From Darkness Into Light
Flogging Molly on Politics, their Amazing Success and their Green 17 Tour
By Arrissia Owen
IE Weekly
March 7, 2013
Detroit got under Dave King’s skin. The Flogging Molly
frontman’s adopted hometown looked like a natural disaster roared through its
forsaken streets, yet FEMA was nowhere to be found. The devastation was not at
the hands of Mother Nature. It was pure human calamity fueled by Hurricane Banks Too Big To Fail.
As Flogging Molly songs started to pour out of King—verses
privy to the woes of the working class—Detroit, the foreclosure crisis and the
downtrodden 99 percent pushed their way into the lyrical content. The result
was the band’s fifth studio album, 2011’s Speed of Darkness.
The perpetually touring band stops by the Fox Theater in
Pomona on Friday, March 8, as part of its annual Green 17 tour leading up to
St. Patrick’s Day. Flogging Molly will play songs from Speed of Darkness,
as well as material from its 16 years as Ireland ambassadors.
“It wasn’t the album we set out to write,” King said about Speed
of Darkness. “It became the album we had to write.” It’s less a collection of
love songs to his adopted hometown and more a commiseration session turned pep
talk over a pint.
Known for their traditional Irish music with punk rock
attitude backed by melodic multi-instrumentalism, the seven-piece band is no
stranger to tackling social issues and politics, most often the Irish variety.
But this time, Detroit served as the backdrop, an inspiration ever present as
the band holed up in King and his wife Bridget Regan’s basement to bang out
their next album.
Hard to Label
If you're over 40, you understand. |
King originally came to America while fronting a British
band with former Motörhead guitarist “Fast” Eddie Clarke called Fastway,
touring with acts like AC/DC. That was followed by a stint with Katmandu, a
hard rock band with Mandy Meyer of Krokus. He landed in Los Angeles after
ditching New York and his label deal with Epic Records to go in a different
direction than the heavy metal they anticipated.
For his next project, King envisioned incorporating rock and
classic Celtic instruments like the bodhrán drum, fiddle, tin whistle, mandolin
and accordion in homage to his Irish roots. Having grown up on a steady mix of
The Dubliners and Johnny Cash, followed by a ’70s glam rock phase, his vision
was more eclectic, moving beyond metal.
When King relocated to LA, he met Regan, who played fiddle,
and they put together what would morph into Flogging Molly. They began gigging
Mondays at a local Irish pub, Molly Malone’s. While beating the place to death
as its house band, the name came from their famed tenure, with a snicker. It
stuck.
By then, the lineup was solidified with all band members
proficient on multiple instruments. The roster includes guitarist Dennis Casey,
bassist Nathen Maxwell, banjo and mandolin player Bob Schmidt, drummer George
Schwindt and accordion player Matt Hensley.
Matt Hensley |
Hensley is famous in his own right for his years as a
professional skateboarder pre-squeezebox in the late 1980s and early ’90s. He
left the competitive side of the sport and turned to music as a refuge. Drawn
to pawn shop accordions, he threw himself into lessons and thanks to a chance
meeting with King at Molly Malone’s secured a spot in the band.
Hensley’s fellow band members had no clue their accordion
player could throw down a mean 180 no comply on pavement or a caballerial over
a picnic table. But it unwittingly boosted the band’s popularity in skate
circles. At one of their first shows away from LA in San Jose, the place was
filled to the brim with skaters, making for a rowdy bunch.
With Casey’s punk-inclined playing and some blues
progressions, the band took on a grinding, amped up sound reminiscent of The
Pogues and The Waterboys spliced with The Clash and Lemmy. They cultivated
their own brand of what the BBC called “sham rock.”
Dennis Casey |
From Flogging Molly’s first independent release, the 1997
live album recorded at Molly Malone’s Alive Behind the Green Door, the
band’s following grew steadily. They signed with indy label SideOneDummy
Records and by 2000 were on The Warped Tour as they promoted their label debut Swagger.
Tours followed supporting Mighty, Mighty Bosstones and Bouncing Souls. Their
fan base exploded.
“We got so much exposure from those three tours that we
moved right into headlining tours,” Schmidt says. Two years later, Flogging
Molly released Drunken Lullabies. By then the band’s following comprised a
demographic across the board drawn to King’s personal songwriting worthy of a
raised Guinness.
Flogging Molly’s 2006 acoustic/live DVD-CD combo pack Whiskey
on a Sunday went platinum, and critics gobbled up the 2008 release Float,
lauded for its political subject matter and anti-capitalist sentiment. The band
does not take its unlikely, uncompromising success lightly.
“It’s one thing to have a connection with people in pubs,”
Schmidt says. “If we can get them in front of us we can convert ’em. But to
sell that many records—you know it’s such a different world.” Because the fan
base relied so heavily on word of mouth and record execs didn’t know how to
market them, when the packed shows translated into record sales—in the
millions—the band was delighted.
Political Certainty
Flogging Molly has become increasingly political during the
band’s years together, outspoken on issues from OxFam to the Pussy Riot
imprisonment to their recent involvement with Amnesty International. The band
reprised Bob Dylan’s “The Times They Are a-Changin’” for the cause,
contributing the track to the organization’s compilation CD Chimes of
Freedom.
Bob Schmidt, left. |
“Over the last eight to 12 years of American foreign policy,
anyone with a functioning brain is calling into question what being an American
means,” Schmidt says about the group’s political leanings. “As you travel the
world, and your mind expands beyond the boundaries of where you grew up or
where you’ve always lived, your involvement becomes more tantamount and you
become more aware of it.”
Flogging Molly is more a social band than a political one,
Schmidt says. “We don’t pretend to know much about politics in the true sense
of the word,” he says, “but what we do experience from talking to people around
the world is what the social effects of political decision are. That is where
our real strength as political commentators lies.” They are compelled to ask the
hard questions, even if through song.
“We all share the view of wanting to take what we do and
help the less fortunate in some way,” Casey says. Each of the members supports
these causes individually, and as a whole band.
Casey’s own interest in Amnesty International, the
non-governmental human rights organization, was piqued as a young man by Peter
Gabriel’s support of the nonprofit. “If we can open at least one person’s eyes,
for me that would be something that I am glad we participated in,” he says.
When they were asked to cover a Dylan song for the CD, “The
Times They are a-Changin’” seemed the obvious choice because it spoke to what
their own album, Speed of Darkness, tackled. Change. “It was like we could
have put it on the record,” Casey says.
Fast Company
The America Flogging Molly wrote about for Float no
longer existed once the lyrics started to take shape for the band’s next album.
Bridget Regan, left, and Dave King |
King and Regan, who married in Japan while on tour for Float,
also have a home in Ireland, King’s native country. While the band’s sound
borrows heavily from King’s Dubliner upbringing, it was Regan’s Motor City
hometown where the couple also lives that dominated the recording of Speed
of Darkness.
The global financial crisis escalated so quickly that
regular Americans could hardly grasp what a subprime loan was before having to
tackle the semantics of credit defaults, bank recapitalizations and stress
tests. Detroit was hit hard, and King became a narrator for the proletariat.
“They were living there, and as the economy was falling
apart Detroit was one of the worst hit,” Casey says. “Neighbors thrown out of
houses, factories shutting down, stores closing down—it was like a domino
effect. He was very moved by that.” Then while visiting Ireland, King saw the
trickledown effect of America’s horrible economy worldwide. “He just couldn’t
get away from it,” Casey says.
Songs like “The Power is Out” are a collective nod to blue
collar folks who may not grasp the impact of deregulation but understand that
the rich are nowhere near as screwed as the people struggling to keep the
lights on. “It’s par for the course / Unless you’re a bloodsucking leech CEO,”
King sings.
“Don’t Shut ‘Em Down” details the economic downturn, drawing
parallels between Detroit and Dublin’s bleak outlooks with factories closing
and populations dwindling. “The Present State of Grace” urges its audience to
rise above the bull, find inner peace and persevere.
Darkness Descends
The title of Speed of Darkness comes from Miljenko
Jergovic’s collection of short stories called Sarajevo Marlboro. The
artist who did the cover art for the recording, Dino Misetic, was quoted in the
book as a child. The book is a fictionalized retelling of how the Bosnian War
of the early 1990s after the breakup of Yugoslavia disrupted lives.
The stories show the horrors of war, but the Croatian author
also highlights how things became ghastly so quickly. The stories in the
anthology illustrate the resiliency of humanity, even when under siege. Sound
familiar?
Misetic is quoted in the book as an 11-year-old schoolboy,
temporarily displaced in Zagreb from Zenica because of the unrest. “I know what
the speed of light is, “ he said. “But we haven’t learned about the speed of
darkness yet.”
“It was such a profound thing to say, sort of a from the
mouths of babes thing,” Schmidt says. The situation escalated quickly,
displacing the city’s Muslims, Croats and Serbs. The quote’s power stuck with
King.
“Economically and politically, we’ve seen kind of the same
thing happen in America, not to the same bloody extent, but certainly we saw
how quickly things can change from a bright, cheery economy to a really dire,
morose economy,” Schmidt says. “It seemed like a really appropriate quote for
that switch. But the upside is that it can turn around just as quickly.”
“Rise Up” closes the album’s songs about life’s ups and
downs with a call for resiliency. “Stand and be counted,” King sings,
championing defiant hope in search of the fizzling American Dream. “Dig out the
cancer / dig out the cancer of futility.”
Don’t Chute the Messenger
Speed of Darkness’ lofty message hasn’t been an easy sell. “This
album has proven difficult for us (because) people are uncomfortable by some of
the subject matter that we are talking about and that is fine, that’s why we
brought it up,” Schmidt says. The mass media representation of a country on the
upswing doesn’t match up with the picture they encounter on tour.
“We felt like it was our responsibility to tell the stories
of some of the people we are seeing out there,” Schmidt says. “They are being
told the hard times are over, but yet they’re losing their houses and their
lives are collapsing and their jobs are gone and they feel like they don’t have
a voice. We were able to be a voice for them.”
Still, the band members don’t want to come off preachy.
“We’re not trying to tell anyone what to think, just that they need to think,”
Schmidt says. Or they may sink like a stone. For the times, they are
a-changin’.
Flogging Molly w/ The Drowning Men at the Fox Theater,
301 S. Garey Ave., Pomona, (877) 283-6976; www.foxpomona.com, www.floggingmolly.com. Fri, Mar 8, 7PM.
$35-$45. All ages.
Camera phone: March 8, 2013, at Fox |
Link to the original post in IE Weekly: http://ieweekly.com/2013/03/feature-stories/from-darkness-into-light/