This week, Chris No. 2 and Justin Sane from the long-lasting punk band Anti-Flag appeared on the Artist Pleasant podcast. The lead guitarist/vocalist and bassist/vocalist spoke to host Joel Madden in regards to the group’s lengthy historical past of activism, involvement within the punk scene, touring, and a lot extra.
Learn extra: The oral historical past of Anti-Flag: “We had been machete-ing our means by means of failure”
Earlier than you dive into the episode, which is out there now wherever you take heed to podcasts, we rounded up a handful of key takeaways from the chat. Examine them out beneath.
The band have realized their purpose is to attempt to assist “alleviate struggling” throughout their exhibits
Anti-Flag have a protracted historical past of activism and being an anti-fascist band. Whereas they’re nonetheless dedicated to writing about politics of their music, they’re conscious that may solely go to this point and these days principally experience the truth that their concert events is usually a protected area and supply of solace for followers. Chris No. 2 shares on the podcast, “Now, I believe that for us individually and collectively, the entire thing is in regards to the alleviation of struggling. If it occurs on the present, it is about telling the trans of us which are there that they are welcoming, the ladies which are below assault of Draconian abortion legal guidelines throughout America that they are welcome.” They perceive that an hour of punk music can have an enormous impact on followers who could really feel marginalized or with out a sense of launch elsewhere.
Speaking to followers on tour helped Chris No. 2 course of his grieving
According to what the band stated about their exhibits aiming to be an area to at the very least quickly “alleviate struggling” amongst their followers, they clarify that it goes each methods. Whereas they perceive the impact their music has on individuals, additionally they share on the pod how a lot that is helped them — and the way they even see “that reciprocation” as “the entity of punk rock and its biggest worth.” Chris No. 2, for instance, shares about how he struggled processing his sister’s demise and did not essentially have alternative to with the band’s intensive touring and recording schedule. “Till I shared that story after which interacted with individuals at exhibits who shared their trauma with me, I wasn’t grieving my course of in any respect,” he says. “That one that skilled one thing that was necessary to them in that second, that individual gave it proper again to me — and that occurs to us on a regular basis.”
Anti-Flag made connections on Warped Tour that they’ve nonetheless held onto as we speak
The bandmates and Madden spoke about their lengthy historical past of figuring out one another, with Chris No. 2 even mentioning he nonetheless remembers when he was an adolescent managing the band’s e mail account and receiving a message from Good Charlotte. They finally linked at Warped Tour — which was an odd however formative expertise for Anti-Flag, as they had been initially hesitant to take part however finally met One Man Military and Flogging Molly, who they’re nonetheless touring with to at the present time. Once they lastly met Good Charlotte on the pageant, although, round 2001 or 2002, Chris describes it as feeling like a satisfying second, as they bought to witness how highly effective the scene was and the methods by which it may crossover to the mainstream.
Lies They Inform Our Youngsters is one in all their most collaborative albums but
Sane calls Anti-Flag’s newest full-length, Lies They Inform Our Youngsters, “one in all our most collaborative data.” As a result of the band had been other than the pandemic, they had been reignited after they bought collectively. For essentially the most half, the album periods consisted of “throwing concepts at one another,” Sane says. “I’d are available in with a riff and [Chris No. ] 2 could be like, ‘We should always take that riff and go right here with it.’ We loved being round one another and with the ability to bounce concepts off one another,” he provides.
There are three chapters to Anti-Flag
Chris No. 2 sees the band’s historical past in three chapters. The primary is their early days, the place they had been getting the band off the bottom. The second takes place within the 2000s, the place he says the band “hit [their] stride.” Lastly, the third chapter begins when the band linked with Good Charlotte’s administration firm MDDN. “We’re higher songwriters. We’re higher communicators of those concepts than we’ve ever been, and I believe we’re higher performers due to it — we’re extra in love with [the band] than we’ve ever been as a result of we’re extra free,” No. 2 enthuses.
Anti-Flag nonetheless have a future
Chris No. 2 admits that the way forward for Anti-Flag is each “very clear and really cloudy.” Contemplating that the punk band have been grinding since their formation in 1988, it’s superb that they’re nonetheless placing out songs that really feel simply as pressing as their early work. No. 2 even says that it’s laborious to take a break as a result of “[they’ve] been so pushed over the past two years.” Nevertheless, Sane says that they should discover a stability quickly. “If I’m sincere, we’ve hit it so laborious the final two years that I believe we’ve got to gradual it down. I see burnout coming,” he says.