"We’d write some songs, perform them and have great momentum, release the record then fall apart. Sometimes not practicing for months at a time. “Wasted” comes to mind a lot when thinking of our potential."
Let's talk about the best EP ever, shall we? Not only did BACK WHEN release an eclectic collection of masterpieces, but 'Swords Against The Father' will forever be the greatest EP I've ever heard. The four songs of spastic, grindy, spacey and screamy hardcore are the most hard-hitting and beautiful bouts of chaos ever put to wax, in my opinion. In the very least check out the opening track embedded at the top of this post. If it tickles your fancy then move onto the very eloquent and revealing interview below. Here's an excerpt that explains how one of the most technical, heavy records I've ever heard is based off of Radiohead's 'Hail to the Thief'!
"I was listening heavily to Hail to the Thief at the time, by Radiohead. The foundation for much of those songs was me deconstructing the guitar/bass compositions of those Hail To The Thief songs and thinking, 'These are fucking genius. I know I can write similarly but grindy and fast.'”
I would also highly recommend checking out the lengthy discography review that I posted here, as included in the review is an interview with Init Records founder Steven Williams, the label that helped release most of BACK WHEN's catalogue.
Here's the new, exclusive, posthumous interview with Jon and Joe from BACK WHEN. Enjoy!
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Jonathan Tvrdik (guitar)
How did Back When get started?
We started out, believe it or not, as a semi-tongue-in-cheek
posi-core band. We had all played in Hydrahead-esque metal/hardcore bands in
the 90’s and early 2000’s and wanted to do something different, whether we
articulated that or not. Additionally, we started to become the older gents at
hxc shows, something that anyone who has ever been involved in punk knows is an
odd thing to witness. When you go from the kid’s table, trying to prove
yourself, to the jaded punks leaning against the wall watching the bands
unamused its a real sobering/jading experience. At any rate, we saw throngs of
new Converge-devotees pouring out of the woodwork, a space we had narrowly
occupied ourselves in the midwest, and selfishly thought we needed to teach
these young kids about what hxc is supposed to be. So we decided to do this
posi-core sXe band that was part grind, part east coast revival hxc.
Why the name, BACK WHEN?
A ubiquitous term in our circle of friends at the time was,
“Back when shit mattered.” Apply that to the idea of the band and there you
have it. As we evolved, however, we went through a love-hate relationship with
it and regretted it.
What was the best thing about BACK WHEN? What was the worst?
Personally, the best thing was our ability to really do
anything we wanted. We were bound by our talent but not our preconceived
notions, something I believe a lot of hxc bands don’t have the luxury of
having. You can see from our evolution of posi-core, to metalcore, to
grindcore, to doom metal, to doom/goth/rock, we really did whatever the fuck we
wanted.
The worst was our ability to sustain momentum. We had really
great wins with our songwriting and any time we played live. People generally
were won over seeing our live performance, which we went through grant pangs to
make awesome. However, our schedules as husbands, working professionals,
musicians in other bands, etc. frequently got in the way and dropped a cloud of
perpetual malaise on the band that was hard to fight through. We’d write some
songs, perform them and have great momentum, release the record then fall
apart. Sometimes not practicing for months at a time. “Wasted” comes to mind a
lot when thinking of our potential.
Was BACK WHEN generally the band at the members' commitment
forefront?
For some of us, it was our primary band. For others of us it
was one of many. But honestly some were only in multiple bands because not
everyone in BW could commit full-time to the band. We really were the biggest
obstacle in our own way.
What were the band's influences? How did they change with
each release?
God that’s a loaded question. It ranged from Rush to Radiohead
to Jeromes Dream to Neurosis to Hum to Cash. We really are eclectic
music-listeners and whatever we were into at the time made its way to the top
of the heap each release. Listening to our canon in chronological order is to
watch our record collections change.
How did you come into contact with Stephen from Init
Records?
All of our previous Omaha bands found a sister-scene in
Sioux Falls, SD. We all spent a lot of time up there playing and thus met
Steven through shows. He was the real deal, putting out records he liked and it
was a great relationship.
Tell me everything you possibly can about the Swords Against
The Father 7", lyrics, art, conception, live, opinions about the songs,
etc.
Joe and I (Jon) were living together at the time and spent
our nights playing guitar together. If I remember correctly at the time, Joe
was really into Mastodon and bands like that. He brought a layer of metallic
lead bravado over everything I would write. I didn’t matter how complex or
messy or stupid I wrote, he would layer a fist-pumping “fuck yeah” spacey solo
over it that reminded me of Cave In / Rush. I was listening heavily to Hail to
the Thief at the time, by Radiohead. The foundation for much of those songs was
me deconstructing the guitar/bass compositions of those Hail To The Thief songs and
thinking, “These are fucking genius. I know I can write similarly but grindy
and fast.” If you slow those songs down there’s one or two riffs in each that
you could pull out and base a rock song around. The last song especially, the
noodly-guitar lead, is my attempt at recreating Myxomatosis. Additionally, the
very first baseline on the very first song, slowed down, and given a swing
beat, would be a Radiohead song.
Lyrically, we wanted to tell a short but interesting story.
Joe is a History teacher and was studying at the time. We delved into this
Greek story about Phobos and Deimos, sons of the god of war, Aries. This was
also the height of the Bush-war-era, and we were all extremely angry and fed up.
We saw a parallel with this father-figure hellbent on war and destruction so we
devised a story about sons rebelling against their father.
We recorded the tracks with a friend of ours in his basement
and I mixed it on my computer. Looking back, I shouldn’t have mixed it as I had
no idea what I was doing but the crudeness did give it a nice vibe.
Overall, the 7” was intended to be a bridge. To let people
know we were writing new material in preparation for the next record. But
honestly, it holds up on its own as a pretty great piece of music and I’m very
proud of it.
You guys broke up or went on hiatus or something after We
Sang As Ghosts and then reformed years later. What happened?
Life happened. Everyone got super busy, practices were
canceled the day-of and members got frustrated. We were all unhappy with the
progress we were making and thought it was better to stop than stall out
further. Then we were all at a wedding together and drunkingly said
fuck it, let’s do it. So we got back at it, hoping to finish the album that
eventually became Champion Hologram.
Tell us about that video you guys made after reforming. With
the fire and all...
Are you referring to the video for "Little Shiny Things" with
us in the revolving carousel around the fire? We had that song, what eventually
became the first song on Champion Hologram, done for years. We wanted to let
everyone know we were back and ready to be weird again. That video felt like a
great way to convey that. Back When has always been about pushing weirdness up
to the point of being pretentious but stopping shy of it, deciding to settle
back into “entertainment”. We wanted you to think “that was weird but fun.” The
video goes along and along very serious and creepy and ends with Aaron mugging
for the camera. It fit us well. The release of the video was sort of our
“bat-signal” to people that we were back and ready to continue.
You guys pulled out a Jerome’s Dream cover almost a decade
before I noticed lots of other bands doing it. What prompted that decision? Was
it hard to cover?
We fucking love Jeromes Dream. It was easy because their
songs are easy. We all intended to pick a song to cover and Jeromes Dream was
Aaron's choice. His love for that band is tattooed on his arm and is the only
time he did any vocals in Back When.
***********************************
Joe Mickeliunas (guitar/vocals)
Do you have a favourite Back When release?
My favorite release is Swords Against the Father. It was so raw and angry. It was very reflective of us at the time and
really challenged us musically. It
wasn't recorded or mixed in a studio, and that added to the overall vibe of the
release. I am very proud of "We
Sang as Ghosts" and "Champion Hologram," but there are tons of
things I wish I had done differently, or am critical of in my playing or vocal
delivery. Being a band with little
funding, studio time is precious and I know that I personally rushed decisions
to make sure that we could finish everything that we wanted to.
You guys were obviously talented, did egos get out of hand
at any point?
I never felt that egos were a problem. Friendships may have had moments of strain,
but egos never got in the way. After our
hiatus, it took a year before the four of us were in the same room
together.
Do you have a favourite tour, tour story and show?
One of my favorite memories on tour is of a show that we
couldn't play. I remember a show in
either Indiana or Ohio in which we were playing a house show in a duplex
basement that we couldn't fit in. At the
time we were a five piece with two guitarists with full stacks, a bass player
with two Ampeg 8x10s, a keyboardist with a full keyboard rig and halfstack for
guitar, and our drummer's fairly large kit.
The basement was tiny and the four piece band with combo amps had
trouble arranging their amps so that they would fit. They had to stack amps on top of each
other. The guy that booked the show had
difficulty understanding why we couldn't fit.
We attempted to unload, but it was honestly impossible.
What band was the most fun to play with?
The Setup (reviewed here) from Richmond, VA.
We formed a very fast friendship with those guys and they made us feel
at home anytime we played a show with them.
They really reminded us of friends from Omaha.
What's the best live band you've ever seen?
Wow. This is tough. I can't name just one, but it is
definitely a tossup between Hum, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Sunny Day Real
Estate, or Fugazi.
What other bands have you played in that you'd like to
mention, and possibly share stories about?
I played in a screamy punk band called Robots Don't Cry that
had a few releases and toured a bit. An existing band, Sutter Cane, asked me to
fill in on guitar for a month-long tour.
Then their singer had a conflict and couldn't make the tour, a friend of
ours joined and we decided to write songs and record a demo to sell. We initially didn't intend to be a long term
band, but stuck around for several years and releases.
Someone told me that you guys had 6-foot bongs in your bong
attic. Can you substantiate this claim?
This seems to be one of those rock and roll myths.
What excites you about music today? What is stale, stagnant
or detrimental?
I am still very excited by music, but I feel like it really
takes something special to really grab my attention. Heavy music has been very challenging for me
to get excited about. The one heavy band
that has my full attention is Thou.
"Heathen" will go down as one of my favorite heavy records of
all-time. Whirr and Nothing are two other bands that I have found to
be exciting. It seems that they are
pretty polarizing, but I've found their music to be thick and heavy with a pop
sensibility that I can't get out of my head. Father John Misty is another artist that I'm very excited
about. He has crafted a persona that is
mysterious, interesting, and genre-bending.
His lyrical content, arrangements, and instrumentation are fascinating
to me. Few could pull off what it is that
he is doing, and do it this well.
The Internet has obviously positively and negatively
influenced music and records. How do you feel about it?
I love the Internet for the accessibility it gives us to
music, but I also hate the Internet for the accessibility it gives us to
music. I can hear new music every single
day. I can get records every single day
on the Internet, but it has definitely hurt the smaller acts and live shows in
general. It is really hard to
"discover" a band due to a live show.
More often than not you can listen to a band via bandcamp, facebook, or
YouTube before deciding to go to a show or what time you show up to a
show. It has definitely taken the
mystery out of music, but has also given us the opportunity to find more music
in general.
You are doing some new stuff, tell us about that.
I play bass in the live setting for Routine Escorts, the
group that Jonathan started with our friend Thomas Flaherty. I'm also playing bass and doing some vocal work in a band
called Post Verse. Jeff Burgher, former
keyboardist in Back When, plays guitar in the band. I have trouble describing our sound, but we
play some upbeat rock songs and some slow rock songs with fuzz and chorus
pedals. We've been playing shows around Omaha for a year and have released a
demo cassette and plan to record a full length album in the near future.
Many thanks to Jon and Joe for taking the time to answer these questions. Check out BACK WHEN's bandcamp page here where you can check out the band's newer releases.
Many thanks to Jon and Joe for taking the time to answer these questions. Check out BACK WHEN's bandcamp page here where you can check out the band's newer releases.
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