Return To Sender With SPIKE From ME FIRST & THE GIMME GIMMES
If you don't know who Me First & The Gimmes are by now, then
you either have little taste in music and/or a sense of adventure,
or you don't listen to music at all. If you have been figuratively
touched by these fun loving punk reprobates then you...
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All the latest music interviews from the team at HEAVY Magazine.
HEAVY interviews the worlds leading rock, punk, metal and beyond musicians in the heavy universe of music.
We will upload the latest interviews regularly so before to follow our...
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vor 1 Jahr
If you don't know who Me First & The Gimmes are by now, then
you either have little taste in music and/or a sense of adventure,
or you don't listen to music at all.
If you have been figuratively touched by these fun loving punk
reprobates then you will already know that the band only recently
visited these shores on a blitzkrieg tour, and you will also likely
not be surprised to hear that everybody's favourite punk covers
band are about to board the plane from the U.S of A for a return
visit dubbed The Band Of The Long Weekend Tour.
Except it goes for more like two weeks.
Armed with their latest release - a tribute to the late Billy
Thorpe with Most People I Know - Me First & The Gimmes are set
to once more decimate Australian crowds, and, according to frontman
Spike Slawson, can't wait to experience our good old Australian
hospitality once more. With less than seven days to the first
Brisbane show on October 30, we start by asking if he is packed and
ready to go.
"Getting there," he smiled. "I always leave it to the last minute,
but we're getting there. Preparing ourselves mentally and
emotionally and infrastructurally it's always a challenge, but
somehow we always make do. And the flight keeps getting shorter and
shorter! I think they hit some kind of slipstream or… I
dunno."
Talk turns to the name of the tour and the fact that Me First &
The Gimmes are anything but predictable, both as people and in the
sonic realm.
"We like to put our fans and facilitators at a disadvantage," he
joked. "I think it's… it's not a strategic thing as much as it is
just a sort of troll. Our shows are an hour and a half long troll
and at first we try to set the bar high for ourselves by really
alienating our potential allies until the point where they are
actually expressing their displeasure audibly. Booing. We like to
bring them to about that point before we start to reel them back
in. When it really kicked in was recently - two or three years ago
- and it was still during lockdown so it was a crazy tour, but we
were on a bill with the Violent Femmes and Flogging Molly as well
as a band from New York called Thick. All the other bands played
originals, or at least mostly originals, so, as with most bands
that play originals, they are the heroes of their own stories.
They're very earnest, and they're very serious about their music.
They may be smiling but it's a serious moment they're sharing with
you. Whereas for us, we understood right off the bat that we were
the heels of the bill. Just as we are the heels of any bill that
we're on. Interestingly enough, the nights when you alienate the
crowd the most, those are the nights where you end up selling the
most t-shirts. Isn't that funny?"
In the full interview, Spike reminisced about their previous
performances in Australia and their upcoming return. He expressed
his love for classical pop music and punk music, particularly the
Ramones and the Buzzcocks, revealing that his band's covers would
likely come from outsider pop or weirdo pop, which was prevalent in
the 1970s. He also discussed his admiration for the music of the
1970s, despite its sometimes jarring themes. We spoke about support
band, Dwarves, and how this coming tour will differ from recent
shows, places where Me First & The Gimme Gimmes WOULDN'T play
and more.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.
you either have little taste in music and/or a sense of adventure,
or you don't listen to music at all.
If you have been figuratively touched by these fun loving punk
reprobates then you will already know that the band only recently
visited these shores on a blitzkrieg tour, and you will also likely
not be surprised to hear that everybody's favourite punk covers
band are about to board the plane from the U.S of A for a return
visit dubbed The Band Of The Long Weekend Tour.
Except it goes for more like two weeks.
Armed with their latest release - a tribute to the late Billy
Thorpe with Most People I Know - Me First & The Gimmes are set
to once more decimate Australian crowds, and, according to frontman
Spike Slawson, can't wait to experience our good old Australian
hospitality once more. With less than seven days to the first
Brisbane show on October 30, we start by asking if he is packed and
ready to go.
"Getting there," he smiled. "I always leave it to the last minute,
but we're getting there. Preparing ourselves mentally and
emotionally and infrastructurally it's always a challenge, but
somehow we always make do. And the flight keeps getting shorter and
shorter! I think they hit some kind of slipstream or… I
dunno."
Talk turns to the name of the tour and the fact that Me First &
The Gimmes are anything but predictable, both as people and in the
sonic realm.
"We like to put our fans and facilitators at a disadvantage," he
joked. "I think it's… it's not a strategic thing as much as it is
just a sort of troll. Our shows are an hour and a half long troll
and at first we try to set the bar high for ourselves by really
alienating our potential allies until the point where they are
actually expressing their displeasure audibly. Booing. We like to
bring them to about that point before we start to reel them back
in. When it really kicked in was recently - two or three years ago
- and it was still during lockdown so it was a crazy tour, but we
were on a bill with the Violent Femmes and Flogging Molly as well
as a band from New York called Thick. All the other bands played
originals, or at least mostly originals, so, as with most bands
that play originals, they are the heroes of their own stories.
They're very earnest, and they're very serious about their music.
They may be smiling but it's a serious moment they're sharing with
you. Whereas for us, we understood right off the bat that we were
the heels of the bill. Just as we are the heels of any bill that
we're on. Interestingly enough, the nights when you alienate the
crowd the most, those are the nights where you end up selling the
most t-shirts. Isn't that funny?"
In the full interview, Spike reminisced about their previous
performances in Australia and their upcoming return. He expressed
his love for classical pop music and punk music, particularly the
Ramones and the Buzzcocks, revealing that his band's covers would
likely come from outsider pop or weirdo pop, which was prevalent in
the 1970s. He also discussed his admiration for the music of the
1970s, despite its sometimes jarring themes. We spoke about support
band, Dwarves, and how this coming tour will differ from recent
shows, places where Me First & The Gimme Gimmes WOULDN'T play
and more.
Become a supporter of this podcast:
https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/heavy-music-interviews--2687660/support.
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