Post by karro on Apr 27, 2005 15:47:22 GMT -5
Millencolin Interview
Posted by AlMachine on Thursday, April 21, 2005
It’s 7pm on a damp Wednesday evening. Outside there’s a line of spooky-kid types stretching round the block waiting to see Good Charlotte. Meanwhile I’m on the tour bus with Millencolin’s vocalist/bassist Nikola Sarcevic, who’s walking round in a bit of a daze…<br>
Rock City: Evening
Nikola: Already? I’m so fucking tired, I think we’re nearing the end of our time here in Britain, but this is a bloody long tour y’know? I think it’s taking it’s toll. We’re touring the new ‘Kingwood’ album and it’s taking us all over everywhere, we’re going from here to Europe, then I think some festivals in Summer, I think there’s talk of us playing your Carling Festival (Reading and Leeds, kids). We’re then in the US for the Vans Warped Tour, so we’re a long time away from home.
RC: You’re touring with Good Charlotte at the moment; it’s got to be a bit different to your usual crowd
N: Yeah, the shows are really quite big this time around. The last time we played the UK it was to far smaller crowds. It’s very different being in front of so many expectant people. The crowds are a lot younger as well, I’m seeing kids out there with their parents (tonight’s show is over 14s), but I don’t know, they seem to be really getting into it, it’s cool that we can get to this whole new audience by being with a band like Good Charlotte.
RC: So you’re touring ‘Kingwood’, which is bit of a departure from your usual sound. Are you trying to bring Millencolin’s sound more towards your solo?
N: Not consciously, although I can see why someone would think that. Kingwood is just a progression, y’know. In the beginning we started out copying the American bands. There were all these great punk rock bands from the States and when we started out in Sweden there wasn’t that sound. So when we started it was with the same sound a Operation Ivy and bands like that, Pennywise and the Descendants, we just wanted to bring that sound to our little country and we were all big skateboarders so the whole ethos that those bands had really appealed to us. I don’t know, we’ve developed since then, we’ve progressed and so naturally Kingwood is a reflection of that change. Maybe we’ve mellowed out, but we’re more our own band now. We still love the hardcore punk sound over in the US though, we can’t wait to get out on the Warped Tour.
RC: A lot of bands over there are very political, and incorporate that into their music
N: That’s not something we really do, I mean we’ve got a lot of respect for bands who do that, and use their music in that way, but it’s not for us. A lot of bands are getting up and saying ‘Fuck George Bush’ and it doesn’t really mean anything, they’re just using it to get the crowd going. It’s really good that people are using music as a medium to make people aware of things, but we’re not a band who want to sing about global politics, we’re making music that’s personal to us as individuals, now more than ever.
RC: So no ‘clever’ Anti-War merchandise then?
N: Ha! No not at all, I like a lot of that, I think Erik (Ohisson, guitarist) is wearing that NOFX shirt right now. No we’ll stick to what we know, at least until we get to America! Then you might see our shirts change to us all hunting Bush!
RC: What about the future? What’s happening to Millencolin? You’ve been going since the 80s, which is a pretty good shelf life for any band.
N: I think we’re all going to go to sleep for six months just to get over what we’re doing now! I’m really not sure. I’ve got some ideas that may not be right for Millencolin so I may look at doing something with those. The band’s not going anywhere though, we’re complaining about it now but we love this really. I know we’ll get back to Sweden, we’ll rest up a bit and spend some time with our families and we’ll want to be back out, even after a year on the road. I know we’ve been around for a while now but we’re still going pretty strong, we’ve got a pretty good following who’ve stuck with us. We’re hoping maybe this tour and album are going to open up some more opportunities to us as well, we’ll have to see what happens.
With that I leave Nikola to find his breakfast beer, and I leave Millencolin to get a thousand 14 year olds in the mood for Good Charlotte.
Millencolin’s new album ‘Kingwood’ is out now.
Spike
Posted by AlMachine on Thursday, April 21, 2005
It’s 7pm on a damp Wednesday evening. Outside there’s a line of spooky-kid types stretching round the block waiting to see Good Charlotte. Meanwhile I’m on the tour bus with Millencolin’s vocalist/bassist Nikola Sarcevic, who’s walking round in a bit of a daze…<br>
Rock City: Evening
Nikola: Already? I’m so fucking tired, I think we’re nearing the end of our time here in Britain, but this is a bloody long tour y’know? I think it’s taking it’s toll. We’re touring the new ‘Kingwood’ album and it’s taking us all over everywhere, we’re going from here to Europe, then I think some festivals in Summer, I think there’s talk of us playing your Carling Festival (Reading and Leeds, kids). We’re then in the US for the Vans Warped Tour, so we’re a long time away from home.
RC: You’re touring with Good Charlotte at the moment; it’s got to be a bit different to your usual crowd
N: Yeah, the shows are really quite big this time around. The last time we played the UK it was to far smaller crowds. It’s very different being in front of so many expectant people. The crowds are a lot younger as well, I’m seeing kids out there with their parents (tonight’s show is over 14s), but I don’t know, they seem to be really getting into it, it’s cool that we can get to this whole new audience by being with a band like Good Charlotte.
RC: So you’re touring ‘Kingwood’, which is bit of a departure from your usual sound. Are you trying to bring Millencolin’s sound more towards your solo?
N: Not consciously, although I can see why someone would think that. Kingwood is just a progression, y’know. In the beginning we started out copying the American bands. There were all these great punk rock bands from the States and when we started out in Sweden there wasn’t that sound. So when we started it was with the same sound a Operation Ivy and bands like that, Pennywise and the Descendants, we just wanted to bring that sound to our little country and we were all big skateboarders so the whole ethos that those bands had really appealed to us. I don’t know, we’ve developed since then, we’ve progressed and so naturally Kingwood is a reflection of that change. Maybe we’ve mellowed out, but we’re more our own band now. We still love the hardcore punk sound over in the US though, we can’t wait to get out on the Warped Tour.
RC: A lot of bands over there are very political, and incorporate that into their music
N: That’s not something we really do, I mean we’ve got a lot of respect for bands who do that, and use their music in that way, but it’s not for us. A lot of bands are getting up and saying ‘Fuck George Bush’ and it doesn’t really mean anything, they’re just using it to get the crowd going. It’s really good that people are using music as a medium to make people aware of things, but we’re not a band who want to sing about global politics, we’re making music that’s personal to us as individuals, now more than ever.
RC: So no ‘clever’ Anti-War merchandise then?
N: Ha! No not at all, I like a lot of that, I think Erik (Ohisson, guitarist) is wearing that NOFX shirt right now. No we’ll stick to what we know, at least until we get to America! Then you might see our shirts change to us all hunting Bush!
RC: What about the future? What’s happening to Millencolin? You’ve been going since the 80s, which is a pretty good shelf life for any band.
N: I think we’re all going to go to sleep for six months just to get over what we’re doing now! I’m really not sure. I’ve got some ideas that may not be right for Millencolin so I may look at doing something with those. The band’s not going anywhere though, we’re complaining about it now but we love this really. I know we’ll get back to Sweden, we’ll rest up a bit and spend some time with our families and we’ll want to be back out, even after a year on the road. I know we’ve been around for a while now but we’re still going pretty strong, we’ve got a pretty good following who’ve stuck with us. We’re hoping maybe this tour and album are going to open up some more opportunities to us as well, we’ll have to see what happens.
With that I leave Nikola to find his breakfast beer, and I leave Millencolin to get a thousand 14 year olds in the mood for Good Charlotte.
Millencolin’s new album ‘Kingwood’ is out now.
Spike