DFRDFL Interview #1: Matty Bar
To kick off, how did discover punk and hardcore and what was your key motivation for getting so involved? Did you come from a musical background and therefore motivated purely by wanting to play in a band; did you find other areas such as show booking, zine making and label running being the main reason for getting involved or was it all of the above/something else?
Vision were an insanely underrated founding NJ hardcore band. I can't quite put into words how good 'In the Blink of an Eye' is. Definition of criminally underrated. |
I didn't really have a musical background but there was
always a radio on somewhere and we had lots of records in the house. My mum had
a guitar around the house and at around 15 I started trying to play along with
Pixies basslines. A year later I ended up getting a bass and Ollie had drums at
his place already. It wasn't until we saw Knuckledust four years later that we thought about doing something
other than getting mashed and jamming Beastie Boys covers (specifically Time
For Livin' and Heart Attack Man).
Knuckledust was definitely the main inspiration for us
to start the band. We had been checking out gigs by American bands like Sick of
It all, Madball and Slapshot for a little while and got hold of Pierre's Time 4
Some Action newsletter. I didn't catch the first KD show but not long after I
saw them support Warzone at the Underworld and they were already tight as fuck.
That gig in particular is significant because a lot of people in attendance
would later become friends and form bands together or start zines and labels.
Anyway after that show it was just sort of mutually assumed that we were doing
a band.
The UKHC History IG account really is a godsend for sourcing almost all the pictures for this blog. Above is A page taken straight from Pierre's Time For Some Acton Newsletter. |
Putting on shows came about as a necessity as we needed somewhere to play. We did a few more in Herne Hill but it was too far for some and numbers dwindled. We would book venues anywhere that would have us in Tottenham, Harrow, Stockwell, Camden until we eventually got involved with the 12Bar. So I wouldn't say any particular one factor was more important than the other – they were all different elements of one thing and it all sort of happened at once.
Your most notable act, Ninebar sits as the Rucktion band with arguably the highest cult status. You have a distinct musical style, very clear lyrical themes and not to mention, a pretty diehard following. Were you ever aware at the time of how important the records you were making would become; what they would mean lyrically and thematically to so many people and the influence they’d have on other bands?
Well, firstly, thank you for the kind words. It's always been something we've done for fun and I don't think we had any idea we would still be doing this in or forties. Any distinction in our musical style probably stems from the fact that we didn't really know how to play when we started! In hindsight, it doesn't seem unusual that Rucktion made such an impact as there weren't any other bands in the UK playing this sort of music with such a London vibe. The only band really close to what we were doing with Rucktion was Above All and they had fizzled out by then sadly.
Although not mentioned in these responses, when I was discussing this interview with Matty, Cold Front came up in conversation. I'm sure their song 'Kings for the Night' tells all regarding the hc/graff connection |
When we wrote back then it was more about just keeping
the song together. We just wanted to write beatdowns! Lyrically we tend to vary
between the serious and the not so serious which we cover later.
The history between the two is well documented now and
we've met writers from all over London, the UK and abroad through hardcore. The
guy who designed the first Rucktion website knew, and had worked with, a few
London writers who have moved into the the art world. The Rucktion logo itself
was definitely influenced by getting the train past one of Zomby's characters
everyday. One of our sadder memories was discovering a good friend of the band
had died on the day of the release party for Urban Legends. RIP VIZO.
There is definitely a tongue-in-cheek element to Ninebar’s lyrical themes and artwork as well as more serious themes at play. What was the motivation in this “dancing on the line antics” between the humorous and the more serious, do you enjoy this kind of ironic approach or have I got it completely wrong?
Spot the difference between Lil Wayne's first album and Raising the Bar, NOW! |
What did you feel like you could offer to hardcore as a band and as a guitarist writing music that no one else could? Was it flying the flag for South London, an urge to compose songs with a distinct flavour or something else?
I don't think I've ever
thought about it like that. We just wanted to play shows and create something
but we were definitely repping South London right from the start. As a
guitarist learning to play, I would have just tried to sound like whatever my
favourite band was at that time. I have a pretty simple style because when I
started playing it didn't need to be anything but simple. I'm definitely better
at playing technically since I joined bands where I'm not writing the music so there's
that!
For me personally, the more
well known bands that pointed me in this direction I mentioned earlier. Then
had the bigger hardcore bands who would play semi regularly like Sick Of It All, Madball, Slapshot, Shelter,
Dog Eat Dog, Downset, etc. Some standout shows I remember are: Denied at the
Verge, Warzone at the Underworld, 108 at the Garage, Subzero at the Standard,
25 Ta Life upstairs at the Garage, Cold As Life upstairs at the Garage.
London can be a pretty bleak place but it's diverse. Hardcore is a pretty narrow-minded but also diverse genre; we can't help but be influenced by our surroundings and so the traditional sound evolved to reflect that.
Ninebar lyrically points the
finger at a lot of people and problems in society (too much internet usage for
example). What were the biggest hardships you yourself, your bands or Rucktion
records ever came up against that affected you personally, your reputation or
maybe acted as barriers to greater success? Did you learn from these struggles
and how do they still influence what you do?
We Don't Need was actually
about the backlash of internet trolls we got when we first started up. You'd
have think we were sacrificing babies the way some of the older crowd reacted.
Rucktion hasn't had too much trouble really. Some guy threatened to sue me once
for defamation of character but nothing ever came of it! We all have day jobs
and families and this is something we try to fit in between. We're also pretty
lazy which probably hinders our progress a bit.
Doesn't get anymore Ninebar than Skinny donning a cheesecutter hat and playing almost entire set bottle-in-hand in a heinously smoky 12bar (bonus points for night vision camera and opening with 'Fuck BTP'). |
I'm proud of what we had the 12Bar, that place really
was a godsend. One of the biggest
obstacles was paying for the venue and backline and trying to find a good spot
everyone could reach. With the 12Bar we had a tiny, lawless little venue right
in the heart of central London; free to hire with an alley way the size of a
small street for a smoking area. We will probably never experience anything
like that again.
I would buy a decent amp as
early as possible and learn to drive. Of course when you're young and starting
a band you're probably skint so don't quit your day job. Bottom line is if you
want to get better you need to practise as much as possible.
Who are your favourite
younger bands who either appeal to you musically or perhaps remind you of yourself/practice
the same ethos you did when you started playing in bands?
Ok I am terrible at keeping
track of new bands.
I think the most recent thing
I've listened to is the Gouge Away album from last year.
This NEEDS to be printed on a shirt. |