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Rock and Pop: CAMDEN CRAWL 2010 - Interview with New York's The Drums

Published: 29 April 2010
by ROISIN GADELRAB

JUST five months ago fledgling Brooklyn band The Drums were crashing on a friend’s couch in Camden, playing their debut European show at Kentish Town’s tiny cult venue, The Flowerpot.

This weekend the very same New York four-piece will be the crowning glory of the borough’s biggest festival – the Camden Crawl.

Weary frontman Jonathan Pierce spoke to Grooves from Berlin, at the end of an 11-hour stretch of interviews.

He said: “It’s been a little void of adventures. The only adventure we’ve had is seeing if we can stay awake.”

The band were this week forced to cancel their show at Highbury’s Relentless Garage thanks to volcano-induced flight delays, but Crawl organisers are confident they’ll make it to Camden in time.

Jon said: “I know we’re playing the Crawl but we’re not familiar with it. Us American lads are still brushing up on our UK education. 

“We used to stay in a friend’s house in Camden Place when we were in London. The Flowerpot was our first show in Europe so it was a really special time for us. Camden really does hold some significance for The Drums. We just went and grabbed coffee all day long.”

Jon first met bandmate Jacob Graham at Christian summer camp. He said: “I was raised in a Chris­tian household and so was Jacob. It’s normal in America for kids to be shipped off to summer camp and ours just hap­pened to be Christian.” 

The boys are struggling with the trappings of fame.

He said: “Our least favourite thing in the world is photo shoots. When you start a band you don’t realise everything it entails. You have ideas that it’s about making songs you really love for the next 40 years and here we are in Berlin and we’ve had three photo shoots today and we just hate having our picture taken.”

Their meteoric rise to fame has meant at times their newfound status has overtaken them.

They once played to a crowd of 10 at Santa Barbara University then minutes later posed for an NME cover shoot.

They may have found success but Jon admits he’s still not quite content. He said: “It’s not that I’m complaining – it’s just I’m confused. You have these dreams and then your dreams come true and you realise you still are just as confused and probably even more confused because it didn’t solve all your problems. 

“There’s this eternal questioning about what is going to make me happy. If this doesn’t make me happy then what will? But it lends to good songwriting.” 

He’s a harsh self-critic, and keeps strict quality control on his songs.

He added: “Nothing really drives me to write anything. It’s never really a conscious thing. I write all the songs and my rule is they have to come naturally. If it feels laboured over then I throw it out. It goes for the lyrics as well. 

“A song might sound happy at first listen but if you listen to the lyrics they often sound a little bit sad or hopeless. We have our own sensitive brand of rock ‘n’ roll. We’re definitely not a typical sex drugs and rock’n’roll type of band. There’s more delicate blood running through our veins. The most exciting thing to us isn’t cocaine it’s writing a beautiful pop song and that’s the honest truth.”

 

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