Jessica:
Just to start off with a basic question, how long have
you guys been a band?
Jon:
We've been a band for almost two and a half years; solid
lineup probably for a year and a half. I joined the band
after almost a half of a year.
Jessica: And what do you play?
Jon:
I play bass and do like background screams and stuff.
Debbie: That's always good.
Jessica: How would you say that the style of music
has progressed and changed since the band started?
Jon:
Well, the songs that were on the EP were kind of a
different variety of music, like it was songs with hard
parts and songs with melody and some songs had screaming
and some didn't. Light A Match came out and a lot
of the songs on there are still older songs, about three
quarters of the album is older material, but the stuff
that we've been rehearsing for a new album that we're
gonna be doing probably...we're probably going to go
record between the months of September and December. The
newer stuff we're writing is more mature and I know
everyone says this, but it's the best stuff we've written
for sure. I don't know how to explain it. It really
brings out all of our influences, so I think going to
record with Ed Rose for Light A Match helped our
band realize how much we needed to improve as musicians
and makes us want to improve every single day, cause
we're just like, "Okay, we do this as a job and we love
it, so we better put all of our heart into it."
Jessica: So you would say that's responsible for the
change?
Jon:
Yeah, totally, cause we went there and we weren't ready
at all and then we just took things more seriously with
the songwriting process, we wanted to involve all of our
different influences. We had a common idea of what we
wanted our music to go toward. Our newer stuff just
really stands out.
Jessica: Is there anything that happened while you
guys were trying to get started that made you think that
you just wouldn't be able to do it?
Jon:
Well I joined the band before they were signed and before
we even had a fanbase in our hometown. I moved out from
Minnesota to join the band, so I left everything behind.
So there were times in the beginning stages where it was
really hard, like not being able to make enough money to
eat, going weeks without eating. Playing endless shows
at really shitty bars to nobody, we'd have like two
people every single weekend. We'd just be like, "Well
when is this gonna happen?" Music starts with goals. A
goal can be from wanting to record a demo to wanting to
play a show to wanting to go on tour. I think with us,
things started to happen like that, like, "Okay, we're
gonna write more songs, okay, we're gonna try to get into
this venue." And it took a long time for that to happen,
cause we went from the band who played in front of five
people to the band who played to six, seven hundred
people.
Debbie: Had any of you guys taken professional music
lessons when you started out? Did any of you really not
know how to play your instruments well?
Jon:
All of us were involved in music in some way, shape, or
form before playing in the band. Armin did drum line in
high school, Shawn pretty much taught himself how to play
guitar. Shawn's pretty much responsible for writing all
the songs for the band. He's just amazing. All the guys
in the band are amazing, everyone's improved so much.
Josh has played in bands all his life and plays tons of
different instruments. With me, I took piano, I played
guitar, and then I took bass lessons and piano lessons
when I was in college. Taking lessons made me not want
to play music because it made me feel like I was so
limited because I had to do things a certain way and I
just wanted to play rock music. If people don't think
it's talent, then whatever, people are entitled to their
own opinion. We like what we do, so that's why we do it.
Debbie: How long did it take you guys to get your
first demo out?
Jon:
They did it before I was in the band. They recorded the
four song EP, it's called The December EP. That's
what was available on MP3.com originally. That's how I
heard of the band. They did that at a local studio in
Riverside, where the band originated from. When I join
the band, we still didn't have the CD pressed. What we
did was, we burned it onto CD-Rs, put them in sleeves,
and people would buy them. We were really lucky that
people actually liked our music. Noise Ratchet helped us
get started with good shows, we played a couple good
shows with them and they helped out a lot. And then we
started getting on bigger shows with bigger bands. We
only did two thousand of the demo and that's out of
print.
Jessica: What did it feel like to finally see your
video on Much Music?
Jon:
That was weird, cause for me, I grew up sitting in my
room idolizing bands. When we shot the music video, it
was cool, but it wasn't like...all of our friends do
music videos and they have the makeup and all of that
crap. I'm not saying it's stupid, but with us, in the
video, we're like sweating profusely. We're sweating
everywhere and we didn't have any of that stuff and it
was just like, "Aright we're gonna videotape you and this
is it." So when we saw it on there, it was just hard to
believe, cause we went from being a band so small to
being...I mean, we're still small but to be seen on TV
and for my family, who still kinda doubts that the band
even exists...they're like, "Why'd you quit college to do
this?" Same with all of our families. They think it's
just a bunch of fun and games. We're really trying to
work with this, so seeing the video on there is a huge
reward. We're really lucky.
Jessica: I was looking at the bios on the site and
saw that Josh is reading Howard Zinn. What's your stance
on the war with Iraq and the situation there?
Jon:
We're kind of biased too, cause our drummer's Persian.
With me, I'm kind of a pacifist. I'm not really into
war. For me, if we did go to war, I could never fight in
a war so I don't know what I would do. I know if I got
drafted-
Debbie and Jessica [who have to talk in unison at all
times]: We're moving to Canada.
Jon:
Yeah, that's what we said! We were like, "We're moving
the band to Canada." I don't know. I want there to be
protection in our country and I'm not ungrateful for what
we have. Cause people sometimes are like, "How can you
say you don't want people to go to war with Iraq when
they're trying to build nuclear weapons that could kill
everyone on the face of the earth?" So it's okay for us
to have weapons, but they can't have weapons?
Jessica: We have enough weapons to blow the world up
seven times over. We only need to blow it up once.
Jon:
Yeah, exactly. Like I said, I'm a pacifist. I'm not
trying to say I'm a wuss or anything; I just can't
imagine killing anyone.
Jessica: I don't blame you-
Debbie: - for not wanting to go to war. I mean,
there are a couple people I'd like to take out, but no
one in Iraq. Just a couple people from here. Okay, are
you pleased with where your band is now or do you feel
pressured to get out there more, play more shows, make
another video?
Jon:
I'm proud of where we're at. I think that being in a
musician and being in a band, you should always be
progressing to the next stage. And it doesn't even
matter if you don't know what it is. You just shouldn't
settle for second best. There's so much more that we can
do and we might not know what it is, but if we keep
working hard and keep doing what we do...touring,
recording, just doing this whole heartedly.
Debbie: You guys have been compared to Thursday,
Atreyu, and Thrice. Do you agree with the comparisons
and were you influenced by them?
Jon:
Being compared to those bands is very flattering; it's a
huge compliment. We're friends with Atreyu, we're from
the same area. Atreyu and us started out pretty much
around the same time. They were a band longer than us,
but we started gaining popularity around the same time.
They were coming to our shows, we'd go to their shows.
With the other bands, to say we're clones of them and we
sound like them and that's it..people will review the CD
and say, "I heard it the first time and it's called
Thursday. I heard it the first time and it's called
Thrice." People don't even know that there's three
decades of rock influence in our music. They don't come
to our shows and see what we're about. With the newer
material, I think people are going to get away from that
comparison. I think the only thing that might share
common similarities is the screaming and singing
dynamic. In the new material, there's no screaming.
It's just rock. It's still very heavy, driving music.
It's not on purpose, but the newer stuff, it just doesn't
seem like it [screaming] fits. So it's a good
comparison, I don't think we sound like them, but if
people say that we do and that's what gets them into us,
that's awesome.
Debbie: Which one of your songs gets the best
reaction from the crowd?
Jon:
"Wide Eyes" is an old song, it's really popular on
MP3.com. Everyone likes "For A Friend" and I think
people are really starting to get into "On Building."
It's the song we have the video for. I think it's
awesome because that song kind of represents where our
music's going. Our newer music's even beyond that.
People know the lyrics and they're jumping over kids to
come and grab the microphone. It's awesome.
Debbie: One time, we interviewed the singer of a band
and he had just been dumped by his girlfriend and had to
go and play the show. We were just wondering, how do you
deal with your outside problems? Do you just put them
aside from the show or are they still just on your mind
and affecting you on stage?
Jon:
Well today, there were problems, I'm not gonna say what,
but I'm upset right now. Regardless of how I might feel
and regardless of me being upset about something, whether
it's internally with the guys with the bands or if it's
just things outside of my life, people pay money to come
and watch my band play. It's a privilege for me to get
onstage and play for people. I'm not gonna have a shitty
attitude, not because I don't want to, but it's not fair
to other people. I shouldn't come off as an asshole to
other people. Without fans, the people who listen to our
music, our band wouldn't be where we're at. So when I
get onstage, it's a way to get out aggression, it's
therapy for all of us.
Jessica: So it's the last show of the tour. What are
your plans for after the tour?
Jon:
Well, our singer's flying home to see his fiancé and then
we're driving to California and we have two or three
weeks off. Then we hit the road with Hopesfall. That's
like a month. After that, we have a couple weeks off.
We're still debating what we're gonna do after that.
There's an opportunity to tour with Mest and then there's
another opportunity to tour with Bigwig. We're deciding
which one we're gonna do. Then we just found out last
week that we finally got a tour with Brand New. That's
gonna be June and July. I'm excited, I hear they're
really nice guys.
[Everyone rambles for a good ten minutes about how
incredible Brand New is.]
Jon:
I'll be driving the van and I'll put in the CD and I'll
be like, "YEAH!!" August we're gonna do a co-headlining
tour with Open Hand. Then we're taking off a few months
cause our singer's getting married and we're writing new
music and recording.
Thanks
to Jon, Mike Cubillos, and the rest of The Beautiful
Mistake!
~
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