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Event Details
The Menzingers
Greg Barnett (vocals, guitar) - Tom May
(vocals, guitar) - Eric Keen (bass) - Joe Godino (drums)
Since forming as teenagers in 2006, The Menzingers have shown
their strength as rough-and-tumble storytellers, turning out songs equally rooted
in frenetic energy and lifelike detail. On
their new album Hello Exile, the Philadelphia-based punk band take their lyrical
narrative to a whole new level and share their reflections on moments from the
past and present: high-school hellraising, troubled relationships, aging and
alcohol and political ennui. And while their songs
often reveal certain painful truths, Hello
Exile ultimately maintains the irrepressible spirit that’s always defined the
band.
The sixth full-length from The Menzingers, Hello Exile arrives as the follow-up to After the Party: a 2017 release that
landed on best-of-the-year lists from outlets like Clash
and Noisey, with Stereogum praising its “almost unfairly well-written punk
songs.” In creating the album, the band again joined forces with producer Will
Yip (Mannequin Pussy, Quicksand), spending six weeks recording at Yip’s
Conshohocken, PA-based Studio 4. “That’s the longest amount of time we’ve ever
worked with Will,” notes Barnett. “We wanted to make sure these stories didn’t
get lost in the music, so we kept it to a lot of room sounds with the guitar
and bass and drums.”
Despite that subtler sonic
approach, Hello Exile still rushes
forward with a restless urgency—an element in full force on the album-opening
“America (You’re Freaking Me Out).” With its pounding rhythms and furious
guitar riffs, the viscerally charged track provides a much-needed release for
all those feeling frenzied by the current political climate. “We’re living in a
pretty insane time, where all you can think about every single day is ‘What the
hell is going on with this country?’” says Barnett.
“But as I was writing that song I realized that it’s kind of always freaked me
out, especially coming-of-age during the Iraq War. I love so much about
America, but I think you can’t deny that there are some people in power who are
absolutely evil.”
Elsewhere on Hello Exile, The Menzingers turn their incisive
songwriting to matters of love and romance, exploring the glories and failures
of human connection. A wistful piece of jangle-pop, “Anna” paints a portrait of
lovesick longing, complete with dreamy recollections of wine-drunk kitchen
dancing. And on “Strangers Forever,” the band shifts gears for a searing tribute to parting ways, backing their spiky guitars
with brilliantly barbed lyrics (e.g., “Maybe it’s for the better if we both
stay strangers forever”).
An album fascinated with home and
displacement and belonging (or the lack thereof), Hello Exile takes its title from its heavy-hearted centerpiece.
With its aching vocals, graceful acoustic guitar work, and beautifully lilting
melody, “Hello Exile” draws inspiration from Anton Chekhov’s “The Lady with the
Dog” (a short story set in the Black Sea resort city of Yalta). “I grew up in a
tiny town that’s essentially a cross between a summer-vacation spot for New
Yorkers and a retirement home, so for most of my childhood there were always people
coming in and out of my life,” says Barnett, who hails from Lake Ariel, PA. “Reading
that story made me think of how isolating it felt when my friends would leave
to go back to the city at the end of the season, and I’d still just be stuck way
out there in the woods.”
In looking back on the songwriting process behind Hello Exile, Barnett
points to the starkly confessional “I Can’t Stop Drinking” to illustrate the
band’s commitment to total candor. “We’ve written so many songs about fun times
with alcohol—but the older you get, it’s not always fun anymore,” he says. “With
‘I Can’t Stop Drinking,’ I wanted to be completely truthful and get away from
glorifying anything. Sometimes it’s tough to look at yourself and at others
that way, but it felt important to make it as real as possible.”
With the band achieving that soul-baring
intimacy all throughout the album, Hello
Exile emerges as The Menzingers’ most emotionally daring work to date.
“We’ve always been in love with good songwriting and the beauty of taking a
song to its fullest potential, but with this album I feel like we’re really becoming
the band we’ve always wanted to be,” says Barnett. Not only a creative turning
point for The Menzingers, that uncompromising honesty helps fulfill their
mission of leaving each listener with a potent sense of solidarity. “A lot of
these songs are looking at different life challenges—they’re stories of people
at some sort of crossroads,” Barnett says. “We might not have the answers for
anybody, but hopefully the songs will help them to see the light at the end of
the tunnel, and know that they’re not alone in whatever tough decisions they’re
facing.”
Talent
The Menzingers
oso oso / Sincere Engineer