Live While You Can: An Interview with Much the Same
Much the Same have lived the ups and downs of life and are realising they are right where they need to be
Returning from a long hiatus is never easy; music rarely stays still, life changes, and people move on. For punk band Much the Same, returning from their 8-year hiatus meant more than just getting back together to write music again. For the members of the band, it was about overcoming some of life's most difficult obstacles to find that while so much had changed, one thing stayed constant; their love for creating music together. And although the process itself has evolved since their initial run through the mid-2000s, Much the Same found new ways to create.
Now 13 years after their last full-length album, Much the Same have just released Everything Is Fine; a collection of punk rock melancholia, introspection, and overcoming the downs of life with three-chord hopefulness and soaring guitar solos. A joint-release by Thousand Islands Records, Pee Records, and Lockjaw Records, Everything is Fine is the band's most accomplished album.
We had a chat with vocalist and guitarist Chris McGrath and talked about living the moments, overcoming battles with cancer, the changing landscape of being in a punk band in 2019, and Dexter Holland's hot sauce.
I really enjoyed the new album. How does it all feel, for everyone, that the album is done?
McGrath: I think there's an overwhelming sense of both excitement and relief. I just looked it up and we first began writing new songs in 2009, two years after we'd broken up and two years before we even got around to playing a single reunion show together. For me, personally, I felt that we set the bar very high for ourselves with our 2006 album, Survive, and I just kept hoping it wasn't a fluke and that we were still capable of writing music like that, especially since we have never gone back to being a full-time band. I'm happy to say that I'm quite satisfied and have been overwhelmed by the positive response to the singles. I can't wait for the whole thing to be out in the world.
The album is a massive accomplishment- but it’s also very personal right? It’s part celebration for Dan (O’Gorman, guitarist)’s victory over cancer?
McGrath: Yes, Dan wrote most of the songs on this album, lyrically and musically. In the past, Dan primarily contributed music, but in the midst of some very dark times in his life, he found his lyrical voice and the songs just started flowing out. So when he got cancer, and then as it traveled throughout his body, things started looking really bad. We tried to stay positive and hopeful, but I was preparing myself to lose my friend. I thought it was pretty likely he wouldn't live to see the album finished. I kept that to myself for a long time, but one day just had to ask him if these songs he wrote were important to him at all, or if in the face of death it was all meaningless, and he assured me that he really wanted them out in the world even if he wasn't around by then.
So we pressed on with the writing, even as he was in the hospital receiving treatments, and miraculously, he had all the cancer removed! There is one song on the album about those dark days, called "In the Event of..." and the album title and cover are a reference to that song. We're just ecstatic that he's still here to celebrate this accomplishment, even though his life is obviously worth so much more to us than any music.
Everything is Fine
Purchase: [Digital] [North America] [UK] [Australia]
You guys got back together in 2015- was it a natural process- did someone reach out to someone first, how did it work out?
McGrath: There'd been a couple of attempts to write music together again since our breakup, but between us living far apart from each other, and everyone being involved with new families, school, and careers, it took many years to finally come together. Since Jevin, our drummer, lived in California and we were all in Chicago, we ultimately recruited our friend Mike, the drummer from Break The Silence, to play with us and help us write new music. We booked a show very shortly after that, which was probably a bad idea because our infrequent practices became more focused on being ready for shows than writing, but it was exciting to have the opportunity to be in front of people again and see that our fan base had grown in the 8 years we'd been apart.
After a couple of years and some cool international trips, it became clear that no matter how awesome Mike was, our band was just not "much the same" without Jevin. He was like family and a crucial part of our songwriting and sound, so we brought him back in despite the long-distance and things felt right again.
What kept you all busy in-between?
McGrath: Three of us got married and had kids, two went back to college and got teaching degrees. The other guys all eventually started their various careers and I continued my career in software development that I'd been doing the whole time we'd been a band. Marriage, young kids, jobs, mortgages to pay... all this stuff keeps a man very busy!
Dan, Frank, and Mike had a band together for a while called The Culling Song that never materialized. Jevin had a band called Unit91 with Jared from Counterpunch and Josh from his old band Form Follows Failure, they put out an EP you can find on Bandcamp. Frank eventually started another band called Burn Rebuild, which has put out a couple of EPs and is still together and playing shows around Chicago. My only musical endeavor was joining my church choir for a couple of years, which was really fun.
What was the first song you guys wrote once you got back together? Was it “Seasons Change”? Like riding a bike?
McGrath: "Seasons Change" was actually the last song we wrote together before the breakup and was released on the Japanese edition of Survive back in 2007. It has been floating around the internet since then, but with the new digital publishing technology available we finally put it up on all the stores and streaming platforms not too long ago.
The very first song we put together for this album was called "Haunted", and we started that way back in 2009. Dan and Frank wrote it together and brought it to my house to work on. We finished it off but didn't really have any way to do anything with it at that point. They recorded an acoustic version with our friend Chris Walsh singing, and then we did pretty much nothing for 7-8 years!
The first song we wrote once we were officially back together was called "Homecoming". I wouldn't say it was like riding a bike, though, because in a way we had to learn how to write all over again.
Has there been a different approach to Much the Same songwriting today than when you guys were writing the songs for Survive and Quitters Never Win?
McGrath: Definitely. With Jevin living far away and having so many other priorities like family and careers, everything is very different. We used to practice together once a week, get together randomly and show each other parts and work them out together before practice. It was extremely collaborative. On this album, most things were done individually and recorded on our phones, emailed back and forth, LOTS of texting (we almost never talk on the phone or see each other in person).
Thankfully, recording technology has become cheap and accessible so we were able to piece these songs together by recording demos, something we'd never been able to do before. It gave us the chance to try things that would have been impossible just standing around a room and playing them live. And as I mentioned, Dan became a songwriting powerhouse for a while, so it was a big change to have most of the songs being written pretty much singlehandedly by one person. That took some getting used to.
What’s been the aspect of Much the Same you’ve enjoyed the most since getting back together, and what’s been, say, the least fun?
McGrath: For me, I have loved being creative again. I really missed that outlet of songwriting and having projects to work on. When one of the guys would send over an idea I'd often obsess over it and spend hours working on demos to flesh it out, whenever I could find the time. It's also been very exciting having a fan base that has grown enough that we really feel like people are as excited as we are that we are a band! For so many years it felt like we were the only ones who cared--us and a very small selection of dedicated fans. Flying to other countries to play festivals and touring with bands we grew up on has been a 20-year-old dream come true.
The least fun could easily be said to be Dan's cancer battle, but that's obvious and already been discussed. I'd say doing this whole thing long-distance and not getting to see each other every week to keep our relationships going and work from a shared energy and excitement has been very tiring and bittersweet. I miss just getting to stand in a room with these guys and play our instruments. We've had exactly one band practice in the past two years. I can't wait to do 9 shows in a row with these guys!
I loved your cover of Lagwagon’s “Making Friends”- and it’s such a different Lagwagon song to cover- was there a reason for “Making Friends”? Will there be more covers on the horizon?
McGrath: When the A Fat Wreck documentary was being made, they put out a call for covers of Fat bands. We weren't together at the time but decided to do something. Lagwagon has, of course, been a huge influence on our songwriting, but we also knew that a lot of the standard favorites would be popular and that we might not be able to bring anything special of our own to them. Pretty quickly Dan suggested "Making Friends" and suggested the beat we used, so we went with it. If I had had more time to think about it I would almost certainly have suggested "Change Despair", which is my favorite deeper cut of theirs. But I'm glad we did what we did.
The other three guys pretty much worked out all the details of the song without me and recorded it all before I heard any part of it. I was blown away by how it turned out, especially the basslines. I knew at that moment that I wanted to write more songs with these guys, so that was actually a major factor in us getting back together. The added vocal harmonies and changes to the melodies were just my natural inclination of what to do over what they'd recorded. It all turned out really well and I love playing that song live.
As for new covers, it's probably not very likely that we'll do more full-band covers because we would really want to bring something unique to it and our sound is not exactly very different from most skate punk bands! But I've got a shortlist of solo covers I'd like to do for our YouTube channel, so we'll see if that ever pans out.
The new album SOUNDS great- where did you guys record, and who produced the record? Is this the happiest you’ve guys have been with the recording?
McGrath: Thank you very much! Nick Diener from The Swellers is an old friend and was an obvious choice for us to record with now that he has his own studio. Fantastic musician and songwriter who knows our music well, so we knew we'd be in good hands. Scott Hallquist from Ten Foot Pole recorded the drums at Ryan Greene's studio. Both of these guys did a phenomenal job getting amazing tones from all the instruments. Nick steered us in good directions with the songs and even sang harmonies on one of them. He also pushed back pretty hard on the original arrangement for the last song, "Passengers", which was a bit different. We took his feedback and tried some other things and the song came out so much better and I think it's collectively our favorite on the album.
Survive and Everything Is Fine were both such different albums to write and record, and both Nick and Cameron Webb did so much for us, I'm not sure I could say I prefer one recording or process over the other, but I do think we sound our best on the new album. That bass tone, though. My God. I've never heard a bass sound so good on any album.
So your previous album, 2006’s Survive, was released on Nitro. What was Nitro like- was Dexter and Greg around for the day to day of the label? Have you kept in touch? I know they’ve been pretty dormant for years.
McGrath: We landed at Nitro during what seemed to be their final attempt to keep the label going. They had A Wilhelm Scream, No Trigger, and Hit The Switch around the same time and I was really optimistic about the direction the label was going, building a great roster of skate punk and melodic hardcore. The A&R guy there, Sean, was an absolute gem of a human being and really believed in us. We only met Dexter briefly in the studio, but he said he liked our band, so that was enough! I've spoken to him briefly once more about some business stuff but by the time we were doing that he was really focused on his hot sauce, Gringo Bandito, which is GREAT. It's the only sauce my wife or I will buy for the past 13 years. Nitro has since been bought by Craft Recordings, which is a catalog label that does reissues, and who just recently pressed Survive on vinyl.
[bandcamp width=100% height=120 album=2278756947 size=large bgcol=ffffff linkcol=0687f5 tracklist=false artwork=small track=479774180]
I feel like Nitro had a great roster. What are some of the differences with being on a label in 2019 than it was back in 2006?
McGrath: Oh man, it's so different. I can't speak generally about all labels because I don't know how they all work, and I've only heard bits and pieces about the business side with the more well-known ones. The main thing seems to be that labels don't often give bands recording budgets anymore and take a lion's share of the profits afterward, it seems to be a much more even deal between band and label regarding both financial and energy investment.
In our case, Nitro was an incredible opportunity because they paid for the album entirely and being on their roster gave us a lot more credibility. Survive would not exist as it does without Nitro, not even close, and it probably wouldn't have survived (ha!) in the scene for years after we broke up.
With Everything Is Fine, we were determined to do the album ourselves and handle the digital distribution, now that that's an easy thing to do. In 2006 we never could have expected to have that kind of reach without a label. From there we looked for labels that had interest in being involved and creating the physical products. If nobody had wanted to do that, we'd still have done the exact same album and just put it online to buy or stream.
Fortunately, Thousand Islands Records in Canada, Lockjaw Records in the UK, and Pee Records in Australia were all excited to work with us and get vinyl and CDs out into the world. So we have great partnerships with each of them that are mutually beneficial. It's a lot less like being "signed" the way it used to be, and more just about a bunch of people helping each other out and sharing a love for music.
So it’s Europe in August- Netherlands, Germany, Czech Republic, Slovenia- what are you looking forward to most about the shows and touring Europe?
McGrath: I'm honestly just really excited to get back on stage with these guys for the first time in a year, and it's a pretty different experience for us to go on tour and actually know there will be people there for us! We did South America with Face To Face two years ago, and we were stoked for the opportunity but had no idea going into it that we'd actually have a significant fan base at every show. That was honestly a shock, it had never happened before. So this time we get to be excited ahead of time!
Then it’s back for the 350V Festival- Me First, Suicide Machines, Naked Raygun, Bosstones- sort of like a hometown fest?
McGrath: Absolutely! 350 Brewing is a local brewery that our bassist, Frank, was working for, and so they knew we'd gotten back together when they were planning their first 350 Fest five years ago. That was our first show back. The event has grown massively in such a short amount of time, last year they had The Descendents, and this is the first year it's a three-day event. I think it has been two years since we played in the Chicago area, so it's going to be a blast to do that with friends at such a great festival, especially right on the heels of our album release and tour.
Has the Chicago scene changed much since the mid-2000s? Do you guys find it easier to be a band in Chicago these days?
McGrath: The scene is probably incredibly different, but I'm really no longer in it to even speak to it. We have our friends in other bands and all, but in the mid-2000s there was this booming punk scene with bands like Rise Against and Fall Out Boy coming up as peers. There were shows constantly and I could go to any show and know a dozen people there, sometimes a hundred. High school kids went to shows every week and were rabid about local bands, and we were single guys in our 20's for whom music was the most important thing in life. I feel very fortunate to have been a part of all that. These days, I'm 40 and spend time with my family, and most of the people who like our style of music are in a similar stage of life, or they're little kids of people who listen to us! Not a lot of teenagers at punk shows anymore, and that just changes the whole dynamic. Punk rock has become something of an older man's game now, but thankfully not in that desperately-holding-onto-the-glory-days kind of way.
So no, I don't find it easier to be in a band these days, especially since time and distance keep us from doing very much at all, and when we do we've somehow ended up in this very cool position where most of our shows are in other countries. I would never have believed that could happen if you'd asked me at any point since I started this band. We are incredibly fortunate and so thankful to all the people who have made it possible to keep doing this.
Much the Same’s new album, Everything is Fine, is out now on Thousand Islands Records, Pee Records, and Lockjaw Records.