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  1. Interview with Fun.’s Nate Ruess!

    September 18, 2009 by Steph

    Fun., from TumblrFun. just released their debut album Aim and Ignite. It’s inventive, upbeat, and whimsical–exactly what anyone would expect from Nate Ruess, former front man of The Format, Jack Antonoff, of Steel Train, and Andrew Dost, formerly of Anathallo.

    While the they’re are out promoting their new release, Nate Ruess took a few minutes out of his busy schedule to chat with me about the band, their music, and their plans for the future.

    Click here for the interview in your browser

    Click here for all the interviews on iTunes

    To check out more about The Format or to find tickets their headlining tour, go to myspace.com/fun


  2. Warped Tour Interview with All Time Low’s Alex and Jack

    September 14, 2009 by Steph

    Alex and Jack, All Time Low, photo by CatharineOur first (and last posted ha!) Warped ’09 interview, we went with almost entirely questions submitted from YOU GUYS! We asked Alex Gaskarth and Jack Barakat, both guitarists and vocalists for All Time Low, some random fan questions about their fears and fantasies.

    We unfortunately weren’t able to get audio that was worth sharing, so this one you guys are going to have to read. Enjoy!

    Alex: You ready?
    Me: Yeah!
    MSO PR organizer: This is Alex and Jack from All Time Low.
    Me: How was it having some of your favorite musicians in your music video?
    Alex: Uh… phenomenal. It is really really cool that, you know, first of all, our favorite musicians have become somewhat of our friends and it’s also really really cool that they uhh, they’re down…
    Jack: Yeah it’s really cool that they agreed to do it.
    Alex: It was cool and it us helped us a lot, bigger bands to [help us out]. It’s really cool that they were willing to do it

    Steph: If you could have anyone dead or alive be on your next album, who would you pick?
    Alex: Um…
    Jack: Ooh I think it would be cool to have Mark Hoppus on the record
    Steph: That’s a possibility.
    Alex: Unfortunately he’s dead, so…

    Steph: What bands this year really impressed you on Warped Tour?
    Alex: I love Less Than Jake. I love them I think they’re great live. There For Tomorrow is awesome.
    Jack: Underoath is one of the best live bands I’ve ever seen.
    Alex: I agree. Underoath is one of the most entertaining bands to watch.

    Steph: When was the last time you did something for the first time?
    Alex: Oo. That’s a tough one. I went tubing for the first time a couple of days ago.
    Steph: How’d that go?
    Alex: It was awesome.
    Jack: I had my first orgy.
    Steph: Wow. Five people with their shoes off?
    Jack: Yeah, it was all the band on that.

    Steph: If you were Kevin Lyman and you got to pick five headlining spots for next year’s Warped Tour, who would you pick?
    Jack: Blink 182, Jimmy Eat World, Third Eye Blind…
    Steph: Two more.
    Alex: Jack’s Mannequin?
    Jack: Jack’s Mannequin.Alex and Jack, All Time Low, photo by Catharine Acurso
    Alex: And uh…
    Jack: How about Underoath?
    Alex: Underoath, yeah.

    Steph: Has anyone ever pulled a really cool prank on you guys during tour?
    Alex: Oh yeah, all the time.
    Steph: What was your favorite?
    Alex: Uh… I remember one, every single band in the tour wore tighty whities on stage and they danced around.
    Steph: I like it.
    Alex: It was kinda silly.

    Steph: How do you feel when fans ask you to marry them? Have you ever considered?
    Alex: Uh, yeah I marry all of them. I marry each and every one of them.
    Jack: We’re Morman.

    Steph: If you guys were to cast a movie about yourselves, who would you have play you?
    Jack: Tom Cruise for me.
    Alex: Uh… Wanda Sykes for me.
    Alex: Jack! Jack! [trying to sound like Sykes]
    Jack: Yes, Alex.
    Alex: Jack!
    Jack: Stop saying my name!

    Steph: Do you have any phobias?
    Alex: I’m afraid of needles
    Steph: No tattoos for you?
    Alex: No I don’t mind tattoos guns but just like…
    Jack: Injections.
    Alex: Injections.
    Jack: Yeah, I don’t like injections
    Alex: Yeah like if I have to get blood drawn
    Jack: Yeah.
    Alex: I faint every time I get blood drawn.
    Steph: Really?
    Jack: I have to get blood drawn next week so…
    Alex: I’m always fine while they do it and then they pull it out and I’m like “Awh f*ck.” It’s not blood so much it’s just the fact that this thing stabs me. Yeah it’s weird I dunno.


  3. Warped Tour Interview with Garrett from The Maine

    September 14, 2009 by Steph

    Garrett Nickelsen, The Maine, photo by Catharine AcursoGarrett Nickelsen, bassist for The Maine, stopped to chat with us. We brought him a whole list of fan questions and he talked about everything from singing in the shower to game show fantasies.

    To listen to the interview in your browser, click here.

    To listen to the interview on iTunes, click here.

    Thanks to the these fans and a number of others for sending in fan questions: Anon, Lisa from Pennsylvania, Katie from Connecticut, Jane from New York, kate from Chicago, Lisa from Pennsylvania, Katherine from Texas, Robin from Ontario, Canada, Morgan from Connecticut

  4. Warped Tour Interviews, Round 1!

    September 10, 2009 by Steph

    Austin Bello, Forever the Sickest Kids, by Catharine AcursoKent Garrison, Forever the Sickest Kids, by Catharine AcursoToday I give you interviews with two awesome dudes from an amazing band. Keyboard player Kent Garrison and bassist and vocalist Austin Bello from Forever the Sickest Kids (interestingly enough in separate interviews) were happy to chat with us about Warped Tour, their upcoming album release, and a few of their deepest, darkest secrets. …sort of!

    Click here (for Kent) and here (for Austin) to listen to it in your browser

    or here to take you to our iTunes podcast


  5. Warped Tour Los Angeles 2009

    September 6, 2009 by Steph

    The MaineAll of Catharine Acurso’s photos can be found here

    Interviews, Round 1! can he found here. More coming soon…

    The day started off with some downtime so photographer Catharine and I headed out to a few bands that we might have otherwise skipped over. The Maine’s audience was filled with screaming girls jumping and singing to songs like “Everything I Ask For” and “I Must Be Dreaming.” It was already scorching hot, yet it didn’t seem to effect anyone’s excitement for the band. The Maine’s music was perfect for the weather—summer songs that only made me wish I had a popsicle. They closed out the set with a cover of Dead Leopard’s “Pour Some Sugar On Me” with a funky bass line and heavy drums.We the Kings, photo by Catharine Acurso

    We stopped off for a brief glance at a couple of bands. The first: We the Kings. Catharine grabbed a couple of shots of the band while I hung in the back to tell people about the site. The band sang their hearts out to their songs “Whoa” and “Secret Valentine” (a song frontman Travis claims is “entirely about sexual intercourse” so he shouts for the crowd to have intercourse.)

    On the way back, we caught a bit of Saosin. The fans were crazy and the bass was pumping so loud I could feel it across the blacktop. Tons of crowd surfers were up for “Voices” and it seemed pretty intense.

    Forever the Sickest Kids, photo by Catharine AcursoInstead of joining the crowd, we decided to head over to see You Me At Six sing for their hot, sweaty pop punk set. With heavy bass, rock distortion, and hangovers from the night before, You Me at Six played “Finders Keepers” to a huge crowd—much bigger than I saw the rest of the day at the Kevin Says stage.

    Forever the Sickest Kids was, as always, a huge, fun, sweaty dance party.  Jumping right in with “Hey Brittany,” the guys told the crowd that Los Angeles is their favorite city outside of Dallas (their hometown) and encouraged the kids to make the crowd look as if its on a trampoline (essentially jump as high as they possibly can). After playing the crowd against each other as “side good-looking versus side better-looking” and “boys versus girls” they jammed out upbeat renditions of “Believe Me I’m Lying” and “She’s a Lady.”

    The next band was one I hadn’t heard before, but caught my ear. Single File from Denver, Colorado had vocals similar to Max Beemis of say anything, but their pop punk style was all their own.  They played their songs “September Skyline” and “Velcro” while one of the guys encouraged fans to come meet them at their tent after and the other to “pat him on the butt. He likes butt stuff.”

    This Providence, photo by Catharine AcursoThis Providence from Seattle (with accents that might suggest otherwise?) were the next band we checked out on the Kevin Says stage. If it’s possible to shred with a tambourine, This Providence did just that. In “Playing the Villian,” the lyrics are viscous: “I hate who you’ve become, I don’t know you anymore.” You’d never know so much rock came from men with such baby faces. Everyone clapped along to “That Girl’s a Trick” and everyone shouted the lyrics to “Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing” with their hands in the air.

    All Time Low, photo by Catharine AcursoAs the sun started to set, the bands only kept getting better. All Time Low hit the stage to “I’m getting fucked up…lets get drunk.” The ATL crew kicked off their set with their newest single “Weightless”  jetting quickly into their foul mouth antics: “This is not a g-d damn concert, it’s a revolution… filled with dicks and titties, blood and sweat and tears… and cats that I hit in my car on the way to work… which is not true because I’ve never had a job in my life.” They played all their favorites—“Jasey Rae,” “Poppin’ Champagne” (with a rock thrash interlude), “Lost in Stereo” (off their newest release Nothing Personal), and “Six Feet Under the Stars.” Someone threw a pair of boxers on stage dripping with sweat and later Alex yelled that we all needed to get “a little more naked.” All ages of women (and men in women’s pants) were singing along to the poppy pop punk hooligans.

    And now for my favorite part of the day: A Day to Remember. A band I’ve recently fallen in love A Day to Remember, photo by Catharinewith, ADTR’s set quickly stole my heart. Super high energy and a sea of moshing and fist throwing. The air seemed to cool down just in time for the set so that we could mosh especially hard. The guys on stage seemed so genuine and earnest. The band shouted from the stage that “LA has been here from the start.” They sang an equal number of songs from their newest release Homesick and older songs like “I’m Made of Wax, Larry, What Are You Made Of?” and “Show ‘em the Ropes” with intense lyrics and even more intense guitar shredding. I felt the music through the crowd and it was a great feeling.

    Watching Bayside is always like being in on one dark joke about yourself. It takes a true Bayside fan to shout at full volume back at Anthony, “I swear I can’t stand this place and what’s becoming of me the longer I have to stay.” Bayside’s lyrics are self-deprecating, but far from defeatist. The rebellious attitude comes out through shredding guitar solos and bass that make fists fly. This is what made Bayside’s set so exciting to watch. Most fans in the crowd knew every word and were yelling them with their rock faces on. The band played a good mix of their two Bayside, photo by Catharine Acursomost recent releases Shudder and The Walking Wounded and a few of some oldies. “Devotion and Desire” set the mood for the set as Anthony’s smooth vocals wailed “I know the spark inside your eyes was just the match I use to set myself on fire.” Playing other favorites like “The Walking Wounded,” “Carry On,” and “Head On a Plate” caused the few who weren’t singing along to mosh in a circle pit.

    Hit the Light’s style always surprises me a little. The guys look pretty tough—the lead singer is a white dude with a shaved head and looks like he could lift me over his head—but their style is more pop than punk and some of their songs even have a dance beat. They hit the stage to Christina Millian’s “A.M. to P.M.” (“Somebody hit the lights so we can rock it day and night”) and then some pretty hardcore screams came out of frontman Nick. I was surprised at the amount of moshing to songs like “Breathe In” and “Back Breaker” (although to be fair, “Back Breaker” has some heavy breakdowns and screaming). They remind me a bit of New Found Glory if not for the style and high energy, then for the way they command the crowd. Hit the Lights played “309” per request of a couple of screaming fans and closed their set with their popular “Drop the Girl” and a hardcore cover.

    We briefly checked out Meg & Dia before heading over to 3Oh!3. They sound exactly how you would expect two 5 foot 120 lb girls to sound—high pitched and sweet. We didn’t stay for my favorite song of their’s, “Monster,” but their funky groove on “Going Away” was pretty cool.

    3Oh!3, photo by Catharine AcursoIt’s rare that I stay till the end of the day at Warped Tour but this year it seemed as though over half the attendees had the same reason to stay–3Oh!3. 3Oh!3 has managed to confuse people into liking them. Not that their music isn’t awesome, but they defy categorization and therefore manage to cross over some thought-to-be impenetrable divides.

    – Are they serious or are they making one big joke?

    – Are they rock or hip hop? Or something else entirely?

    The last performance at the last warped tour date of its 15th year, a couple thousand people stuck around not to discuss what 3Oh!3 means, but to raise their “3O3” hands and shake their booties, mosh, and crowd surf. From “Punkbitch” to “Rich Man”  to “Colorado Sunrise” to some new material, there were hardcore 15-year-old boys moshing alongside preppy 18-year-old sorority girls dancing next to some metal dudes. The two white guys on stage doing choreographed “crump” dancing singing “Choke Chain” to heavy guitar and three drum sets (they invited a couple of guest musicians) seemed odd, but fun. It didn’t make sense, but maybe that’s why everyone loves it so much. Myself included.

    At the end of the day, Warped Tour’s 15th anniversary was pretty successful.  Lots of great bands, some I heard for the first time, some I saw live for the first time. I came home with a bunch of posters, a backpack full of flyers, and a tape recorder full of interviews…


  6. Backseat Goodbye Interview

    August 6, 2009 by Steph

    Backseat Goodbye, source: myspace.com/backseatgoodbyeGetting to chat with Chad Sugg from

    Backseat Goodbye was quite the pleasure. I got to pick his brain about some of his favorite bands, his favorite cities to tour, and what we can expect coming from him in the near future.

    Listen to the interview here.


  7. Goodnight Sunrise Interview

    August 4, 2009 by Steph

    Goodnight Sunrise, source: myspace.com/goodnightsunriseDan, the guitarrist and singer for

    Goodnight Sunrise,

    sat down and had a heart to heart with me about the band and … Jessica Simpson’s dad? Check out the link below (or our iTunes podcast) to listen to the interview.

    Click here to check out the interview


  8. Interview with The Ready Set

    August 3, 2009 by Steph

    The Ready Set, source: myspace.com/thereadysetJordan gave us a call to tell us about his band The Ready Set

    Click here to listen to the interview or

    Click here to check out all our interviews on our iTunes podcast


  9. Interview and Review of Meese in Hollywood

    July 22, 2009 by Steph

    Meese

    Patrick Meese, Meese, Source: myspace.com/meese

    Photographer David Endicott and I arrived to The Viper Room on Sunset Boulevard at dusk on Thursday, June 16th to find Nate Meese and Mike Ayars of the band Meese taking a smoke break outside of the venue. I introduced myself and we chatted a bit about the venue and Sunday night’s show with Copeland. Immediately I could tell that these dudes were humble and down to earth and I was impressed with how genuine they were. After a quick sound check, Meese and Ayers along with other Meese (Patrick) and Ben Hayley joined me on Sunset outside the venue to chat about where their band has been and where it’s going. You can check out the interview [here].Nathan Meese, Meese, By: David Endicott

    After sincere “thank you” s all around, the boys headed into venue and David and I checked in and headed up the stairs to an almost pitch black bar/venue decked in true Hollywood rock style.

    Meese (not the plural of Moose) took the stage and opened with the first song off their record “Forward Motion” in which frontman Patrick pleads “I’m okay with the darkness coming for me” with such intensity that shows on his face. The song builds and crescendos into the breakdown of full rock glory with Nate’s guitar solo, steady, infectious bass drum beats and heavy bass backed by electronic strings. The band commanded the audience’s attention right off the bat and even those who had just stopped in for some beer were moving to the beat.Ben Haley, Meese, By: David Endicott

    The set continued on high energy and when it came time for the band to play their new single “Next in Line,” the venue was tapping their feet to the boom-chuck of the guitar and bass in harmony. Even their ballads like “Taking the World On” built in intensity into a crashing rock-out breakdown behind the soft piano. The vocal harmonies between Mike and Partrick on the heartfelt slow jam “Movie Screens” were gorgeous and kept me wanting more. The last song the band dedicated to a friend in the audience getting married. The piano rock “The Quiet Side” has sincere lyrics and soaring vocals that rise above a power pop chorus to pounding keys, building guitar riffs, and reverberating drums.Mike Ayers, Meese, By: David Endicott

    Meese ended exactly as they finished—strong and full of energy, except now to a captive audience. It is their kind of musicianship, the kind that performs each song to its pinnacle, that makes Meese an amazing band live. Don’t think that they aren’t fantastic on their new album Broadcast, because they really are. However, if you have a chance to see Meese perform, whether it’s with The Fray and Jack’s Mannequin or with Barcelona and Seabird, catch them out on the road this summer and you won’t be disappointed.