Royal Bangs
Defying monotony is the reason ROYAL BANGS exist.In recording their third album, Flux Outside, out March 29th, the band has proven their ability to challenge the tediousness that consumes the music industry today.With the new album they have reclaimed their identity: three high school friends playing inspired, kinetic rock and roll, and in the process, discovered the sound they’ve been looking for all along.“This record is not just another in a progression of little steps forward,” Schaefer explains. “It’s something different.”
Under ROYAL BANGS and various other guises, frontman Ryan Schaefer,
drummer Chris Rusk, and guitarist Sam Stratton have been making music together
since their high school days. In 2006, they unleashed We Breed Champions, a home-recorded and self-released breakthrough
album. The record's potent noise-pop wormed its way into hearts throughout the
southeastern US, eventually finding its way to Patrick Carney (The Black Keys),
who reissued We Breed Champions on his own Audio Eagle Records in May of
2008.
In February of 2009, ROYAL BANGS traveled to Tangerine Sound Studios in
Akron, Ohio to record their long-awaited sophomore album. The studio quickly
became home to the three obsessive musicians, who even found themselves
sleeping there at night. “We just could not stop working,”
Schaefer recalls. The result wasLet It Beep,
released on Audio Eagle in September 2009. It was the intense attention
to detail combined with pure joy in songwriting and recording
that first attracted Glassnote Records to the band when they saw them play at
SXSW in 2010 and months later at Lollapalooza. Glassnote was blown away by the
band’s powerful performance and it was soon clear ROYAL BANGS had found their
new home. “It just felt natural,” Schaefer explains.
To say that ROYAL BANGS have developed a saner work ethic since signing with
Glassnote, would be to lie. If anything, the band has only become more focused
and passionate. To record Flux Outside,
they decamped to a friend’s restored Victorian house in Knoxville, where they
spent a month exploring the unique acoustics of every single room. They’d
already written much of the album holed up in their rehearsal space, an old
methadone clinic. The resulting album is a beguiling,
multi-layered collision of brutal, wittily arranged rock and roll. “Loosely
Truthing” is a madcap blend of driving guitars and syncopated keys. “Back Then
It Was Different” is an elegy to past desires set to the relentless throb of a
defiant piano. But of all the album’s tracks it’s the bright-eyed frenzy of
“Fireball,” that really captures the essence of this band.
The “Fireball” demo was initially barely formed, just something Schaefer had recorded and then forgotten about. But they needed new material. After the loss of a few band members due to the rigors of touring, they began to question how they were going to continue on, especially with even more severe touring in the near future. “We had no idea how we would play these songs with three people,”Schaefer remembers. “It was depressing, trying to recreate things we'd already done.” Schaefer began to play with the beginnings of “Fireball,” and quickly, it became the band’s motivation to create. Once ROYAL BANGS focused on writing songs the three of them could play together, everything fell into place.
After years of exploration and reinvention, ROYAL BANGS finally know who they
are and what they’re about. In this state of reassurance, the band is eager to
tour. “When you’re on tour it’s nice because there’s a schedule,”
Schaefer says. “It’s not a tough schedule, but it’s a schedule, and we're
doing the only thing we've ever wanted to do.”
