I always struggle with writing about musicians because I feel a pressure to talk to them about their music and write the article that my editor or their managers or agents expect. This is difficult for me because I believe that there are only so many words that can be used to explain what a song sounds like or what a song’s lyrics are about — and I lose motivation when I don’t feel like I have anything new to say. I always want to provide some hidden truth about the subject I’m writing about, but Ian writes and speaks with an openness that reveals more about the listener than it does himself. What I’ve learned from listening to Militarie Gun is that I appreciate honesty and earnestness above all else. What I’ve learned from thinking about Militarie Gun after having a conversation with Ian is that I am not a very honest or earnest person.
I find the band’s openness and earnestness inspiring, but I also find it irrationally frustrating. I am jealous of it. I think a lot about earnestness and about how nobody is earnest and about how everything is wrapped up in too many layers of irony. I talk a lot about how much I hate the lack of earnestness in the world and in the hardcore scene. I say I wish people would stop trying so hard to be something they aren’t, but when I am shown something that is as earnest and genuine and forthcoming as the band’s most recent release, I realize how much time I’ve wasted trying to hide and change and shapeshift.
Ian’s lyrics announce themselves the way I wish I was able to — without disclaimers. He sings about the things that I would keep a secret, and talks about the things that I’d be too self-conscious to admit to anyone. I want to beat myself up for not confronting these things about myself, instead I’ll resolve to practice at least a fraction of the earnestness and openness found within “Life Under the Sun”.
I still don’t think I have anything to say about Militarie Gun that hasn’t already been said before, but I do think that “Life Under the Sun” wants me to be okay with that. And I think there is something valuable there.
Hey, how’s it going? Is it cool if I record this interview?
Yeah, I assume you would have to.
I could just make up a bunch of things instead. No notes. No recordings. Just lies.
I feel like a lot of people do that even when they hit the record button, so go for it.
For real though, how have you been? Are you on tour now?
I’m at home for 12 more days, and then on tour.
I can’t keep track of your touring schedule.
We did a seven week US tour in the fall, and then we went straight to Europe and did five weeks there. Now we’re laying low, well besides FYA. We’re about to leave for the next big six week one. We don’t get to be at home for too long.
Coming off of a tour where you’re playing bigger shows, I assume playing something like FYA was different.
I could definitely tell there was a lot of hesitance towards us at the fest, which is understandable. You know, people are there to hear breakdowns and beat each other's asses. And we don't have any of that. But overall it was great.
The hardcore scene is having this moment of mainstream recognition, it feels like there are a lot of kids coming into the scene with a very different perspective on what hardcore can be.
I always look back at the pandemic as the catalyst for people stopping making such traditional hardcore. Songwriters and artists had time to fully explore a sound. Hardcore was so focused on the live reaction for so long, because it was happening in the room. And when there wasn't a room anymore, people I think, stopped being so concerned with just the fast part, breakdown, fast part, breakdown formula. Instead, people thought, Oh, what else can I do with this medium?
Everyone's dropping these really forward looking records now because it’s all they had to do for a long time. If you actually spent the time and the labor to explore, you ended up with something new.
I remember you sharing very early MG demos when it was still a solo project, and it felt very much like that exploration you’re describing. Fast forward to now, shows and tours are back, it feels like the band has really taken off. I feel like I don’t even understand what all has happened.
I’m a very restless person, so when all of the shows and music videos got canceled, I just went to the practice space everyday and wrote a song a day — and a lot of those songs were failures, but then some were good and became Militarie Gun songs.
The one great thing we had was just having nothing else, but the ability to practice for over a year. It felt so psychotic and maddening to only be able to practice and not be able to play shows, but it was such a godsend in the way that we were able to just keep honing in on what we wanted the band to be. Every moment that we're not on tour, we're writing and practicing and making videos and doing anything we can to keep the band exciting and fresh for ourselves. I wish people could see the labor element behind what we’re doing.
Do you write music as a full band now? Or are you still the primary songwriter?
I'm still the primary songwriter. Mainly due to the fact that I'm the only person I know that's always with me. If my band members were with me all the time, I'm sure we would write more together.
You're also kind of an obsessive person — in a good way.
I’m definitely an obsessive person, I get into crazy cycles of obsession. I try to acknowledge it like, “No, you're in a cycle. Chill out. This Is gonna be numb in like two weeks. So don't over commit.”
Do you worry about waking up one day and wanting to do something that isn’t Militarie Gun?
I don't worry about it. I embrace that it is likely. There's a quote from Adaptation that I've always loved, where one character is talking about how he used to go hunting for tropical fish every day, and he says, “One day, I decided to never go in the ocean again.” That probably will be me one day, but I'm not there right now.
We just worked with Manchester Orchestra. Watching their musicianship was very humbling. I refer to us as idiot musicians. We can get it done, but we’re playing in ways that are very atypical, because we're not classically trained. So, for us to get bored, it would be because we felt that we perfected everything, and we know that we're very far from that.
Many people aren’t that open about having a desire to continue learning and honing their craft. I don’t think people like admitting that they put in effort.
Earnestness is, I think, the MG brand. That means being embarrassed. It means risking embarrassment, it means that you could take a lyric and make fun of me, and I'm gonna have to be okay with that. This whole band is about embracing the melodrama, and not censoring that like the most dramatic version of a feeling. Our record is called Life Under the Gun because it’s supposed to be very oppressive and dramatic.