Boysetsfire - Friday 08th September - The Black Box (1 Viewer)

ssmcmullan

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Boysetsfire - Last ever UK show!
We Are Knives
Your New Friend

Friday 8th September
The Black Box
Doors 7pm-11pm
Tickets £8 - Available soon

Check out Hardball Booking for more details and other shows

629180146_l.jpg



A lot has happened in the 10 years that this band, ubiquitously named boysetsfire, has been a band. Imagine a country before 9-11, before emo was a term used to described music that is for the most part completely emotionless, before punk broke, then broke down, and finally broke again. When the underground was underground and not a mass marketing term. This is the story of boysetsfire, a five piece that started in Delaware, a state known more for its gay beaches than its thriving music scene. But before I get ahead of myself, let me just let you know that I have absolutely no interest in rewriting a bland boring promotional piece of garbage. I guess if you like that kind of stuff, you can check out some other websites on the internet. I cant even remember the year we started. It was a long time ago, let me just tell you that. It was me and Chad on a porch in Elkton, smoking cigarettes and maybe having an adult beverage. You wanna start a band? Sure. I dont know who said it. Doesnt matter. Do you care? I doubt there is a boysetsfire trivia game out there and this is the final question. The important thing is that we would start a band, get the hell out of Delaware, and talk about things that nobody was talking about. The next thing we did was get the other dudes in on it. Nathan was in, Darrell was in, Matt was in. He was sixteen when this thing started. I guess it is a shame that we ruined his life at such a tender age. We were pretty freaking naive in those days. We thought you simply made a demo, sent it to labels, and they signed you immediately. so we recorded a four-song demo and immediately sent them to our favorite labels, and sat back, expecting a chorus of yesses and a unsigned contracts to flood our mailbox. Pretty funny, huh? Because all we heard was a resounding no from every label we sent it to. Doghouse said no twice, I guess just to make sure the point was driven home with enough emphasis. Undeterred, we brought a van on credit from our friends at Switch Skateboards and started touring. We made dubs of our demo in the van as we drove to shows, made t-shirts on the road the same way; by the skin of our teeth. There were no discussions over points. There were no debates concerning cross-collateralization. It was seven friends in a van doing what we loved. Not to say it was the easiest thing in the world to do. On the contrary, it was the hardest thing in the world to do. Eating peanut butter and jelly with non-brand name bread on the side of the road while waiting for a tow truck is not the most glamorous thing. Nathan and I would beg change off kids going to our shows just to get enough money to buy taco-bell for dinner. If life was good we could buy a forty or two. Memories are filtering back slowly. Having a show at a bed and breakfast in south carolina that had neither a bed nor a breakfast. Finding a river to swim in after every show. Darrell almost drowning in one of those rivers. He was literally not waving but drowning. Arguing politics with just about everyone. We played a show in an empty trailer in July and it was the hottest I have ever been. Nathan singing in his boxers until people expected it and then refusing to sing in his boxers because people expected it. Heart-Attack Zine trashing our second demo tape and actually caring what they had to say. Pressing our own seven inch, only pressing like 700 copies, but only making like 250 with original pamphlet and liner notes. (so if you got one of those, that is awesome). Meeting Mike CTW and agreeing to do a record. Hating it. Doing it with Magic Bullet. Meeting Andy Initial and agreeing to do a record with him. We recorded The Day The Sun Went Out for twelve-hundred dollars. Can you imagine? That was unheard-of money back then. The most intense memory I have of that recording session was attempting to play along with the other tracks and always sounding out of tune. I tried different guitars, different fingering, nothing. Well, it was because the other tracks were out of tune. So everyone had to start over. Still, it only took us a couple of weeks from start until mix. Funny, huh? We toured and toured and with every tour it seemed a few more kids knew who we were. Toured with Avail who really taught us how to be a real band. Went to Europe after our friends in Avacado Booking invited us over. Met a guy named Robert who will figure in our story later. Continuing our incredible string of stupid decisions, we had t-shirts made with the slogan European Tour emblazoned on the back. Turns out European kids hate that kind of thing and we sold almost nothing. Hilarious, huh Starting a sad tradition of one record stands with labels we left Initial Records and went with Victory Records, who were actually something of tough guy label back then. That is funny to think of, huh? Now the bulldog has tears leaking out of its sad smile. Darrell left the band due to what was, in retrospect, a massive miscommunication. Really no one was right and no-one was wrong in that situation. We got Rob Avery in the band who we loved. He recorded After The Eulogy with us at the Carriage House in Connect. After that record came out we started to see some really positive things happen which was incredibly humbling. We would play music anyway, even if no-one else gave a fuck. Fortunately others seem to give a fuck. We toured our butts off for After the Eulogy. Made so many friends throughout the years it is pointless to list them all now. Fought a lot, drank a lot, did a lot of interviews and even managed to write another record called Tomorrow Come Today, which we put out on Wind-up Records. (remember that thing with one record per label?) We played the industry game a little bit for that record, recorded it in LA because that is what you are supposed to, used a producer and all that. We definitely learned a lot during that time, but it always felt a little uncomfortable. Like a tight pair of shoes or itchy underwear to church, you know you are supposed to be comfortable, but you just....arent. Rob quit soon after the record was released and the less said about that the better, I guess. In his place we got a long time friend and roadie Robert Ehrenbrand, which was wonderful. Which brings us to today. Kind of. We toured again, made a video with all our friends here in Newark, Delaware. Did this tour called Lollapalooza. Played all those festivals they have in Europe. Finally went to Australia, which was great. Nathan and Chad pet a koala. After Australia the label let us know that they were in affect giving up on the record. There would be no second single. It was write another record, kids. Ok, we were ready. It was a blast writing this record. Ideas came fast and the songs were up a couple notches in intensity. We were broke, Bush was the president, and our personal lives were in shambles. Sucks for us, but great for our music. We had every intention of writing for a couple of months, recording, and then immediately going out there again. Not so fast. We dont hear a single. Was the common refrain we heard from label and management. We don't care. (that was our reply). None of us listen to the radio, or if we do, we don't like it. Boysetsfire will never sound like watered down nirvana or stop singing what we sing about. Ya gotta go easy on the president. We heard that more than once. Not that I blame Wind-up. They were great to us. They just didnt really know or understand who we were. The idea of a co-writer was broached. Do we look or sound like Ashlee Simpson? Maybe Nathan is as cute as she is, but, come on.... So the story continues. We were given the go ahead to record. And then told no. And then the go ahead And then told no. Third time told yes and then no. That broke it. We asked to be released, and they, being very gracious and in their hearts, kind, let us go our separate ways. (Remember the whole one record one label thing? Oh yeah, life is wierd.) So here we are. We signed deals with Equal Vision Records and Burning Heart Records not because they gave us the most money but because we felt they cared the most about our band and the direction we want to go. We talked to a lot of good people, but in the end we went with our gut reaction. We poured our anger, pain, and yes joy into the writing and recording of our fourth full-length the Misery Index; Notes from the Plague Years. The record was born from intense frustration, anger and tears. I hope you like it. We do. August 2005, Boysetsfire
 
what a load of complete and utter bollocks i hope this band get petrol bombed. before punk broke and then broke down and then broke again. shite.
 
BOYSETSFIRE/THE SCARE

Toxic in association with Lips On Fire presents:

BOYSETSFIRE
THE SCARE
20 BULLS EACH

The Voodoo Lounge
39/40 Arran Quay, Dublin 7
Saturday 9th of September
Doors 8pm
Tickets €13.50 www.tickets.ie
The Sound Cellar, Setinel Records, Road Records and City Disks
over 18's ID required

www.toxicpromotions.net www.boysetsfire.org www.thescare.net
BOYSETSFIRE Announcement

Dear friends,
it is not with a heavy heart that we write these words but with a head held high. we wanted to collectively inform you that BOYSETSFIRE has decided to retire.
Thank you all for your support and belief in us over the last 12
years...please know it meant the world to us.

BOYSETSFIRE for us was always a vehicle for changing the world and we
believe that change comes about by starting with yourself, so instead
of awaiting certain things to come our way, as always we decided to
take our destiny in our own hands.
we're not sure which path each of us will take from here on out, but
we plan to continue following our dreams...
we will play all the shows of our upcoming european tour (and possibly one or two last shows on the east coast sometime
this fall, we will keep you posted on this
good-night,
 
VACUUM IRONY

DEBUT RELEASE VACUUM IRONY OUT 5th June 2006 on NOMADIC RECORDS


"At its best New Wave/punk represents a fundamental and age-old Utopian dream: that if you give people the license to be as outrageous as they want in absolutely any fashion they can dream up, they'll be creative about it, and do something good besides." - Lester Bangs

By that token The Scare has found a home in a musical world full of conventions. Not even 18 months together, they have been attacking curious audiences through a barrage of angular guitars, short spurts of stabbing vocals, a raging rhythm section and synth lines that sit somewhere between haunting melody and classical rhythm. It is this concoction that makes The Scare so damn interesting - yet few people get it… they remain out of synch with most of their contemporaries and few comparisons can be drawn with other artists. Even recent tour buddies The Blood Brothers, who The Scare are constantly compared to, actually sound nothing alike.

But it's the ideals that The Scare espouse that set them apart from their "punk rock" peers. It isn't the fact that they dress punk, play punk or even subscribe to the DIY aesthetic of punk. The Scare is punk – Punk in the way that Jay Adams is to Skateboarding or Brando was to Film, It's their approach, their apathy to the conventional, the blandness of society & the mundane grind of their everyday lives that gives their creative outlet its meaning.

Front man & self proclaimed “boy genius”, Kiss Reid, describes his journey: "Well I was found in a junkyard and started playing in bands when I was 13. Most of them didn't last due to the music being too difficult for people to comprehend and me finding myself in trouble a lot". As far as front men go, Kiss is as enigmatic and despondent as they come. On stage he is a possessed madman; off stage he is mostly quiet and reserved with a glint in his eye that says approach with caution.

The rest of the band - Liam O’Brien, Wade Keighran, Brock Fitzgerald & Sam Pearton – all subscribe to the same theory. The Scare isn’t the perfect equation, not all the pieces fit into in the right places. Truth is the band is so unpredictable that even as much as they could become the biggest band in the world they are just as likely self implode tomorrow.

It's that feeling of a band so on edge that creates an aura of misunderstanding
around The Scare. They're not here to change your world! The Scare exist for other reasons - a way out... whether that be your way out or theirs.

So is The Scare punk rock? Well put it this way: The Scare are everything you think that they aren’t and sound nothing like you think they do. If you have heard the first Scare EP, it’s safe to say that before listening to the latest EP 'Vacuum Irony' The Scare are the best band you have never heard.


 

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