Sceneazine March 15 - April 14, 2015 | Página 17

Sceneazine.com Andrew Saul (guitar) – Jewish Artie Revel (drums) – Puerto Rican If I was a butterfly on the wall of one of your rehearsals…who would you say is the “leader”? Our rehearsals are pretty crazy. We all know what has to get done going into a rehearsal and hopefully it gets done by the time everyone goes home. Although when people start getting distracted by the Internet and food, I’m usually the one that tries to keep us on track. Tell me the funniest, wackiest thing to ever happen to you during a gig? There were a lot of funny things (to us) that happened at our early shows mainly around Dom forgetting words and stuff like that. At our second show we were playing a brand new song and Dom had a really long mic cable and by the end of it we realized he wrapped a good 10 feet of cable around his arm because he didn’t know what to do with it. Another more recent wacky thing was we played at a midget bowling event and we all got to bowl midgets. Felix and Jon were the best at that. There are many “bells and whistles” in the studio today…how do you think your studio sound translates to a live performance? Our studio recordings are loud and raw which is exactly how we sound live. We write our songs with the live performance in mind. We definitely don’t do anything in the studio that couldn’t be reproduced live. To paraphrase something Joe Elliot of Def Leppard said, “If you want to play arenas, write music that sounds good in arenas.” What has been your greatest disappointment to date? What is your greatest triumph? There have been a few disappointments such as not being able to play the Rocklahoma festival because one of the organizers didn’t like Dom’s voice but we don’t let those affect us and we keep moving forward. Our greatest triumph is probably recording 9 songs in 24 hours over 3 days which became our album Nothing Bad Happens, Ever. What makes you unique or different? As I said before, we never take ourselves too seriously and as a result every sh