ThePunksite.com | Bouncing Souls Interview - Greg Attonito
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| Band: The
Bouncing Souls |
Member:
Greg Attonito |
| Label:
Epitaph Records |
Location:
Starlite Room - Edmonton, Alberta |
| Date:
Thursday, May 3rd, 2007 |
Interviewer:
Bobby Gorman |
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Before he took the stage with Strike Anywhere, The Loved Ones and Static
Radio, Greg from The Bouncing Souls had a nice
little chat with me during their stop in Edmonton. We discussed the lengthy
history of the band, the current tour, mp3s, the universe of Mold and more.
Thanks to Greg for doing it and to Keith and Tonni for setting it up.
Bobby: Starting with the basics, you guys have been on tour with Strike Anywhere
and The Loved Ones for a few weeks now; how’s that going so far?
Greg: It’s going really well. It’s going great.
Bobby: Have there been any really memorable moments from it?
Greg: Montreal was pretty interesting because we got to Montreal on Earth
Day and they were having Earth Day parades so we got stuck in a whole bunch
of traffic. Then the cops pulled us over to a one way street because we couldn’t
get though – the traffic was blocked – so we got a police escort
which was pretty fun.
Bobby: Have you ever got a police escort before?
Greg: No.
Bobby: On January 26th, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame did an exhibit on the
Warped Tour which you guys gave some memorabilia for. What did you guys give
to that exhibit?
Greg: There’s a shirt that I wore on the Warped Tour. A tie that is
designed by my wife Shanti – she has some stuff in there too, she was
on the tour. There’s a set list, a lyrics sheet, and another set list – a
Bouncing Souls set list.
Bobby: You guys also performed at the opening ceremony, how was that?
Greg: It was great. It was cool. It was a good show, it wasn’t exceptional
or different in that way, but it was fun to be acknowledged as being – The
Warped Tour being acknowledged was cool and then us being a part of the Warped
Tour made it a great experience.
Bobby: Okay, this may sound like a very vague question – and it is – but
it’s leading into something so don’t worry. To you, what is a complete
album?
Greg: A complete album? Uh… Well, I guess if you listen all the way
through and you really enjoy it all the way though. Whatever kind of music,
every song has its own character and it feels complete. I don’t know
how to explain it.
Bobby: I was asking that because I wanted to see if you were going to touch
on the artwork. Because I know Bryan does a lot of the artwork for all of your
CDs, do you think that adds an extra layer to the album?
Greg: Oh yeah. The artwork also has to be part of that whole character as
well.
Bobby: A lot of people these days are saying like “CDs are dead, MP3s
are where it’s at.” Do you think that with MP3s people are missing
that tangible quality? The artwork by Bryan, the more complete feel to it?
Greg: Well, yeah, I mean there’s something definitely enjoyable about
vinyl or CD and then there’s something very convenient about MP3s. So
I think it can all be there if you choose to. Now you can download the art,
turn it into whatever you want. If you want to make something physical out
of it you can. I think it pays to be more creatively interactive with artists
and musicians as music and art is expanding into different kinds of formats.
I look at it as all positive and expanding different ways of pretty much just
being musical.
Bobby: You can’t really deny that MP3s are having a big impact on CD
sales and all of that but what do you think about the way the Record Industry
Association of America is handling all of that? Suing all the college students,
the dead grandmothers, the twelve year old kids? Do you think they’re
going a bit too far?
Greg: Yeah, they’re just panicking. They don’t know what to do.
They’re just trying to hold onto everything they can because their entire
infrastructure and their system of doing things is falling apart and they don’t
know what to do. To put a long story short, I don’t know all the details,
but that’s the way it appears to me.
Bobby: In 2003 you guys released the DVD, “Do You Remember? 15 Years
of The Bouncing Souls.” I read there was a lot of material left on the
cutting room floor, like the short movie “Clockwork Santas.” Was
there any other little movies you guys left out?
Greg: There were a couple little things, yeah, but all the best stuffs there.
All the good stuff’s really there.
Bobby: Do you think anybody will ever see “Clockwork Santas” or
any of that?
Greg: No, no. It’s all just what it was. It’s perfect for the
moment, it gave a little bit more interest, personality and character to the
DVD but we’re always working on new things too.
Bobby: You guys were also recently interviewed for the book “My So Called
Punk: How Neo-Punk Stage Dived into the Mainstream.” First off, how did
that interview go?
Greg: I don’t remember.
Bobby: How do you think Neo-Punk stage dived into the mainstream?
Greg: I don’t know man. I don’t know *laughs*. Too much for me
to define. You know what I mean? I don’t know, you figure it out, whatever
you think is just as valid as what I think.
Bobby: Next week, the compilation “Prisoners Of War: A Benefit for Peter
Young” hits the stores. You guys have a live version of Born Free on
it, what made you work with that compilation and give them that song?
Greg: It just makes sense. People ask us to do things like that and it makes
a lot of sense and it’s for a good cause and we say yes.
Bobby: It has been two decades since you guys formed back in ’87. When
you first formed do you think you’d still be going twenty years down
the road?
Greg: No. I had no ideas. To ever think back that it’s been this long,
it’s been amazing, and it’s been an incredible experience that’s
for sure.
Bobby: Do you think in twenty years from now you’ll still be
involved in the music scene? If not in a band, still putting our records
on Chunksaah
or anything like that?
Greg: I’ll always be making music as long as I can physically do it.
As far as how and how I’ll be involved with the rest of the world, I
don’t know. I enjoy the creative part, I enjoy the performing part. As
far as the where and how, I don’t know and that’s the fun part,
like I don’t want to know. You know what I mean? I like to see the world.
All things change and I’m right there with it.
Bobby: Being around for so long now and with so many CDs out, how hard is
it to set up a set list before a show? Like do you consciously try to fit new
and old stuff like Joe Lies or PMRC into your set list?
Greg: Yeah, it is difficult because everybody wants to hear everything. We
write the songs, we put in a few songs from the new record and then we try
to do as much of a mix as we can from all the old records about as best we
can do.
Bobby: When you’re playing the older songs from the first couple albums,
do you still get the same feeling as if you’re playing the new songs?
Or has the meaning lost it a bit after twenty years?
Greg: You know, it really depends on a whole lot of things. If you’re
tired, what kind of mood you’re in. I think performing music, sometimes
it doesn’t matter what the songs are, it’s just your music and
you’re expressing yourself and the moment. So I think certain songs are
more enjoyable than others because they’re just more celebratory than
others, some are more depressing. So we try to carry the celebratory energy
into all the songs, that’s what I do because that’s the energy
that I don’t see enough of in the world so I do it as best as I can.
But some nights it’s just hard to be stoked every night, so you do the
best you can.
Bobby: In June you guys are playing with Bad Brains at the School of Rock
Festival, are you excited for that?
Greg: Yeah, it should be really cool.
Bobby: Do you agree with the School of Rock’s philosophy that
the only way to learn something is by actually doing it?
Greg: Yeah, absolutely. I absolutely believe in that. Like traveling, you
can learn so much just by traveling to different places.
Bobby: In March, you released your first solo material online; do
you think they’ll ever see a proper release other than just the MySpace
songs?
Greg: I don’t know, I’m gonna keep making music and if it feels
like it’s appropriate to release something then I will. But until then,
I’m just gonna keep being creative and enjoying it and see what happens.
Bobby: What made you try and do the solo stuff?
Greg: Well, I’ve been making records as a singer of a band for almost
twenty years and as a musician you get all these ideas watching everyone else
recording. And it’s like, well, I wanna try stuff. So it’s just
a natural evolution, I think, to experiment and see how all that process, how
it would work out if I play with it a little bit.
Bobby: You also just did some paintings with your wife Shanti and
you just finished writing a children’s book called “I Went For A Walk.” What
made you decide to do the paintings and what made you decide to write a children’s
book?
Greg: Well, the art I just started doing for fun. Doing the paintings, inspired
by Shanti and she had written the story and I actually have a rough copy, let
me show it to you. *He reaches into his pocket and takes out a copy of the
book to show me* She had written the story and was looking for an artist to
do the artwork and I had been touring for so long and she suggested “why
don’t you just, if you want, try playing with it for a little bit?” So
I just brought it out on tour and every time I had time I just started doing
some drawings. Four years later it’s finally done.
Bobby: One of the places the character goes to a walk to is the Universe of
Mold. How would you describe the Universe of Mold?
Greg: Its right there *pointing to the book* I don’t need to describe
it because it’s better as a visual, wherever that page is. But the picture
in the front, it shows outer space and then the character gets cast into the
Universe of Mold to the concept being that this is being inside the size of
the atom so our whole concept of space being much different than you might
think. Outer space is outer space. The size of an atom on this table is, in
some perceptions, massive, endless space.
Bobby: I love going to concerts and I try to go to as many as I can
but of course there’s always some which are more memorable than others.
So thinking back, what are some concerts that you went to or you played at
that are really
memorable for you?
Greg: I saw Johnny Cash in New York; that was really cool. I saw the Replacements,
I saw George Clinton, a few Fishbone shows that I’ve seen were amazing.
There’s a few.
Bobby: Okay, when you were growing up, whose poster did you have on your wall?
Greg: I had a few different ones. I had Bruce Springsteen, I had some U2 ones,
I had Robert Johnson – a blues musician.
Bobby: Who sold his soul to the devil.
Greg: Yeah, supposedly. The Who, I had a couple of Who posters.
Bobby: Okay, if you could have one thing at this moment, anything at all,
what would you have and why?
Greg: Wow… what would I have? Anything? You know, to answer that question
truly and accurately, there’s a lot of things I can think of that would
be nice. Maybe I could be on a nice beach, be with my wife, be somewhere else.
But in truth, in my experience I really believe that all of us are exactly
in the most perfect spot wherever we are in our lives. It’s up to us
to acknowledge it and see why that’s the perfect spot although it might
be some place you don’t wanna be or you don’t like being at certain
times. But whenever I go there, and believe me, I’ve been truly an escapist
and being an escapist, in a sense you’re a dreamer, but a lot of times
you’re missing out on what’s really going on around you. So in
my last few years I’ve been acknowledging that part of myself and saying “you
know what? I have to find out what’s so great about this moment instead
of wishing for something else.” And realize that I’m here, and
you’re here, for a perfectly good reason. There’s no reason why
we’re not somewhere else. So this must be as great as any other moment
that ever was and try to see that and make that happen and believe and understand
it. It’s not always very easy.
Bobby: I guess that’s about it, thanks a lot. Do you have any final
thoughts you’d like to add? Or, I guess, that was a pretty good final
thought to end with.
Greg: Yeah, I think that was pretty good. Check out our MySpace page, it’s “Iwent4awalk”-
MySpace.com/Iwent4awalk. And, thank you.
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