Leeds punk-funk upstarts ¡Forward,
Russia! are doing it for themselves, taking the music industry
by storm -
all on their own terms.
Whilst the band themselves out-rightly refuse to try to tie down their
sound, merely saying that they’re dedicated never to getting stuck
in a rut, their act has been described by the authorities as ‘Convulsing
punk-funk brilliance’made up of ‘floor-filling disco punk
funk party music, epic post-rock and larynx scorching yelps,’
which, even in the Red Bull frenzied world of music journalism, passes
for high praise. More than befriending NME, XFM and Drowned in Sound,
the band is distinctly pulling its weight on the live circuit, and seems
to have a reputation for taking over Leeds music scene.
Shafting the whole genre of modern indie-pop, the band are an ‘indie
band’ in the literal old-school sense, not going the big labels
in order to maintain artistic and financial control, releasing their
material entirely on their own label Dance to the Radio.
What’s more, instead of giving their tracks names the band has
eye-catchingly titled each track by the order that they were recorded
in. Whiskas, the member of the band responsible for guitars, shouting,
and the label, explains, “There’s a kind of No Logo idea
at work, where you’re meant to look at the actual object rather
than the way it’s presented. In a way titles don’t really
matter, where people refer to the tracks rather than the song names.
It’s just a way of cataloguing your output, and this is an ultimate
conclusion of that.” So far ‘Twelve’, and ‘Thirteen/Fourteen’
have been released as singles, whilst ‘Nine’ is causing
a bigger stir on its release.
Whiskas is quick off the mark to deny that the band's name is in actuality
an ironic reference to Stalin's abandonment of the Republic in the Spanish
Civil War.
“We
didn’t have a name for the band for ages, so Tom put together
a list of names and we picked the one we liked best, and me, being a
bit of a scamp, put the exclamation marks on. I like the idea of it
being a command to action and the Spanish grammar emphasises that from
the start.”
All the band members had been in place in the Leeds scene for some time,
and so when, in early 2004, Whiskas asked Tom Woodhead and Robert Canning,
then of the Black Helicopters, and in search of a drummer, to join up,
they enthusiastically agreed, incorporating Whiskas and sister Katie
Nicholls, into the team on drums.
“The late start was really organic, all going around, jamming
at each other's houses. It was like a first band sort of thing, but
with all the knowledge.”
Eventually the boys quit their jobs, Katie finished college, and in
the Summer of 2005 Russia set their eyes to the road, playing at the
Reading and Leeds festivals, and starting on a mammoth cross country
tour, which they've only just, briefly, settled down from. The tour
took in 37 consecutive dates in the UK, as well as stints in Ireland
and the USA, where they got a particularly strong reception, and have
been supporting acts like Biffy Clyro, VHS or Beta and We Are Scientists,
as well as the Editors, who are now good friends with the band.
Talking about the industry brings out a deep funk in Whiskas, but also
the practical experience that he has picked up from the scene, which
was exactly the reason that he went it alone to set up Dance to the
Radio, picking up bands like iLiKETRAiNS and the Pigeon Detectives to
the label.
“I think that the way that indie’ll survive is if the bands
stop chasing the big money, rather than going for what really matters.”
“I
worry that a lot of genuinely nice people, in good bands are getting
snapped up by labels to be abandoned. About three or four years ago
an awful lot of stuff got signed, on the basis that if you sign three
and at least one works out, then that's a success, even if nothing happens
with the other two.”
“I’ve got a lot of friends on big labels, who felt like
they've been let down, as well as people who work nine to five, and
then go on to gigs, and I have a lot of respect for doing things that
way.”
Commenting on their status as a Leeds scene band, Whiskas replies, “It’s
more incidental, really. We’re not a ‘New-Yorkshire’
band, but we are a Leeds band, if that makes sense.”
“There’s a really strong scene in the town, all the other
bands tend to be friends. A big thing for us was that we didn't go out
of our way to play in Leeds, and we did a little, but only slowly got
a few fans from doing support gigs.”
“A lot of bullshit goes about how good and bad the scene is. It’s
not really the press in Leeds, so much as a lot of opinionated people.
It’s very funny seeing as how diverse it really is, but people
tend to tarnish it all with the same brush, wherever everyone has the
same watermark that they’re aiming for.”
He goes on to dismiss any damage that the Kaiser Chiefs might have done
for the Leeds indie market, describing them as ‘good guys,’
but that, at the end of the day, they really ‘don’t sound
anything like us.’
Having taken a brief siesta, the band are now nearly ready to tour ‘most
of the world’ supporting their debut album Give Me A Wall, (and
not anybody else) which is set to put a whole new spin on their extensively
performed live act.
Forward, indeed - it seems to be.