim Barry that fostered that type of songwriting?

Thank you! I’ve always been drawn towards the kind of music that reflects the way I think and process the world around me. I’m a deep dude and the circumstances of my upbringing are likely responsible for that way of thinking from an early age. I think that’s what drew me towards folk music when I was younger. Tim has played a big role in my life as a friend and songwriting mentor. Tim and I have spent a lot of time together on and off the road and I do think there are similarities and reasons why we connected and continue to relate to one another the way we do. We share a similar mindset on a lot of things. I love storytelling through song and think the most important thing is that it’s told truthfully from its perspective, no matter where it comes from. There are so many important stories being told all the time and it’s important to listen to as many as you can.

How did you get connected with the punk rock audience? Your sound is more country and Americana than punk, while your lyrics fit right in. Were you a punk fan growing up and made the shift to this genre later on, or was it your lyrics that drew in a punk-leaning fan base, or was it something else? I always find the answer to this question interesting, Cory Branan and Ben Nichols are two that I think fall into the same realm.

I grew up as an outsider in a small town and fell in with a small group of punk rockers. At that time punk rock was the most tangible way to express what I was feeling and experiencing. It empowered me. I started touring selling t-shirts for a punk band before I was a teenager and that connected me with life on the road and to so many good people that I still keep close today. I learned a lot from punk rock that I’ll always carry with me, but always felt more drawn to folk songs. I discovered folk singers like Woody Guthrie through punk rock. I connect with the ideals of punk rock and the expression of folk music. I think they have a lot in common. 

Country and punk seem on the surface to be two very different genres. And by country I mean traditional country, not that mainstream pop bullshit that’s popular now. What would you say are some similarities between the two? For me, honest lyrics seems to be the biggest one.

Struggle and progress. There is a struggle in it all. That’s what I wrote about in “Cowtown.” Being somewhere, going nowhere and keeping the faith that progress can be made. Punk rock to me has always embodied hope. There is a longing to it for something better. My favorite country music is about people’s struggle. Acknowledging hardship and moving through it. A lot of songs I love are just an acknowledgment of the struggles we experience as people. The power of music is when we share in the acknowledgment of the hardship. Recognizing that we aren’t alone through sharing stories is where we find hope. Finding hope is where we get a chance to try. 

Shows!!!

May 06 in Cambridge, MA at The Middle East Restaurant and Nightclub (Dying Scene will be there – come say hi!)

May 19 in Atlanta, GA at 529 w/ Tim Barry, Lee Bains and the Glory Fires

May 20 in Carrboro, NC at Cat’s Cradle w/ Tim Barry, Lee Bains and the Glory Fires

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DS Interview: Todd Farrell Jr. (Two Cow Garage, TFJ and the Dirty Birds, Benchmarks) on His Brand New Full-Length “Might as Well be Ghosts”

Might as Well be Ghosts, a perfectly-executed, poetically-written solo record of Todd Farrell Jr., formerly of Two Cow Garage and Benchmarks, officially hit streaming last month and I think it’s pretty damn good. Actually really, really damn good. I had an amazing opportunity to sit down with the very elusive Mr. Farrell at Music City’s […]

Photo Credit: Chad Cochran

Might as Well be Ghosts, a perfectly-executed, poetically-written solo record of Todd Farrell Jr., formerly of Two Cow Garage and Benchmarks, officially hit streaming last month and I think it’s pretty damn good. Actually really, really damn good. I had an amazing opportunity to sit down with the very elusive Mr. Farrell at Music City’s greatest punk bar, the Cobra, to shoot the shit about anything and everything that was even remotely related to music.

I label Todd elusive because he’s somebody I was hoping to just grab beer and shoot the shit with ever since I’d come across his Dirty Birds masterpiece of a record, but our paths hadn’t seemed to cross until just before this full-length was due to release. He gained somewhat of a reputation as the wise musician-dad to a few guys in my circle and, knowing his background of opening for Frank Turner and Lucero, I was dying to meet the guy. Yet it wasn’t until a songwriter’s night at the local 5 Spot that I was finally able to meet the dude and chat a bit (coincidentally, it was also my first in-person meeting with Nashville-newbie and Dying Scene friend Roger Harvey). This interview was comprised of equal parts questions about the new record and personal questions seeking wisdom from a dude that had definitely seen his share of the road and has moved into a new stage of his life, or as Todd wisely labeled it, “new adventures”.

“I’ve kind of found myself in this in-between position, like in the song “See You Next Year”. I’m just happy to do anything, I love to make music, I love to record, I love to play. And there was a time, especially during Covid, when I was pretty sure like nobody would ever play music again“, said Farrell. “I’ve somehow stumbled into a good happy medium where like I have a full-time job here, I have kids, I have a wife, I have a family, I have a house. I do like normal dad shit, I coach a t-ball team. But I do still get calls to do some road work every once in a while…” Farrell has made it known, especially during his live shows, how happy he is with this family life he’s built for himself here in Nashville.

I was particularly interested in asking questions pertaining to his balance of family life and music life, a balance I will hopefully be faced with in the distant, but not-too-distant future. When discussing my personal aspirations for hitting the road and my understanding that I hadn’t done it near enough for it to get old yet, Farrell gave an extremely level-headed and well-thought-out response: “it’s not even that it gets old, it’s just you kind of crave new adventures. Like I wanted to be a dad, and I wanted to take my kids to baseball games; I think that’s something that’s important to me. So on that Dirty Bird’s record, there’s a song called “Pawn Shops”, it’s about selling my guitar. And that was written kind of from a perspective of a guy that has not done it yet. And it was, like, this bleeding-heart anthem of how much I want to get out there and do the thing. So on this record, I kind of challenged myself to write the spiritual successor to it. So that’s the first track, “Local Pickup Only”. And it’s the same theme, about selling guitars, and then the turn of both songs is, like, ending up not selling your guitars. But on this one, the perspective is different. This is the perspective of I’ve done these things already, but I still think this is a worthwhile thing to do.

For the Might as Well be Ghosts, Farrell isn’t in pursuit of a month-long tour of support and sinking every ounce of effort he’s got into pushing it. “I’m just happy I made a record and I get to play the 5 Spot sometimes, and sometimes people take me on tour to play guitar, and that’s cool. Like, there are so few amount of people in the world that get to do even that, and so I’m just thankful that I get to do even a taste of it, and that I got a big taste of it early on, and then now I still get to poke my head in there and do it... I’m not taking it too seriously, and I don’t think anybody should really take me too seriously. If you enjoy it, that’s awesome, and I’m stoked that anybody enjoys the stuff that I still do. I guess thank you to anybody whose listened, and thank you for being interested at all... the fact that I still get to do anything is a gift. Every show I play is a gift, every time I record anything, every time I play with anybody, every time I get to have a cool conversation like this is a gift. So, just, like, thank you for taking your time to take interest in what I’m doing.”

Photo Credit: Kaitlin Gladney

Every song, even every verse at times, features a storytelling through song that I rank up there with the likes of Tim Barry and Cory Branan, but with a humor and wittiness that reminded me a lot of Will Varley. A great example is track 8, “Hey You, You’re Finally Awake”: “The first verse is like, pretty real. Like I’m an older dude now, I have kids. I still have that glimpse of like, old band dude life, you know, “black metal t-shirts in my drawer that I can’t wear anymore” because I’m picking up my kids at daycare, that’s like the crux of that. The second verse is like, just off the wall, random, a COVID rambling I wrote down one time that I thought was really funny... it’s literally just describing the Skyrim Civil War. The Stormcloaks and the like, that’s all it is. And then, the Fox News bit was just because of all the politics... not everything has to be this poignant, super important thing to say. Sometimes you can just do things because you like to do them, because it’s fun.

From an outside perspective, Todd quoting Shane from their Two Cow Garage days together summed up what I loved so much about hearing the meanings behind these songs: “I quoted him in the lyrics, it’s, uh… “We forget better stories than most people will ever know”. He said that to me a hundred times on the road. What he means is, like when you’re out there and you’re doing stuff, you’re kind of living that life, you see things every single day and everything’s a good story.” But he followed that with a wise personal touch that I appreciated even more: “I don’t think that’s specifically true, I took my kids to their first baseball game this weekend and that was, like, maybe a top-five thing for me. But the point was, there’s kind of a romanticism between band people about the things that you share, the camaraderie and all that, that nobody ever understands until you’re out there doing it. Maybe that’s a little bit of the theme of the record too, I just kind of wanted to tell some of those stories.

This was hands down my most enjoyable interview to date, my hope is that readers enjoy it a fraction of the amount I did. We talked about tons of great stuff that isn’t touched upon in the write up: his contributions to the new Kilograms full-length featuring Joe Gittleman, Sammy Kay, Mike McDermott and J Duckworth, explanations behind Goose catching on fire at Springwater and “when St. Louis stole all of our shit”, tour stoires and road wisdom, and a whole lot more. Scroll down for the brand new full-length Might as Well be Ghosts and the entire interview transcript.

Dying Scene (Nathan Kernell Nasty Nate): So what’s kind of the timetable for you’re playing career? Like I know about the Dirty Birds, that’s some of my favorite music period, and I know about like Benchmarks, but I’m screwed up on the timetable. Because you did a solo-type record with some Dirty Birds stuff too, right? 

Todd Farrell Jr.: So, I’m trying to think, so you’re talking about the “Birds on Benches” record with like all acoustic versions. I did that, I think it was either last year or the year before, but I literally kind of did it as like I’m just hanging around my house and I have this microphone and a guitar, here’s how I play songs live these days. But so like I guess it all kind of started when, in 2011 or 12, I was working at a recording studio out in Kingston Springs, and I like self-recorded an EP where like I played everything myself, just to kind of see if I could do it. And I got trashed on a Drive-by Truckers message board, and then that was like weirdly a springboard into people knowing who I was. I was like, “well, I love the truckers, man, do whatever”. Anyway, then I put a band together, it was just like buddies, like Goose, he played bass in Benchmarks too, and my buddy Jack played drums. We did that and like did a little bit of regional stuff, we would get some decently cool opening things, and we got to open for Two Cow at the Basement in like 2013. I had known them before, but that’s when I kind of really got to know them. And they invited me to sit in with them a few times. But then I was playing guitar for this other girl that next spring on a South by Southwest run, I was just a hired gun guitar player. But we like hit all the same cities as Two Cow so I would just, after our show got done, go see them, and like we just hung out. Then that led to Shane asking me if I wanted to join the band. So I did that, and then simultaneously, we did Benchmarks. Benchmarks and the Dirty Birds are like the same band, but it was kind of like the fresh rebrand, I guess you could call it. We want to make this kind of aggressive, punk, but melodic, and songwriter-based music. And it’s not like “me and the someones,” it’s like this is the band. So we did the “American Night” EP in ’15, we did “Our Undivided Attention” in ’17 on SofaBurn Records, and then around that time, I walked away from Two Cow because I really wanted to focus on Benchmarks. Which leads of course to 2020, putting a record out in 2020 and COVID destroying everything. But it was all good, like I got married and had kids, and was very stoked about my home situation.

Now with Two Cow, like were you guys kind of on that show schedule where it’s like, I don’t know, like 300 shows a year or whatever it was?

It wasn’t 300 while I was in there, but it was definitely 150 plus. For a while it was like a month on, a month off, a month on, a month off. And by a month, I mean like six to seven weeks, kind of, and then a month off. It was a ton of fun, I learned just about everything I know about touring from being in that band, what to do and what not to do. I can’t say enough good things about my time with them. 

Well, I’m envious as fuck about doing that because that’s kind of what I’m trying to work my way up to, my goal is 100 shows in a year and my wife hates that. 

Honestly man, unless you go to the West Coast, you don’t need to be out for two or three weeks. It used to be you had to be out for more than a month to like break even because you had to find enough like anchor shows to make the trip worthwhile. But now it’s like, figure out where a good paying show is, book a few shows around it and do that. Then it’s good on your band’s sanity, it’s good on your band’s finances, you’re not overplaying. There was a minute in Two Cow and Benchmarks to where we were like in this exact same bar, playing to this exact same crowd two months ago in this town. That’s not really furthering this, you know, we don’t even have new merch. I think bands could be strategic about like how, when and where they tour. There’s a romanticism about being on the road your whole life, but I don’t think it’s sustainable for a band. Having said all that, there are parts of it that I do miss and I’m thankful that sometimes artists will take me and I get to play guitar or whatever. I haven’t done the touring on my own in a while, maybe I will if I get to do something with Sammy [Kay] or whatever.

That’s something I wanted to ask you because you’ve been pretty outspoken at your shows about like you’ve built this life for yourself that you really love with getting married and having kids. And that’s not super conducive to touring like you used to. But it seems like you’ve got a happy medium of you still get out like you went with Will Hoge, but you’re home with family too.

Yeah, like last year I went with Sammy and we did the support for Chuck Ragan. I’ve somehow stumbled into a good happy medium where like I have a full-time job here, I have kids, I have a wife, I have a family, I have a house. I do like normal dad shit, I coach a t-ball team. But I do still get calls to to do some road work every once in a while and these days, obviously if it’s a good paying thing I’m more likely to take it but sometimes with Sammy it’s like we’re opening for Chuck Ragan for five nights.

And you can’t say no to Sammy… *laughs*

To be fair I do say no to Sammy *laughs*, not because I don’t love him but because sometimes it’s like my kid’s birthday. I think I’m in a privileged situation, picking shows, like I know those calls aren’t always gonna be there forever, but like doing a long weekend or a week on the road with someone like Sammy or even like Will Hoge is still pretty cool, he’s on a level more than I’ve ever been a part of, and like I respect the hell out of him. He’s kind of living the dream, he’s also like a family dude, he’s got kids and a family and he’s made more sacrifices than probably I’m making to make that dream. I respect the hell out of him and it was an honor and privilege to do those things. I’m a big fan of his. My wife is a huge fan of his. And so I was like “Vicki, you know, I got a call to do a long weekender with Will Hoge”. That’s how I knew it was legit, my wife knew who he was by name and she knew some of the songs he’d written.

So with the the new record you talked on your EPK you sent me that it was mostly written and recorded over Covid. Were there any outliers, like old songs?

Yeah, there’s three specific ones. One is called “Separate Beds” and it’s like on YouTube, I played it at an in-store in Little Rock in 2015 or 16 or something, I also played the other songs at that same in-store. “Separate’ Beds” I wrote for my wife before we were married. And then this other one on the record is called “Nahmericana”, it’s on YouTube as something else. But I played an unofficial Americana fest thing at the 5 Spot and some guy told me like “your songs are great, but you talk too much about like Taylor Swift and black metal, like you really need to focus on your brand”. So I wrote that song in response to that. And then the third song, that was an earlier song called “Health and Safe Passage”. There is an artist named Chris Porter, he was in a lot of bands, like alt-country bands, Some Dark Holler was one, Porter and the Bluebonnet Rattlesnakes with like John Calvin Abney who’s on that record. So anyway, Two Cow’s on tour at South by Southwest and we run into Porter at the bar, and we’re just hanging out and shooting the shit. He’s a good dude, we all know each other, we’re all friends. But like three weeks later, we’re on the West Coast in Santa Cruz and wake up to hear that there’s a van crash and Porter died in this crash. And I literally wrote those lyrics on my iPhone, I like walked from the hotel to the pier and sat there, wrote those lyrics down. And I didn’t think about it, literally, until when I was recording these songs, I was kind of like “what else could I put on here” and then I found those lyrics. And actually John Calvin Abney, who played with Porter a lot, he’s playing lead guitar on that. 

Does this this record kind of a theme?

I think it probably does, it’s probably kind of what we were talking about earlier. I think it has a lot to do with, like you said, where I’ve kind of found myself in this in-between position, like in the song “See You Next Year”. I’m just happy to do anything, I love to make music, I love to record, I love to play. And there was a time, especially during Covid, when I was pretty sure like nobody would ever play music again, I just thought it was not gonna happen. And you know Benchmarks had this whole album, tour flop because of Covid and everything and I was really upset about that. I was in that space kind of where whole world’s changing and I really gotta buckle down and do my normal job and I need to be a dad. I need to do all this stuff because I think music’s done. And then Joe Maiocco, who did kind of the creative direction for the album art, he convinced me, one, that that’s not the case, that it’s worthwhile to keep creating, and, two, that these songs deserve that these dongs deserve to see the light of day. I was just sending him iPhone demos like “here’s a song I wrote today, what do you think?” And he was finally like “Todd, you need to actually fuckin’ record these songs and put them out.” So I guess the theme is just, you know, make cool stuff. You can just make cool stuff and it doesn’t have to be this big extravagant thing. Like Benchmarks, to me, was like I need to make sure I’m printing up records and I need to do the merch and I need to play X number of shows a year and I need to do all this. And now I’m just happy I made a record and I get to play the 5 Spot sometimes, and sometimes people take me on tour to play guitar, and that’s cool. Like, there are so few amount of people in the world that get to do even that, and so I’m just thankful that I get to do even a taste of it, and that I got a big taste of it early on, and then now I still get to poke my head in there and do it. 

Well, I think that’s a great mindset to have, a great perspective to have on it.

I get the bug still though, you know. I get the bug that like, man, maybe I want to go back out on the road for, you know, whatever, months and months and months. There’s a lot of me that would be like, oh, that would be really fun. But I also just took my kids to Atlanta to see their first baseball game and I would never give that away. This is what that “Northern Lights” song is about, but just because I really love the situation I’m in now, doesn’t mean I don’t still occasionally look into what that other life was like and think it was really, really fun. So trying to like pull little bits of that into my current life, and exercise whatever kind of moderation I can in playing, and just trying to make myself happy and make those around me happy, it’s cool.

I always love talking to guys like you that have kind of been there and done that in terms of touring. It’s kind of what I’m trying to do now, you know, and you’ve done it. I’ve talked to other guys who have been out there and done it, and in a certain way it’s gotten old. It’s still fresh for me, I’m looking at it in a way like “oh, I could hit the road every day this year and just be gone all the time.” I know, like, that’s going to get old. It’s just really cool talking to you about that and it’s a very level-headed way to look at it. 

Well, it’s not even that it gets old, it’s just you kind of crave new adventures. Like I wanted to be a dad, and I wanted to take my kids to baseball games. And maybe that’s really, like, un-punk rock of me or whatever, but I think that’s something that’s important to me. So on that Dirty Bird’s record, there’s a song called “Pawn Shops”, it’s about selling my guitar. And that was written kind of from a perspective of a guy that has not done it yet. And it was, like, this bleeding-heart anthem of how much I want to get out there and do the thing. So on this record, I kind of challenged myself to write the spiritual successor to it. So that’s the first track, “Local Pickup Only”. And it’s the same theme, about selling guitars, and then the turn of both songs is, like, ending up not selling your guitars. But on this one, the perspective is different. This is the perspective of I’ve done these things already, but I still think this is a worthwhile thing to do.

That’s a perfect lead-in to what I had next because I wanted to talk about your one-liners. You’ve probably got, like, no exaggeration, some of my favorite one-liners in music. “Pawn Shop” is a prime example, like, “The hardest part when all your heroes play in bands, is finding out all you heroes live in vans”. Then right after “I’d sell my guitar to buy all my friends drinks at the bar.” I wanted to ask about some of the one-liners you had in “Local Pickup Only.” I mean you kind of just explained that as a follow-up to “Pawn Shop”. Being from St. Louis originally, I’ve gotta ask about the line about St. Louis stealing all of your shit.

That one was with Two Cow. This is my first tour with them, too. We played at the, I think it’s called the Demo, it’s not there anymore, next door to a record shop. Played the show, and this is when St. Louis was at its height of people stealing from bands. And we were like, “all right, we’re going to go out of our way, we’re going to spend money on a nice hotel with a nice locked-up garage”. We play the show, go back to the hotel. I brought my acoustic guitar in, which is like a $90 guitar I got at a pawn shop. All of our other gear’s in the van still. And we wake up the next morning, the van locks are popped, like everything’s gone, everything was stolen from us. It’s an interesting story too because somebody made a GoFundMe for us, and by the time we made it to Minneapolis, we had enough money to just buy new gear. We played at Triple Rock that next night, my first time playing at Triple Rock. But, we just played on borrowed gear from the other bands for the rest of that tour, and then we bought new stuff. But then it came out later, like in the last three or four years, they found all the people that stole everything, it was just this big theft ring. But all that was left was Shane’s bass because he had painted “Soldier of Love” on it and you couldn’t resell that without it being tracked. There’s a big Riverfront Times article, you should look it up, about how we found all our stuff on eBay, and like bid on it, and then they blocked us, and we showed the police and the police didn’t do anything.

What about the Springwater line, about Goose catching on fire? 

Goose and I used to play in a death metal band, this is in like 2000, maybe 2005, like a long ass time ago. And, we would play at Springwater. They did this thing called Metal Mondays in October, they would have a bunch of metal bands play. And, there was this band, I run into this dude sometimes, the guitar player from this band, they were called Good Lookin’ Corpse. They would like, take swigs of Bacardi 151 and Spitfire. But this is Springwater, you’re gonna blow that shit. And like Goose is the bass player in all these bands, I name dropped him in that song. He got it all, it like, singed all his arm hair off.

Probably my favorite was “the Dragons, just like I saw on Fox News” from, I think it was from “Hey you”.

The first verse is like, pretty real. Like I’m an older dude now, I have kids. I still have that glimpse of like, old band dude life, you know, “black metal t-shirts in my drawer that I can’t wear anymore” because I’m picking up my kids at daycare, that’s like the crux of that. The second verse is like, just off the wall, random, a COVID rambling I wrote down one time that I thought was really funny. Have you ever played Skyrim? 

Oh yeah absolutely.

So, it’s literally just describing the Skyrim Civil War. The Stormcloaks and the like, that’s all it is. And then, the Fox News bit was just because of all the politics. 

Well that gets a good laugh every time I’ve heard you play it live, everyone fucking loves that one.

And, you know, I think the roundabout of the whole thing is a little bit in theme with not everything has to be this poignant, super important thing to say. Sometimes you can just do things because you like to do them, because it’s fun. 

So what’s your favorite song on the record, do you have one? 

*laughs* I gotta remember what songs are on there. Um… I really “Local Pickup”, I really like “See You Next Year”, I have a few different versions of “See You Next Year”. And the version that’s on this is very specific in the way it was done, but it’s not the way I play it live. I kind of want to record the live version. I like “Northern Lights” a lot, that’s a song I wrote about touring with Sammy, actually. It was shortly after I left Two Cow, I was kind of still looking for work. Sammy called, and we did, like, a seven-weeker opening for the Creepshow. I flew into Jersey and met up with them, and we kind of played our way out that way, we went, like, from Jersey to California, up to Vancouver, back across Canada to Winnipeg, crossed over the border on Halloween night, played Minneapolis, and then Benchmarks met up with us in Minneapolis. So I played both sets on the way back down to Nashville and then they continued on the rest. This is in the fall of ’17 and I’m, like, two days into this seven-week-long tour and I get a call from my wife, I find out she’s pregnant. And, one, like, we can’t talk about it, I’m surrounded by people, we can’t like have private conversations on the phone and stuff. But we can’t also be together and, like, dissect that emotion or whatever. So it was, like, a month and a half before I saw her again. And then when I see her again, there’s two bands crashing in our place. But on that tour, we went all the way up to Fort McMurray, Canada, as far as North as I’ve ever been. And the club guy was like “if you drive, like, a few miles north, you can see the Northern Lights.” And we all thought that’d be awesome. But by the end of the show, everybody’s so tired, like we’ll see it next time, wherever. But, like, in my mind, I’m thinking, I don’t know if there’s gonna be a next time for me, I really wanna see it. So that was kind of about that, like that transitional phase, in theme with everything else, getting a good look at what you’re kind of leaving behind, that sense of adventure and discovery and everything. Kind of transitioning into that other, not adulthood, but into like, post-band life. Everything’s a story, I think. 

Well, that’s what I really like, I’ve gotten real into the Americana genre these past few years. It just happens to be it’s all punk guys that do Americana that I like. Like, Tim Barry, I think, does it better than anybody where it’s storytelling through song. He does it great. 

I’m trying to get better at this. I try to, like, be too flashy on the guitar when I’m writing songs, there has to be a lick or something. But Tim’s like, I’m gonna play G, D, C, and E minor and rip your heart out with those chords. It’s all his words and his melodies and it’s not about being flashy.

Well, I think you’ve got the storytelling part of it down, that’s what I love about some of your songs. You can tell it kind of is a story, not even between every song, but every verse. Like “Local Pickup Only”, you can tell there’s a story to everything you’re saying.

The theme of that song came from something Shane from Two Cow said to me. I quoted him in the lyrics, it’s, uh… “We forget better stories than most people will ever know”. He said that to me a hundred times on the road. What he means is, like when you’re out there and you’re doing stuff, you’re kind of living that life, you see things every single day and everything’s a good story. You see whatever’s funny or terrible or sad or beautiful or whatever, like… you experience life in such a different way than the monotony of, like, your day-to-day work. The best stories that you have, like, in your day-to-day are not as good as the worst stories that you have when you’re doing the thing. And I don’t think that’s specifically true, I took my kids to their first baseball game this weekend and that was, like, maybe a top-five thing for me. But the point was, there’s kind of a romanticism between band people about the things that you share, the camaraderie and all that, that nobody ever understands until you’re out there doing it. Maybe that’s a little bit of the theme of the record too, I just kind of wanted to tell some of those stories. 

That’s fucking rad, that fires me up. That’s exactly what I’m kind of going after with my band. The relatability and the storytelling has always been what appeals to me about punk. I mean, you go from, like The Bouncing Souls or NOFX to like Roger Harvey or Tim Barry or whoever, it’s all kind of the same… relatability and, like accessibility, I guess. 

It’s interesting for me. I kind of back-ended my way into punk. I was, like, a metal dude. And then I was really into, like, songwriters. I loved Richard Buckner, John Prine. I found Drive-By Truckers and Lucero, and those kind of bands. And that, like, back-ended me into punk music. So I’m not, like, the great authority on punk rock, other than playing in and with a bunch of cool punk bands. Like, I listen to it now. But that ethos that you’re talking about and those, like principles… the sense of community, I think, is the most important one. That existed across all those genres, but it’s very much rooted in that punk ideology. It’s not, like, the DIY thing as much as it is just a community of people that lift each other up, whether that be musically or actually lifting each other up physically in life. 

Well, it’s cool hearing from you, somebody who found punk in a drastically different way. Because I was, like looking for punk. And I found it, finally. And then I found, like, Lucero two years ago, maybe. And I found all these guys that are some of my favorite songwriters ever now. You know, like, Will Varley, Frank Turner, Brian Fallon I found because of Gaslight, and Dave Hause, I was a big Loved Ones fan before him. I almost respect them more as, like, it takes some balls to get up there just with an acoustic guitar and songwriting. It’s terrifying. Like, I’ve got nerves real bad being on stage, so I’ve got to have a few beers in me. I couldn’t imagine being by myself up there, I respect the fuck out of it. 

I used to be really bad at it, too. This is terrible. The show, I’m trying to think, this is 2013. I had booked back-to-back show, and I was opening solo for John Moreland and Caleb Caudle at the OG Basement. I, like, really fucked up the solo set. Like, I blew it, I was not good. My banter was bad, I didn’t play well, I forgot lyrics, I was so nervous. And then, the band show with Two Cow was, like, killer, probably the best the band ever sounded, probably why I got a job at Two Cow. For whatever reason, playing in a band was so much more natural to me than playing solo. But over the years, I’ve kind of figured out how to play solo, there’s no formula to it. It more just has to do with, like, being comfortable and knowing what you’re going to do.

When developing these songs, John Prine died, and so I started studying John Prine. And then one of my favorite bands and songwriters ever is The Weakerthans, John K. Samson of The Weakerthans. The way he writes, the way he crafts his songs to be conversations with the audience. A lot of these songs are like, John K. Samson, I’m just doing what I think he would do. Like that song, “Skulls and Antlers”, the chorus is just “I wanna start a blackened death metal band”. That’s just me trying to think what would John K. Samson do.

Going back to what you were saying about playing solo, maybe there’s also a little bit of I’ve changed my expectation of what I want my live performance to be. It used to be, man, I gotta make sure I get this many people in here so I can sell some records and t-shirts, I’m really nervous about everything. Now when it’s just me with an acoustic guitar, I can just play my songs, maybe selfishly or arrogantly, but I know they’re good because I’ve worked on them really well. I’ve already put the work in and I’ve practiced them at home. I guess maybe just from playing for years and years, I don’t have a stage fright thing anymore. I’m in total control. When I’m with a band now, I don’t have a lot of time to rehearse anymore so there’s some variables and I’m like, “we’ll see how this goes”. 

My love for Lucero, they’re a band that maybe people wouldn’t think I’m into because they’re not like a guitar-forward band per se, they’re not shredding or anything, they’re just like writing really good songs and playing it really well. That’s a band that probably changed my life on taking songwriting seriously and not just wanting to shred all day.

Ben Nichols, Sammy, and Dave Hause are probably the biggest friends of the site. Our head dude Jay knows all of them real well. You two may have met at some point, he was actually the one who told me about you and Micah seeing on Twitter the interview I did with Roger Harvey not too long ago.

Yeah I met Roger when he was living up in Pittsburgh, he’s a sweet dude too. 

I’m so glad he’s in town because I got to see him play, he was opening for Greg Barnett at the End, that’s how I found out about him. Fell in love with the dude’s music.

I was at that show, Mike Bay, Borrowed Sparks, was playing that show.

I missed his set because I drove from Chattanooga I think for that show. I’ve actually covered him for the site quite a bit too. But I’m the biggest Menzingers fan and I was like taking pictures for Greg Barnett and his family, hanging out with them, him and Eric Keen which was cool. That’s what I love about punk, how accessible it is. Even like the biggest names, like Fat Mike, my buddies have stories about being around him. It’s so accessible, everybody’s just a dude, I love it. The amount of big name guys I’ve met just here at the Cobra, dudes from TSOL, Sean Sellers was drumming for the Mad Caddies, I was smoking a cigarette with him out back.

It’s pretty cool that people hang here, there used to be no green room. I haven’t played here since it was Foobar. 

There’s a green room about the size of a bathroom in there and nobody hangs out in it, they all hang out out front. That’s what I’ve always loved about punk, no one’s got a big head because the ceiling for punk isn’t super high normally.

Speaking of “all our heroes live in vans”, I just remember during that period, I thought Two Cow was just the biggest band in the world, they were the most important band in the world to me and I’m getting to open up for their show. The coolest thing in the world. And then like a year later, I’m in the fucking band. I was like “that’s what this scene is, everybody is just a person”. Something I will say, from playing country gigs and just doing hired gun stuff for people that aren’t necessarily in that same punk ecosystem, like a lot of the Americana punk stuff is crossover, but I would do a lot of Broadway stuff or try to get on big country gigs. And it’s not the same, like right now, we’re saying a lot of names, but it’s not name dropping, it’s just like these are our friends. But people name drop and people get pissed when you try to do that. I don’t know, there’s just a weird vibe, you can’t talk about so and so was a good example.

So do you have any plans with the new record, are you doing any promotion shows for it or any pressings? 

I have nothing planned, and this is like, the most haphazard way I’ve put a record out. Everything else I’ve done has been so precise, and so planned, regardless of whatever band. Planned is probably a loose term, but at least we had a plan and a tour, and things like that. I don’t even have a show booked at the moment, and I know that’s not like, what you’re supposed to do, but I kind of just wanted to get the music out. I’ll probably play some local stuff. I would like to maybe do a quick regional run where I hit, like, places where they like me. So I might go to Atlanta, like, Raleigh, I might go to Columbus, Ohio, Louisville, Dayton, Little Rock, Dallas, but I have no plans to do it at the moment. And I do it, it won’t be all at once, it’ll probably be like a couple weekends here and there, but I would like to. But I also wanna like coach my kids’ t-ball team on Saturdays.

What about with like Sammy, or just hired gig stuff, anything you can talk about?

I’m playing this CKY show with Electric Python here next week. I don’t have anything on the books with Sammy. He asked me to do something over the summer that I can’t do, with the Kilograms. 

The Kilograms are fucking unbelievable, dude. Were you on that new record?

Yeah, I played pedal steel on it. I literally did it in my living room, I haven’t even met them. They sent me the tracks I did in my living room, and like, we’ve talked on social media, but I haven’t officially met any of them other than Sammy. Which is funny how it all works these days because they recorded all that stuff in, like Cincinnati, and I don’t even know where Joe is, I assume he’s like in the Jersey area. But I guess that’s not like a far-fetched thing these days. Like, that Sammy tour that we did with Chuck Ragan was, like, me and Lydia Loveless and this guy Corey Tramontelli, who did a tour with Stuck Lucky from here recently. It was the four of us and Lydia and I knew each other before, but I didn’t know Corey. Sammy and I played together a lot. But we just kind of, like, the day of the first show got together and jammed for a half hour. I also did that Will Hoge tour, I learned 65 songs and we never rehearsed. The first time we played together was just, like, on stage, in front of, like, hundreds of people. Talking about nerves, I was terrified for the first, like, half of that set. I was terrified, because these guys play together a lot, and I have not. And, you know, like, you can learn songs, you can’t learn the way a band plays them live. You can’t learn, like, he’s gonna do this move that means we’re gonna stretch a verse. There’s a little variance.

That’s something that’s always blown my mind, how well people live can go along with variation in sets.

Dude, with Two Cow, there was a time, this era of Two Cow, we were just like a breathing unit that we knew exactly what we were all doing. We knew what each other was gonna do, and it was great. And that’s how I kind of perceived, like, the Will Hoge situation when I walked into that environment. I was, like, “man, they have that, but I am new here, so I don’t know what I’m doing”. I’m just, like, watching everybody very carefully. I slowly figured it out, I think that’s a cool thing about just bands and musical communication.

Well that’s about all I’ve got if there’s anything you wanted to add about the brand new record?

I guess if I want anybody to take anything away from, like, what I’m doing with this record is I’m not taking it too seriously, and I don’t think anybody should really take me too seriously. If you enjoy it, that’s awesome, and I’m stoked that anybody enjoys the stuff that I still do. I guess thank you to anybody who has listened, and thank you for being interested at all. Kind of like I said, I kind of thought that that creative side of my life might have been over during COVID, and so the fact that I still get to do anything is a gift. Every show I play is a gift, every time I record anything, every time I play with anybody, every time I get to have a cool conversation like this is a gift. So, just, like, thank you for taking your time to take interest in what I’m doing, and I appreciate it.

Yeah, that’s a great way to end it, I appreciate it dude.

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DS News: Dave Hause announces new album “Drive It Like It’s Stolen”, premieres first single “Hazard Lights”

The Loved Ones frontman Dave Hause has announced his new solo album Drive It Like It’s Stolen will be released on April 28th through Blood Harmony Records. Listen to the first single “Hazard Lights” below and pre-order the record here. This will be Hause’s sixth solo LP, following 2021’s Blood Harmony. The Philly singer/songwriter says […]

The Loved Ones frontman Dave Hause has announced his new solo album Drive It Like It’s Stolen will be released on April 28th through Blood Harmony Records. Listen to the first single “Hazard Lights” below and pre-order the record here.

This will be Hause’s sixth solo LP, following 2021’s Blood Harmony. The Philly singer/songwriter says he’s going for a “post-apocalyptic Americana” feel on this album.

Drive It Like It’s Stolen tracklist:

  1. Cheap Seats (New Years Day, NYC, 2042)
  2. Pedal Down
  3. Damn Personal
  4. Low
  5. chainsaweyes
  6. Hazard Lights
  7. Drive It Like It’s Stolen
  8. lashingout
  9. Tarnish
  10. The Vulture

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DS Photo Gallery: Dave Hause and the Mermaid, Jordyn Shellhart in Nashville, TN 8.17.22

I’ve been hooked on Dave Hause for several years now. It was Hause and Brian Fallon that both opened a whole new world of punk that I previously had no idea even existed. The folk/ Americana genre, comprised of Tim Barry, Dan Andriano, Chuck Ragan and the likes, that I have now come to love […]

I’ve been hooked on Dave Hause for several years now. It was Hause and Brian Fallon that both opened a whole new world of punk that I previously had no idea even existed. The folk/ Americana genre, comprised of Tim Barry, Dan Andriano, Chuck Ragan and the likes, that I have now come to love was completely unknown territory about 5 years ago until I made a monumental discovery. It was Fallon’s record Elsie and Hause’s single “We Could be Kings” that really pulled my heart strings and broke me into listening to anything that wasn’t hard, fast punk-rock.

The real game-changer for me was seeing Hause play the historic 95-person capacity Bluebird Cafe in 2018. Over the years, Bluebird has seen shows from notable punk greats Garth Brooks and Taylor Swift (I hope you pick up on my sarcasm here), as well as a wide plethora of other Grammy-winning artists. To my knowledge, Hause (joined briefly by Northcote) was the first punk act the grace the Bluebird’s historic stage. After a Brian Fallon performance there a couple months later (a show that still haunts me to this day for not being able to make), no other punk-rocker has played since. The raw intimacy grasped me and made me a fan for life.

This show differed in that Hause was joined by a full band rather than just his brother Tim, but the small-venue intimacy had not disappeared. This time taking place at the Basement with a rough capacity-estimate of around 100, Dave Hause and the Mermaid damn near blew the fucking roof off the place.

Nashville-native Jordyn Shellhart kicked things off and man was I impressed. She reminded me of the sheer cesspool of songwriter talent that calls Nashville home. After her performance, there seemed to be hope after all that something may come out of Nashville other than shitty pop-country and hot chicken.

So, we meet again Mr. Hause. This reunion has been long overdue but the anticipation made the performance even more worthwhile. In all honesty, when Dale Doback said “You sound like a combination of Fergie and Jesus“, he wasn’t talking about Brennan Huff; he was talking about good ol’ Dave Hause (I hope you get this reference).

In all seriousness, this had the feel of an old school punk show: the shoulder-to-shoulder audience packed into a literal basement dive-bar, running into old buddies from around town that I hadn’t seen in ages, seeing a songwriter hero of mine play 10 feet in front of me. This show was about as perfect as it gets, and only got better when fellow Nashvillian Will Hoge hopped on stage to close the set.

From a photography perspective, this was a nice challenge. Up until now I’d had little to no success shooting shows at small, dimly-lit venues, especially when my options are limited by the crowd like this one was. Overall, I’m happy with how these turned out and I’m happy to share them with whomever has made it this far through the article. As always, your time is much appreciated and help spread the word that Dying Scene is back and firing on all cylinders. Cheers!

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DS Photo Gallery: Joshua Ray Walker and Vandoliers at The Middle East in Cambridge, MA (3/8/23)

Remember a bunch of years ago when Joe Strummer (RIP) was asked his thoughts about what constituted “punk” and his answer was along the lines of “punk isn’t about the boots or the hair dye” and instead it’s about having exemplary manners to your fellow humans and especially about not being an asshole? Because I […]

Remember a bunch of years ago when Joe Strummer (RIP) was asked his thoughts about what constituted “punk” and his answer was along the lines of “punk isn’t about the boots or the hair dye” and instead it’s about having exemplary manners to your fellow humans and especially about not being an asshole? Because I do, and because if you ask me – and I’m operating on the assumption that you did because you’re reading Dying Scene – some of the most “punk rock” music that’s being created in American music nowadays doesn’t come from bands that are on “punk” labels or play music that involves Les Pauls and Marshall stacks or mohawks or skateboards or two-tone wingtips or come from places like southern California or the streets of Boston. Instead, some of the most important and progressive and culturally-inclusive and, in that sense, most “punk rock” music being created comes from places like Tennessee and Texas and the Carolinas and the Deep South and comes from music we’d traditionally call “Americana” or “outlaw country.” There is something inherently “punk rock” about sticking up for the poor or the marginalized or the different or the outcasts when you live in a place that those of us in our safe, suburban coastal elite homes might otherwise look down upon for the Redness of their political views.

And so it was that a tour featuring a pair of acts that have been featured at places like the Grand Ol’ Opry and the Ryman Auditorium and the State Fair of Texas and onThe Tonight Show w/Jimmy Fallon became, in my mind, one of the most eagerly-anticipated “punk rock” tours of the early stages of the year that is 2023. I’m talking, of course, about the recent Joshua Ray Walker/Vandoliers tour that found itself upstairs at the iconic Middle East in Cambridge, Massachusetts, last week. It was the first time that either of the acts – who both hail from the Lone Star State – had played in Massachusetts, and safe to say it was a resounding success.

Vandoliers had been very recently in the news for auctioning off their stage-worn dresses after a show in Tennessee in protest of that state’s abhorrent anti-drag legislation, and they carried that energy through a barn-burning hourlong show-opening set. Frontman Josh Fleming pointed out how he’d spent many hours in his younger years watching old YouTube videos of punk shows that had taken place at the Middle East over the years, and while his band’s sound may include a fiddle and a trumpet and a large-body Gibson acoustic and songs about highways in its home state, the live show is every bit as “punk rock” as many of those performances from years-gone-by. Personal highlights included “Cigarettes In The Rain” and “Every Saturday Night” and, of course, their rousing cover of “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles),” a song that I’m 99% sure I saw Down By Law cover in that same venue more than a quarter-century ago.


Headlining this run – although both acts played hourlong sets so it made it feel like a co-headlining affair – was the one-and-only Joshua Ray Walker. If you’re not familiar, here’s the brief version: Walker is a Texas-born-and-bred singer and songwriter and dare I say guitar virtuoso. He’s a larger-than-life figure both in myriad ways and writes songs that can make you smile (see “Sexy After Dark”) and songs that can make you cry (see “Voices” or “Canyon” or like 3/4ths of the rest of the catalog) and, quite frequently, songs that can do both at the same time (see their honky-tonkified version of “Hello”). Oh, and he’s got a voice like a goddamned angel.


The live music scene in the greater Boston area can be a bit of a fickle beast at times, particularly for bands that aren’t from around here; I’ve seen far bigger “punk rock” names play the very same venue to far smaller and less enthusiastic crowds than the one that showed up to party and dance and holler on this particular late winter Tuesday evening. Because it’s not about the mohawks or the hair dye – it’s about the people and the connection. See more pictures from the shindig below!


Joshua Ray Walker Slideshow

Vandoliers Slideshow

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DS Photo Gallery: Rebuilder’s “Local Support” Record Release Party, w/ No Trigger, Choke Up and Trash Rabbit (Cambridge, MA – 09/01/23)

A week ago Friday, beloved Boston punks Rebuilder finally held the very-long-awaited record release show at Cambridge, MA’s Sinclair for their latest full-length, Local Support. If you read our recent chat with Rebuilder co-frontman (and Local Support‘s primary architect) Sal Ellington, you’re no doubt aware of the trials and tribulations that went into the drawn-out […]

A week ago Friday, beloved Boston punks Rebuilder finally held the very-long-awaited record release show at Cambridge, MA’s Sinclair for their latest full-length, Local Support. If you read our recent chat with Rebuilder co-frontman (and Local Support‘s primary architect) Sal Ellington, you’re no doubt aware of the trials and tribulations that went into the drawn-out making of the album. All of that added up to not just the successful release of a wonderful album, but an extraordinary evening of revelry and celebration that truly exemplified the idea of “local support” in the best ways possible.


The evening was kicked off by a tremendous four-piece known as Trash Rabbit. If you’re not familiar with Trash Rabbit…well, you’re like I was until a couple of days before the show when I decided to familiarize myself with them. The results were tremendous. The original Trash Rabbit trio (Mena Lemos on vocals and guitar, Nick Adams on bass and Gibran Mobarak on drums) have been playing together since their formative years and took their talents to the vaunted Berklee College of Music, adding Gia Flores on guitar to fill out the sound. The sound is up-tempo garage rock, a sort of post-emo cacophony of hooks upon hooks upon hooks. The crowd were infinitely more familiar with Trash Rabbit than I was and were at the ready with their dancing shoes afoot. Adams and Mobarak switched places for set closer “Scuba Queen,” a delightfully weird and interactive singalong.


Speaking of bands who have been together since their formative years, I feel like beloved Boston punk quartet Choke Up have been playing together since they were diapers. They don’t play in Boston – or many other places – much nowadays because life happens; Sam put out pretty great solo record and Harley moved to NYC and plays in a fun band called Sadlands and James plays in like 87 other bands including the super rad Cape Crush for example. And so it’s always a celebration when they do get together and especially when they play on the big stage at Sinclair. Songs like “Blue Moon” will never not turn into glorious, drunken, sweaty-arm-in-sweaty-arm singalongs.


Thanks to the high-energy table-setters on the bill, the mostly-full crowd at the 525-capacity Sinclair was sufficiently warmed up by the time Rebuilder graced the stage. In keeping with the album-release theme, the band took the stage in matching lemon-print Hawaiian-style shirts and in a formation that I don’t think I’d previously seen despite this being my 19th Rebuilder show to date. Choke Up’s Harley Cox did double duty, manning the drum kit for the set’s first couple of songs while normal Rebuilder drummer Brandon Phillips joined co-frontmen Ellington and Craig Stanton in a three-guitar attack, alongside stalwart Daniel Carswell on bass and frequent Rebuilderer Pat Hanlin on keys.


After a few songs as a six-piece, Cox departed and Phillips assumed his throw behind the kit as the band tore through a set that, as you might imagine, leaned heavily on the new material. Because the album was released on time a few weeks prior to the show (thanks Iodine Recordings!) a solid number of showgoers were already singing along to tracks like “Hold On” and “Wedding Day” and “Another Round.” For album closer – and set closer – “Disco Loadout,” Ellington left his guitar to the side and assumed full-on frontman role as the band were joined by a pedal steel player and not-one-but-two horn players to fill out the sound (and/or turn them into the world’s first ska/Americana (would that be Ameriskana or skamericana?) pop-punk band.


And thus it was time for the evening’s headliners, although No Trigger frontman Tom Rheault joked that since the evening was Rebuilder’s record release show, there was essentially no pressure on the antifascist sextet from straight outta the Worcester Hills. Everyone’s favorite discount Strike Anywhere blazed through a super fun set that included crowd-favorites old and new like “No Tattoos” and “Too High To Die” and “Dogs On Acid” and, of course, “Anti Fantasy.” Rheault programmed the digital backdrop to include a mix of No Trigger artwork and logos and scenes from all your favorite sociopolitical documentaries, like “Dumb and Dumber” and “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret Of The Ooze”.


Head below to check out slideshows from each of the evening’s bands! And Jeff Bridges pooping!

No Trigger Gallery


Rebuilder Gallery


Choke Up Gallery


Trash Rabbit Gallery

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DS Record Radar: This Week in Punk Vinyl (Ramones, Mad Caddies, Pinhead Gunpowder & more)

Greetings, fellow degenerates! Welcome to the latest installment of the Dying Scene Record Radar. The holiday season is finally upon us and it’s almost time to put a bow on 2022. Hopefully you’ve gotten your gift shopping done, because there’s a lot of new records to blow your money on this week! Kick off your […]

Greetings, fellow degenerates! Welcome to the latest installment of the Dying Scene Record Radar. The holiday season is finally upon us and it’s almost time to put a bow on 2022. Hopefully you’ve gotten your gift shopping done, because there’s a lot of new records to blow your money on this week! Kick off your shoes, pull up a chair, crack open a cold one, and break out those wallets, because it’s go time.

R-A-M-O-N-E-S

We’re starting this week off with two nuggets of 80’s Ramones goodness. First up is a new 40th Anniversary reissue of 1983’s Subterranean Jungle on violet colored vinyl. This is due out on January 6th, 2023; not sure how many were pressed, but it does look like it’ll be readily available at independent record stores. Here is one of many places you can pre-order it online.

Remember that Ramones box set that was released on Record Store Day earlier this year? The one I spent $150 on? Well… it’s back, and it’s only $90 now! I’m kinda pissed honestly, but hey, if you don’t already have this, it’s a great fuckin’ deal. The Sire Albums 1981-1989 features all six of their 80’s LPs and a bonus rarities compilation (that’s $12.86 per record btw). If you’re a sucker like me and you bought this at full price on RSD, this would still make a great gift for the Ramones fan in your life (though it, too, is not due out til January 6th). Buy here.

Fat Wreck Chords has released another 25th Anniversary reissue, this time for the Mad Caddies‘ debut LP Quality Soft Core. This has been out of print since its original release in 1997. Head over to Fat’s webstore and get it before it’s gone!

The hard working folks at 1-2-3-4 Go! Records are wrapping up their long-running Pinhead Gunpowder reissues series. The final round includes the band’s 2003 LP Compulsive Disclosure and 2008’s West Side Highway 7″. Both are available here, along with all the previously reissued records.

Pennywise‘s 1995 classic About Time has a new European exclusive yellow color variant. Grab it here (and don’t worry, shipping to the US isn’t too bad if you really want this).

Continuing our theme of “old music on new colored plastic” is skate punk supergroup Implants (members of Strung Out, Pulley, Ten Foot Pole, etc.). El Hefe’s Cyber Tracks Records has reissued the band’s 2013 debut From Chaos to Order on gold colored vinyl. This is limited to 100 copies and will cost ya 40 fucking bucks!!! I’ll stick to my OG pressing… you guys can grab some lube and begrudgingly purchase your copy here.

Members of Mom’s Basement Records bands the SUCK, Proton Packs and Bad Secret have united to cover the Riverdales‘ classic self-titled record. This LP from “The Greendales” will be available on the label’s webstore Friday, December 16th. There will be two color variants (yellow and clear) of this vinyl-only release.

Our friends at Punk Rock Radar have announced a new release from German melodic punk band Astronuts. Their 2021 debut Dark Matters is getting released vinyl for the first time. I had never heard of these guys, but I’m listening to the album right now on Spotify and it kicks ass! Definitely recommend listening to a few tracks below and grabbing this on vinyl here (US) or here (UK).

I got a pleasant surprise this week when I opened up Facebook and saw Canadian melodic punks Colorsfade had announced a brand new record! Built from the Wreckage is due out January 20th, 2023 on People of Punk Rock Records. Check out the first two singles below (spoiler: they’re killer) and pre-order the LP here.

Also coming to us from north of the border is The Corps! These guys released a digital EP called From Oblivion earlier this year. Thanks to the fine people at Thousand Islands Records, it’s now being given the wax treatment. Get your copy on “green lantern” colored vinyl here.

RECORD OF THE WEEK

We here at Dying Scene are all about trying new things, so this week I’m challenging you, loyal reader, to listen to something new! This week’s Record of the Week comes from Tampa Bay’s Black Valley Moon. Formed by longtime Down By Law guitarist Sam Williams in 2019, the band’s latest album Songs from the Black Valley delivers a unique blend of surfy rockabilly with Americana flair. Check it out below and grab the LP on blue wax here.


And that’s all, folks! Another Record Radar in the books. As always, thank you for tuning in. If there’s anything we missed (highly likely), or if you want to let everyone know about a new/upcoming vinyl release you’re excited about, leave us a comment below, or send us a message on Facebook or Instagram, and we’ll look into it. Enjoy your weekend, and don’t blow too much money on spinny discs. See ya next week!

*Wanna catch up on all of our Record Radar posts? Type “Record Radar” in the search bar at the top of the page! Or, just click here. That’s probably easier.

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DS Review: Aaron West and the Roaring Twenties – “In Lieu of Flowers”

The Wonder Years frontman Dan Campbell, has been hard at work; in 2014, he created a well-thought-out alter ego known as Aaron West, best defined as “a character study conducted through music” – basically a fictitious telling about his alter ego’s life. The first album, We Don’t Have Each Other, told the story about Aaron […]

The Wonder Years frontman Dan Campbell, has been hard at work; in 2014, he created a well-thought-out alter ego known as Aaron West, best defined as “a character study conducted through music” – basically a fictitious telling about his alter ego’s life. The first album, We Don’t Have Each Other, told the story about Aaron West’s worst year; in 2019, Aaron West and the Roaring Twenties released the follow-up, Routine Maintenance, which according to Campbell, gave the fictitious alter ego a redemption arc and focused on him learning to deal with tragedy instead of going down the self-destructive route. Five years later, the Americana folk project released a new album, In Lieu of Flowers, the third and final album for Aaron West and the Roaring Twenties

In Lieu of Flowers kicks off with “Smoking Rooms,” a slow acoustic song with voices from a crowded room. Towards the end of the song, horns, guitars, and the beating of drums appear to underline what’s in store for the rest of In Lieu of Flowers. The acoustic guitar is placed in a corner for the following song, “Roman Candles,” which tackles the effects of COVID-19; “But Mom works at the hospital / Every shift is a curse / She’s never seen people this sick before / She says it’s only getting worse”. While we’re two songs into the album, you can already hear it becoming an emotional one because the relatable feeling of wanting to sleep through the horrible pandemic and one’s life standing still throughout it is very evident in the song. 

Jumping to “Alone At St. Luke’s” and “Spitting In The Wind”, take it upon themselves to pick the tempo of the songs again; with “Alone At St. Luke’s”, the lyrics are cheeky, (“Fuck The Tories!”) and begin to tackle the narrator’s downward spiral with alcohol again. The pop-punk anthem “Spitting In The Wind” sees West drinking more frequently and tells the story of how it is affecting his relationships around him. “Runnin’ Out Of Excuses” starts with a gentle piano key while West’s vocals are softer. At the same time, we are taken on a journey of entering rehab after his relapse with alcohol, and throughout the song’s progress, he admits that while he has stuff to do, he is staying to make himself better. 

The title track and penultimate song, which was also the first single from the album, are relatively upbeat and feature a tremendous horn section. The song serves as an apology to those his drinking affected. You want to sing along with the chorus; the glimmer of hope is there, and not everything is as bleak as you thought. The closing song, “Dead Leaves”,  is similar to the opening song—a slow song—but unlike the first song, which was filled with the angst of hopelessness in the air, we hold on to the feeling of hope that came to the surface during “In Lieu of Flowers”. “Up the block when I come to I see our name on the marquee / And smile cause I love you and I know that you found what you need”, finally finding peace. 

The ability to build tension in songs, with the same amount of passion from start to finish, has been one of the most profound abilities that Dan Campbell has done in his decades-long career. While not comparing this to any of The Wonder Years albums, Campbell has always been great at writing lyrics for the listeners to interpret for themselves and sometimes even be able to build the visualization in their heads. However, being able to capture the same level of emotion for a fictitious alter ego really gives the listeners an insight into his creative process.

And the emotional impact of feeling lost during the pandemic, letting yourself fall back into the self-destructive behavior that we all heard him work hard to get out of on Routine Maintenance, can have listeners cheering for a happier ending than how the bleak portrayal of the first half of the album seems to be heading. And do we get it? I don’t know, but we get something: the self-realization of how destructive his drinking got, how it affected his surroundings, and checking himself into rehab, all while the undertone of “I can leave whenever, but what does that help me?” lingers in the air during “Runnin’ Out Of Excuses”. And to the end, where the narrator, Aaron West, sees his ex-wife finally having the life he couldn’t give her and being at peace with it, does maybe explore the theme of forgiving oneself instead of him jumping into the gig and getting wasted. While it’s the final album, those last lines of “Dead Leaves”, “The future’s a rhetorical question / So I open the door, and I walk in,” leaves it up for interpretation. I would like to think that while life has given one hardship, the future is untold. 

I loved the album. The way In Lieu of Flowers weaves storytelling and music together is one of a kind. From the gut-wrenching moments of listening to Aaron West fall back into a downward spiral, to the moment of reassurance of him realizing that it can’t go on and getting help, had me on an emotional rollercoaster. It can be rare to find an album that has the intensity of pulling you in with the ups and downs. The way the album touches on the different genres, blending with Americana, country, pop-punk, and the modern-day emo that reminds one of the likes of Hot Mulligan and Spanish Love Songs. The album isn’t just music; it’s a story. 

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DS Review: Lucero reinvent their rock-and-roll roots on “Should’ve Learned By Now”

It’s weird to think of an album as being a “back to basics” record when you’re a band that has gone through as many changes in sonic direction as Lucero has over their quarter-century run, but that’s exactly where the Memphis-based quintet find themselves on their latest release, Should’ve Learned By Now (out today on […]

It’s weird to think of an album as being a “back to basics” record when you’re a band that has gone through as many changes in sonic direction as Lucero has over their quarter-century run, but that’s exactly where the Memphis-based quintet find themselves on their latest release, Should’ve Learned By Now (out today on Thirty Tigers/Liberty & Lament). The album marks the band’s eleventh full-length release – twelfth if you count The Attic Tapes, which you’re certainly allowed to do – and represents the band’s most straight-forward dare-I-say “rock and roll” record in quite some time, probably since at least Nobody’s Darlings.

The festivities get started with “One Last F.U.” which is a song that’s been floating around for the better part of the last half-decade at this point, a crowd favorite that finally made it onto a proper record. It’s a raucous barn-burner of a song, three-and-a-half minutes of four-on-the-floor rock (complete with cowbell, albeit maybe not enough) and squelchy guitars and more piss-and-vinegar in the lyrics than we’ve heard from the mouth of Ben Nichols in quite some time. More on that later.

The gas pedal stays pinned down for “Macon If We Make It,” a ripper of a tune that intertwines a literal storm outside with a figurative storm back home, a theme that returns a few songs later on the acoustic-driven ditty (am I allowed to call a song a ditty on a punk rock website?) “Raining For Weeks.” “Nothing’s Alright,” another track that quickly made a great impression when it debuted live toward the end of last year, brings with it a big, anthemic chorus. Throughout the record, Brian Venable continues to do that thing that really, only Brian Venable does, his wandering, pinch harmonic-filled guitar lines as snarly as ever, shining brightly on tracks like “One Last F.U.” and “Macon If We Make It” and personal favorites “Buy A Little Time” and the title track. The latter two continue the album’s general sonic theme of big uptempo rock songs that will quickly make their way into the setlist, to the delight of many a longtime fan from back in the band’s more raucous early days. While many of the tracks on Should’ve Learned By Now have been around a while and didn’t fit stylistically with the likes of their last record, 2021’s When You Found Me, “At The Show” is a straight-forward track that really could have been a thematic holdover from the Tennessee sessions two decades prior (or, hell, even from the Red 40 years).

That’s not to say that the album is all boilerplate up-tempo rockers. “She Leads Me Now” is a pretty, mid-tempo not-quite-ballad that actually features vocal harmonies, a rarity on a Lucero record. The aforementioned “Raining For Weeks” comes complete with a pretty piano melody that belies the track’s melancholy lyrics. “Drunken Moon” is a legitimate ballad with even more vocal harmonies (perfected by the trio of Edwards brothers from LA Edwards on the last East Coast run if you were lucky enough to catch it). As per usual, the rhythm section of Roy Berry and John C. Stubblefield provide a stable foundation for the rest of the musical structure to build off. Neither would win awards for flashiest or over-the-top playing, but that’s never been what Lucero has called for musically. With Rick Steff on keys (and again on accordion as an unexpected and welcome treat on album-closer “Time To Go Home”) providing texture and melodies and Nichols and Venable’s inimitable styles of guitar-playing, Berry and Stubblefield – both live and on record – serve as the closest thing you’ll find to guardrails in a Lucero sound.

Lyrically, Ben Nichols has made a career out of tapping into the role of barroom poet. He’s been heart-breakingly honest at times and revealed a lot of himself through tales of loves both unrequited (especially in the earlier years) and more recently, unadulterated, especially with the prominent role that the women in his life have taken over the last handful of years. And of course there have been the more character-driven songs that have spoken to the human condition and to people trying to make their respective ways through various trials and tribulations and staring down the ghosts of the consequences of their actions. On Should’ve Known By Now, Nichols seems to have also stripped away some of the imagery in his stories, keeping the context a little simpler (look, mom…curse words!) yet somehow, perhaps unintentionally, revealing more of himself in the process than meets the eye, particularly on songs like “Buy A Little Time” and “Drunken Moon.”

I’ve been dyed-in-the-wool Lucero fan for a lot of years and have traveled many, many miles to see the band and its members and I’m happy to follow them down whatever musical rabbit holes they want to venture down. You want so sing tear-jerkers about unrequited love? Check. Whiskey nights and rodeos? Check. Keyboards and horns and a traditional Memphis soul influence? Sounds good. Accordion-infused World War II songs? Let’s do it. Synthesizers and soaring guitars and post-apocalyptic retellings of Little Red Riding Hood? Absolutely. Campfire singalongs inspired by an incredibly bleak Cormac McCarthy western novel? Let’s do it. Trap-horror instrumental movie soundtracks? Sign me up. The weirded and newer the direction, the better.

And yet, I really, really enjoy Should’ve Learned By Now. There’s something about the singularity of musical focus and putting forth a no-frills rock record that results in a record that fits in the collection like a glove. Without really sounding like any previous Lucero record, it somehow encapsulates some core tenets of all of the albums that precede it in the band’s oeuvre. Once described semi-tongue-in-cheekily as “too country for punk rock and too punk rock for country,” Lucero circa 2023 probably don’t qualify as either one now, because they’ve carved out their own niche. They’re not really country or punk or Memphis soul or Americana or roots rock or whatever other labels we might want to throw at them. They’re Lucero. We really should’ve learned by now.

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