Summerbruise
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10 bands emo punk band SUMMERBRUISE ripped off for their new LP

4 mins read

Fresh off the release of their new single With Friends Like These, Who Needs Empathy?, Indianapolis-based emo/punk outfit SUMMERBRUISE checks in with us today to give you their 10 bands that heavily inspired them while writing their new album.

โ€œWith Friends Like These, Who Needs Empathy?โ€

Chicago – My dad was in a kickass oldies cover band when I was growing up, and my favorites were always the Chicago songs with the big bombastic horn sections. This was the first time I ever attempted a brass โ€˜arrangementโ€™ of any sort and I drew heavily from bangers like โ€œSaturday in the Parkโ€ and โ€œMake Me Smileโ€ while writing & structuring horn parts.

Keep Flying – If seeing my dad play with a horn section planted the idea that I wanted to do the same somehow/someday, Keep Flying filled in the how & when. I hadnโ€™t heard another band up to that point that added brass to punk without getting ska (which rules, to be clear, but just isnโ€™t what we were trying to do), and touring with them a few years back was what finally inspired me to take a crack at it. We were lucky enough to have Rick and John track them as well, and they knocked โ€˜em out of the park if I do say so myself!

Rozwell Kid – A lot of our emo/DIY contemporaries will have funny merch or social media presences to accompany some of the most despondent fucking lyrics youโ€™ve ever heard in your life, and I canโ€™t really get serious like that without also trying to be funny. Rozwell Kid is probably my favorite band, and how I learned to use humor as a songwriting tool without necessarily writing joke songs (even though their joke songs are also great). Also both times on โ€œFriendsโ€ when the guitars do the muted โ€œchk-a-chkโ€ thing in time with the drums weโ€™re just trying to do the โ€œUHF on DVDโ€ intro because itโ€™s perfect.

Mover Shaker – The melody for the vocals and lead guitar on the choruses of โ€œFriendsโ€ are super lifted from the chorus of โ€œLatchkey,โ€ to the point that my girlfriend overheard me recording the demo and asked if thatโ€™s what it was supposed to be. Hehehe sorry friends ๐Ÿ˜ˆ

Stars Hollow – Similarly, Iโ€™ve been obsessed with the groove on โ€œTadpoleโ€ since the first time I heard it and have always wanted to steal it for a Summerbruise song. So I did ๐Ÿ˜ˆ

Prince Daddy & the Hyena – When I was writing it, I always envisioned the third verse of โ€œFriendsโ€ sounding like the last verse of โ€œLauren,โ€ where the band picks up and the lyrics sound almost crammed in or rattled off, followed by the big exhale feeling of everything coming back down. Itโ€™s more subtle and maybe not quite a full blown rip-off but certainly intentional.

Fountains of Wayne – โ€œFriendsโ€ is one of the first (and only) Summerbruise songs to use a standard ~pop structure~ with the whole verse/chorus/verse/chorus/bridge/chorus deal, something I never intentionally avoided but something that never really came naturally to me either. Then, a couple summers ago, I saw Kory from Prince Daddy cover โ€œMexican Wineโ€ on a livestream for the Alternative which unlocked a memory of me being absolutely obsessed with Welcome Interstate Managers as a kid. This sent me on a Fountains of Wayne re-discovery binge in the midst of writing the album that had a huge influence on a lot of the sounds and structures within it.

Pavement – I donโ€™t think any of the songs on the album sound like Pavement, but I was also listening to a shitload of Pavement while writing them to the point that, at least to me, some of the choices sort of feel like Pavement. I think what makes Stephen Malkmus an interesting songwriter to me is that he takes no pains to make his lyrics relatable, but doesnโ€™t go out of his way to make them weird either, leaving you somewhere between relatable songs with a weird narrator and weird songs with a relatable narrator. I definitely challenged myself on this album to keep stuff I liked the sound of even if I was worried it only sounded good or made sense to me, in hopes that the authenticity is what would make other people think it was good.

Plans – Yes I technically play in this band, no it doesnโ€™t count as a self-plug because Iโ€™m not on any recordings. Sue me. This album will be Summerbruiseโ€™s first as a 4 piece, so writing it was the first time Iโ€™d written any bass or lead guitar parts and Iโ€™d have been completely clueless if not for what Iโ€™ve learned playing in Plans. Thereโ€™s a common clichรฉ that the best way to improve as a musician is to always be the worst in the room, and Iโ€™ve absorbed so much from them since joining a few years ago that it feels incredibly true. It might be a cornball pick for a list like this, but an undeniably huge influence on this band one way or another.

Elliott Smith – For the longest time Elliott Smith was a sort of anti-influence on my songwriting (or lack thereof); I first started playing guitar in high school after becoming enamored with his music and spent a lot of free time learning Elliott Smith songs as a hobby. The more I got to know his music, the more sure I was that I could never make anything like it and shouldnโ€™t bother trying. Playing guitar was a private thing I did to practice Elliott Smith songs for fun, strictly a non-creative exercise. It wasnโ€™t until my mid-20โ€™s that someone showed me a now-rightfully-disgraced band that influenced a lot of early Summerbruise and I realized you could actually suck all kinds of ass and still write songs people would like, somehow. They would just call it โ€œemo.โ€ It was then and only then that I made my first attempt at songwriting and started this very band. Outside of the occasional cheeky reference in past songs, this record is the first time Iโ€™ve really tried to tangibly emulate Elliott Smith (by which I mean the opening track is literally a carbon copy of โ€œIndependence Dayโ€).

Karol Kamiล„ski

DIY rock music enthusiast and web-zine publisher from Warsaw, Poland. Supporting DIY ethics, local artists and promoting hardcore punk, rock, post rock and alternative music of all kinds via IDIOTEQ online channels.
Contact via [email protected]

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