Kerrang Issue #1789 (from pressreader)
Magazine Release Date: September 4th, 2019
Issue Label: September 7th, 2019
âCrate Expectationsâ
Photo Credit: Gobinder Jhitta
Edit:Â Link to a very nice .pdf
White pageâs Transcription below:
LAURA & FRANK THE LIFE, TIMES AND RECORDS OF TWO PUNK ROCK ICONS Kerrang! (UK)4 Sep 2019
WORDS: James MackinnonÂ
PHOTOS: Gobinder Jhitta If you want to see two lifelong punk rockers act like kids in a sweet shop, just let them loose in a record store. All Ages Records in Camden Town, London is a mecca for all forms of anarchic sounds proudly sticking two fingers up to authority, and Laura Jane Grace and Frank Iero â in town with their respective personal projects, The Devouring Mothers and The Future Violents â rifle through the racks of vinyl, staring up with glee at the assorted gems they unearth.
Laura quickly plucks out Big Attraction and Giddy Up, the double EP from Australian firecrackers Amyl And The Sniffers and asks Frank if heâs heard it, enthusing âtheyâre so goodâ. Frank admits that he hasnât yet had the pleasure, and adds it to his pile. He continues flicking through the vinyl until suddenly his fingers stops. âIâve actually been meaning to ask you about this,â he says to Laura, as he turns to present her with Spiderland, the seminal 1991 release by post hardcore luminaries Slint, one of the targets of Lauraâs ire in The Devouring Mothers song I Hate Chicago, along with Smashing Pumpkins and deep-dish pizza.
âOh, I know theyâre not actually from Chicago,â Laura grins mischievously. âTheyâre from Kentucky, but people from Chicago are really into them so I put them in the song to piss people off!â
Frank, Laura and shop owner Nick all burst into raucous laughter. âFor the record,â Laura says to Kerrang!, âI actually like Smashing Pumpkins a lot, too.â
Laura has been kicking against the pricks as Against Me!âs rebellious singer since forming the band in 1997 among Gainesville, Floridaâs anarcho-punk scene. Meanwhile, further up the Eastern seaboard, Frank found creative freedom and liberation from the doldrums of suburban New Jersey in the local hardcore scene â a scene that would put him in touch with the members of My Chemical Romance. Both bands occasionally crossed paths, but it was only when Frank toured with Against Me! in 2015 â this time with The Cellabration â that a friendship forged in punk rock blossomed.
âI had always been an admirer of Against Me!, but from afar,â Frank says as he rings up his purchases. âIt was so nice to connect over similar interests years later on that tour and realise that we were of the same kind.â
âWe would have parking lot parties,â smiles Laura. âOn the Fourth of July we nearly blew each other up with fireworks. We literally had to dive for cover!â
Similar sparks fly between these mutual fans today as they settle down in a nearby cafĂŠ to discuss how punk has shaped their livesâŚ
You both came to punk rock at an early age. What was your first contact with that world and what drew you in?
 LAURA JANE GRACE: âWell, for me it was because I got beat up a lot. I had originally gotten into music through bands like Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, the Grateful Dead and stuff like that. Thatâs what my friends were into and that scene seemed to be more about taking the beatings and saying, [raises V sign] âPeace, man.â So punk rock and bands like The Clash and X came along to me as a total revelation â that you could fight back. You were still going to get beat up, but wearing studs and charging out your hair was like an armour against that. It was a way to further differentiate yourself from the other people around you, because I never felt like I fit in.â
 FRANK IERO: âMy dad was a drummer and the blues was kind of his punk rock. That was about a bunch of guys getting together in a basement and making recordings because they had to. When I found out about bands that existed with people who were just like me, making recordings in basements and putting on shows, that was all I wanted to do. That was my gateway into this secret society that I wanted in so bad.âÂ
LAURA: âIt did also have a certain element of, âOh, the bar is a little lower for actually being able to play guitar!â (laughs) Four chords, even three, and youâre ready to go!â
 FRANK: âThe ability to be part of that world and not have to be virtuoso was huge. Eddie Van Halen didnât feel attainable. Punk rock did.â
Which bands did you gravitate towards? FRANK: âMisfits were big, because they came from just down my block. I remember stealing Dead Kennedysâ Give Me Convenience Or Give Me Death when I was skating with my friends. At 13 it was all about what your local store had in stock. And then you could look through the liner notes to find out which bands they liked and then go find their records. It would open your mind to everything.â LAURA: âIt was a lot harder to discover bands, then. You had to make mixtapes and share stuff with friends.â
For you, Laura, getting involved with the punk community coincided with getting into anarchist and anti-fascist politics, right?
 LAURA: âWell, a lot of those ideas were things that were not reachable for us. I think there were maybe only two or three squat houses that I had legitimately heard of in the U.S.. A couple of people tried that in Florida and it was busted up by the cops within days. So we didnât have any elders to look up to. But at the same time, the bands that I was getting into were the English anarcho-punk bands. So you would listen to things like Crass and try to figure out how to adapt those politics to what was happening around you. So we started doing things like Food Not Bombs [a volunteer movement that shares free vegan meals in protest of war and poverty], and then through that we met other activists. For me, punk was definitely the gateway into activism.â
How did your experiences compare in the New Jersey hardcore scene, Frank? FRANK: âWell, you would hear about this stuff because New York was very close, but at the same time I grew up in a neighbourhood in New Jersey, so it wasnât like there was much to be oppressed by. Like Laura said, you would listen to bands like The Clash and Sham 69 and try to figure out how that applied to your world, but it wasnât on that level. For me punk wasnât so much about activism as much as telling stories.â
When it came to booking your first tours, did it feel like you had a network to draw upon?Â
LAURA: âBook Your Own Fuckinâ Life [the book of punk contacts published annually by Maximum Rocknroll] was literally the network. I had started doing a zine and become pen pals with people through that, and then I met people across the country. We booked our first tour through those contacts and maybe out of a month-long tour only 10 shows out of 30 happened, but it was the time of your life!âÂ
FRANK: âSame thing for me. In the first band I toured with, Pencey Prep, we booked this tour around this one big support slot we had in Minnesota and we were like, âHoly shit, we get to play [legendary Minneapolis venue] First Avenue? We have to go!ââÂ
LAURA: âFirst Av? Thatâs rad!âÂ
FRANK: âOh my God, it was huge. So we somehow got a van and it would break down every day, but weâre going. We played maybe 10 shows and just before that one big show the van just gave up four hours outside of Minnesota. So we didnât get to play that one big show we had booked the whole tour around, but that was what those tours were like. It was one big road trip and we got to play our music in towns we never thought we would even get to see. We saw âthe worldâ and that was a big thing for us. I probably learned more in that one month than I ever did in the 12 years that I went to school.â
Had your paths crossed much before this current tour together?Â
FRANK: âItâs funny, because My Chemical Romance and Against Me! were both on Warners and had the same A&R, but we had never properly hung out together. It was usually just passing each other at festivals and such.â
LAURA: âThere were those shows in Canada [on the 2011 Honda Civic Tour] where there was us, blink-182 and Rancid, but years before that, we both played together to maybe 15 people at a venue where you basically had to walk through a meth lab to get paid.âÂ
FRANK: âOh yeah, in Nashville, Tennessee! I remember that. I remember watching you guys and thinking, âHoly shit, this band is way too good â this is scarier than the meth!â
What were your first impressions of My Chemical Romance, Laura?Â
LAURA: âTo me, they always stood apart. There were all those other bands they were getting lumped in with, but they were clearly way fucking better than all of them.âÂ
FRANK: âThank you, I appreciate that. Itâs funny, because I would always be there any time Against Me! would play Jersey or Brooklyn. I remember our A&R guy would say, âGo say hi!â but Iâd be like, âI donât wanna be that guy!ââ
How do you feel punk rock has changed since people now have the technology and means to record music, put it out and then book a tour, using a device in their pockets?Â
LAURA: âThatâs actually been worrying me a lot lately, because I think we fucked up by switching so totally to that technology as a means of opposition. Thatâs what punk rock is supposed to be â a form of opposition and protest movement. But now weâre so reliant on communications and yet that whole system of communication is so easily manipulated that you canât form a true sense of things. And as those systems get more and more controlled it will become less effectual for organising protests or resistance art. I think we really need to get back to distributing zines and writing letters in the mail, and I know that sounds so old fashioned, but itâs fucking real.âÂ
FRANK: âHuman beings on a global scale need to realise that there are way more similarities than differences and look out for one another. The world is going to shit, weâre killing each other and the planet is dying. Enough of pushing each other down for ridiculous differences that donât make any fucking sense. I feel like beyond punk rock, itâs just a humanity thing that we need to wake the fuck up.â
What does punk mean to you now and has it changed at all over the years?Â
FRANK: âFor me, I think of it as the spark. Itâs the spark that got me into this world of creating and to not have any rules surrounding what I make, where I make it and how I make it. I know it probably doesnât mean that to anyone else, but I donât care. Itâs given me the freedom to be myself and create what I want to create.âÂ
LAURA: âI would agree with that, the only thing I would add is that it has meant all of that to me for the last 25 years. Iâm 38 years old; Iâve been listening to punk rock since I was 13 and it still feels exactly the same 25 years later.â
LAURA JANE GRACE AND THE DEVOURING MOTHERSâ NEW ALBUM BOUGHT TO ROT IS AVAILABLE NOW THROUGH BLOODSHOT RECORDS. FRANK IERO AND THE FUTURE VIOLENTSâ NEW ALBUM BARRIERS IS AVAILABLE NOW THROUGH UNFD
âI FEEL LIKE HUMANITY NEEDS TO WAKE THE FUCK UPâ FRANK IERO








