features
Idol Worship: Joe Marro (The Early November) and Davey vonBohlen (The Promise Ring)
Alternative Press - Scott Heisel on 3/29/06 @ 3:48 PM - altpress.comJOE MARRO: I actually met you a couple times in Philadelphia when Maritime were playing. I showed you my Promise Ring tattoo.
DAVEY VONBOHLEN: Oh, no!
That's exactly what you said the first time. [Both laugh.] How is Promise Ring practice going?
It's really weird, but totally normal in the same way. You do something for 10 years, and then you stop cold turkey and start right back fresh. It's kind of nice because you don't have to hate the people [in the band] anymore... [Marro laughs.] Actually, that's not the right word: All the personal things that drove you nuts don't have to drive you nuts anymore, because it's going to be over in three days. Actually, we've been having fun with it.
That's awesome. I have a lot of friends going out [to the Flower15 show], and I'm bummed I can't make it.
We haven't played the shows yet-you may be lucky for not being there. [Laughs.]
When I discovered the Promise Ring, I was 15, and I heard "A Picture Postcard" on the 411 skateboarding video. It was the Mark Johnson profile-he was one of my favorites at the time, and he was skating to that song. I was like, "What is this music?" It was unlike anything I had heard. It was the perfect blend of pop music and really smart lyrics-everything about it was just really intelligent. I was wondering if that is what you were always trying to achieve in your songwriting.
I never really got on that idea of thinking more about it than it was. You've got two guitars, bass and drums, and there's only one rudimentary goal: Make the best songs that you can. I know other people have more focused goals. Had we had the "What's cool?" blinders on, "A Picture Postcard" would've been buried long before it could see the light of day. At that time, we were still a post-hardcore band. "Emo," or the lighter side of that, didn't really exist in our world. It was like, "This is what happens when kids leave straight-edge hardcore." [Laughs.] That song [made us feel like], "People are gonna beat us up at our shows." Really, [the goal has] always been to make good songs, and stop getting in the way of them with stupid ideas of who you are or who you should be.
For the rest of the story, pick up AP 211 below...





















Post a Comment