A conversation with Jeff Rosenstock and Chris Farren of Antarctigo Vespucci

A conversation with Jeff Rosenstock and Chris Farren of Antarctigo Vespucci

Antarctigo Vespucci is a band born of the bond between Chris Farren and Jeff Rosenstock. Forged in the midst of both artists' burgeoning solo careers, and following the respective ends of both Fake Problens and Bomb the Music Industry, Antarctigo Vespucci recently returned with their sophomore LP Love in the Time of E-Mail (their first for Polyvinyl). While on the road supporting the album, the band met up with writer Graham Isador in Toronto. This is their conversation.

Interviews
WLMRT

WLMRT are serious, maybe

This is a big week for Toronto noise-punks WLMRT. Friday, November 16 will see the release of the band's third EP, titled Lube 2, on Pleasence Records. They'll celebrate the same day with a performance as part of Long Winter, the cold-weather music and arts festival. The band plays the Tranzac Club on Friday evening as part of the kickoff for the event's seventh year. Last weekend I spoke to vocalist Shelby Wilson and bassist Kat McGouran about the release, the band's recent gig playing before an SLC Punk screening (of all things), and their escape plan when the Waltons come calling. You can listen below.

Interviews
"What the Misfits Mean to Me"

“What the Misfits Mean to Me”

As you know by now, it's Misfits week at Punknews. Not only did the band create an entire genre and aesthetic, but they've influenced thousands of bands in their wake. So, we reached out to some cool bands and asked them how they've been influenced by the gang of ghouls. You can read their contributions below.

Interviews
"I tried out for the Misfits"

“I tried out for the Misfits”

It's a lesser known fact that when The Misfits were resurrected in the late '90s, they actually held semi-open auditions for their new singer before deciding on Michale Graves. Iconic Philly punk rocker Pat Society of Violent Society (and now Battalion Zoska) heeded the call. He traveled up to Lodi to rehearse with the revived band in their proto-form and gave it a shot. Check out Pat's adventure from the '90s below.

Interviews
Up close and personal with Lande Hekt of Muncie Girls

Up close and personal with Lande Hekt of Muncie Girls

The hype is real for Exeter’s Muncie Girls, in the little time that the band have been in existence they have toured Europe and The UK extensively and have released two full length albums. They recently released their second LP, Fixed Ideals through Buzz Records and Specialist Subject Records. The new album draws from some of their most personal content that they have ever written. Editor Samantha Barrett spoke with guitarist and vocalist Lande Hekt about the new record and about their upcoming US tour.

Interviews
The Damned

Dave Vanian on The Damned's new album, the human race, and cool clothes

As it turns out, Dave Vanian, the guy who is perennially dressed like he's about to go to a funeral, the guy who is often credited with inventing (or at least advancing) goth culture, the guy who co-wrote "I just can't be happy today," is a really upbeat guy. As vocalist for first wave punkers The Damned, Vanian and crew embraced the true ethos of punk more than almost any other band and, instead of running headfirst into three chords, leather jackets, and studs, have spent the last 42 years twisting, turning, and flipping their sound- sometimes it's a garage rock blowout, sometimes it's a gothic nocturne, and sometimes it's an 18-minute avant garde mind warper produced by Hans Zimmerman.

Their brand new album, Evil Spirits finds the band wrapping goth and garage rock melody around a classic punk charge, and the result is an album like only the Damned can do and it is goooood. But despite, the perhaps, heavy nature of some of the tunes, Vanian himself seems downright jovial. In order to understand Vanian's convival nature, Punknews' John Gentile spoke to the singer about the new LP, his fashion sense, and romance.

Interviews
Natterers

Thomas Witty of Natterers on the band's first full-length

With the release of each EP over the passed couple of years, the UK’s Natterers have made quite the splash within the contemporary hardcore scene. 2018 is a very different year for the band though. The surf and 80’s hardcore-influenced band has totally outdone themselves with the release of their first full-length Head In Threatening Attitude , which was released on October 5, 2018 through Boss Tuneage Records. They took their sound to a whole different level. Fans of the Punknews Podcast may recall that core members Emma and Thomas made a brief appearance on episode 350 along with other notable punk musicians. But with the release of such an outstanding record, it is time for Natterers to get a proper interview. Contributing editor Ricky Frankel spoke with the band’s guitarist Thomas Witty about some of the songs on Head In Threatening Attitude, the band’s recent line up change, the punk icon that mastered the album, and more. Read or listen to their conversation below or on iTunes.

Photo Credit: Meg Manley

Interviews
Chumbawamba's Danbert Nobacon on his new LP, his history, and a certain mysterious record...

Chumbawamba's Danbert Nobacon on his new LP, his history, and a certain mysterious record…

Danbert Nobacon once dumped a pitcher of ice water on the head of the Deputy Prime minister, wrote a fairy tale about environmental cataclysm, and was one of the first guys to dis the Clash… and, oh yeah, he's also a founding member of Chumbawamba and is one of the most influential anarcho-punks of all time… and oh, yeah, he's still doing his thing.

Nobacon recently released Stardust to Darwinstuff, under the name Danbert Nobacon & The Axis of Dissent. The record finds Nobacon in classic form, cranking out jams about how the environment is being plundered and polluted just so a few rich people can get a few more bucks. But despite the heavy subject matter, Nobacon keeps that wry Chumba sing-songy humor in the cracks as he calls out people on their bullshit. Punknews' John Gentile spoke to Nobacon about the new release, the ice water incident, and a top secret record that only the most hardcore Chumba fans have in their collection…

Interviews
Gareth Liddiard of Tropical Fuck Storm

Gareth Liddiard of Tropical Fuck Storm

Tropical Fuck Storm isn't just a whacked out name- it's a whacked out band. Formed by Gareth Liddiard and Fiona Kitschin after taking a hiatus from the art-punk psych band The Drones, the Australian band takes hard edged punk and adds an experimental electronic edge. Their newest album, A Laughing Death in Meatspace is their trippiest and meanest release to date, with songs about CIA secret opps, slashing people's tires, and multiple songs that feel like bad acid trips.

That's out next Friday, so Punknews' John Gentile spoke to Liddiard about the new LP, being mean on the Internet, and Men at Work.

Interviews
Mike Haliechuk on Fucked Up's new LP, dreams, and the sax

Mike Haliechuk on Fucked Up's new LP, dreams, and the sax

After Fucked Up released their last record, the compact Glass Boys in 2014, the band had nothing left to lose. The record didn't get a huge reception, people liked it, but didn't love it's relatively understated texture, and it sort of came and went. So, with the freedom of "no future expectations," the band recharged, and went for it with a double disc, cosmic traveling, genre warping, whacked out, concept twisitng, meta-ficitonal melting, mind blasting, weirdo punk rock album. It also has a saxophone on it.

The Canadian band started out a basically a straight up hardcore band that kept people guessing with their use of sigils and references to their guru, a mysterious figure named "David Eliade." Over the years, they got weirder with multiple 20 minute Hawkwindian opuses based on the Chinese zodiac, albums about David himself bombing factories, and eventually, they morphed into their Glass Boys selves- a *gasp* single disc album wherein they contemplated themselves.

Now, some four years removed from their calmer statement, they are back with Dose Your Dreams, a house smasher if there ever was one, that is just the kind of thing that their spaciest fans want. So, because they are about to release an album that certainly will be a landmark in their career, Punknews' John Gentile spoke to Haliechuk about dreams themselves, Buddhist thought, and why the saxophone is cool.

Interviews
Night Birds

Brian Gorsegner of Night Birds on 'Roll Credits,' record collecting, and death

Ask not for whom the bells tolls, for it tolls for thee… Brian Gorsegner of Night Birds knows this truism well, so he's set his sights to making the most of the moment. The singer and his band just released their fourth album, the strategically compact Roll Credits , and the whole crew is punking it up as much as they can while facing that other golden ideal- raising a happy and healthy family.

That is to say, Gorsegner might be a standard bearer of neo-hardcore, belting out lyrics about insanity, insidious government oppression and serial killers, but he's also a dad and a husband, and trying to make these two forces work in conjunction instead of opposition. And if that's not difficult enough, while he's trying to complete that juggling act, the grim reaper, the foul grinning fiend, looms permanently in the back of his mind. So, to see what brews under that furrowed brow, Punknews' John Gentile spoke to Gorsegner about the new Night Birds platter, how to collect records, and Thanatos himself.