What is the music scene in
Rhode Island like?
The music scene is RI is really varied. We (me and the band)
were in high school when Monty's Fan Club (now Monty Are I)
and Bad Larry were first starting out, and we loved them.
They were two awesome ska bands and that was the local music
we focused on. But we also liked M80, which was a punk band
that was around at the time, as well as Slik Willy (now
Arcadia Landing), which was more of like the newer stuff
that could be considered pop-rock as much as it could be
considered pop-punk. We also had Zox, which is like a jammy
band, as well as tons of others. So we always had this
really varied scene here. It's not like you have a big punk
scene, or a big ska scene or anything like that, there's
just a lot of different bands. We have specific friends in
the scene now – Monty Are I, Someday Providence, Lemon Lime
Tennis Shoes, Arcadia Landing, Mustache Ride, Penrose (and
others who will be upset that I didn't name them) – and none
of them really play music like ours, or like eachothers'
(for the most part). We play shows that have all different
types of acts all the time. It's more about enjoying the
music in general, rather then going to a show and seeing two
crappy punk bands, then two okay punk bands, then one good
punk band. I'd rather see five good ANYTHING bands. Every
time we organize a big homeshow we definitely reach into all
the different types of music from the scene and just try to
expose kids to more different types of music.
As far as the fans, RI seems to have a pretty good layout of
venues for bands to come through, so that helps. But since
we got into local music when we were 15 or 16, the same
amount of kids just do not come to shows. We promote really
really hard and have a big reputation for doing so, so we
always get a large amount at our shows, but you can tell in
general throughout the local scene, less kids are going to
shows then they used. It might even be BECAUSE there are
such varied shows. We had a recent fan tell us he's not
going to our local homeshow coming up because he doesn't
like the type of musicof the other bands on it. He told us
he would come if we played with Catch 22 and the Brunt Of
It. But the thing is, we played shows with both those bands
in the past two months! We want to play shows with EVERYONE
regardless if they're not the same type of music. It's hard
because, the age of people who go to shows is pretty young,
and that's also the age when people aren't really open to
all types of music. A 16 year old punk rock kid is not going
to be interested in a band that's been compared to Maroon 5,
even if he's never heard them. And in my opinion, that's a
shame.
Promotion-wise, we do a ton of street promo, we do a ton of
personal promo (talking to kids directly), and we also do a
lot of video promotion, which appeals to people who aren't
even necessarily music fans, and that gets a lot of
different people into us, and interested in going to see us,
but you can't expect every band to be able to do all those
things, so it's hard to just get kids to come out to a show,
unless you're a national act.
Have you ever played in PA? If so, what are your
thoughts?
We played at the Smiling Moose in Pittsburgh last summer.
Our experience was not noteworthy and we would never judge
PA in general on it. This is because we had this shitty
douchebag booker, who totally screwed us on this tour we
were going on and sort of booked us anywhere (if at all,
during our proposed 23-day tour), regardless of money,
location, other acts, etc.
We got to the Smiling Moose, and the bartender (who was an
incredibly nice guy) didn't even know we were playing. I
guess there wasn't much communication between the bartender
and the promoter there. No one even knew about the show, so
no one was there.
Not that there would be people there, as no one knows about
Senior Discount in PA yet, and we were booked as the ONLY
band on the bill. We played our music, sang into one
microphone (for three guys) and some of us slept in a room
above the bar that had buckets of vomit in it. I guess they
were already provided for us so we didn't even have to throw
up. That was convenient.
Other than that isolated experience, we have yet to really
get to play there.
Tell us about your recently
released DVD? How do you come up with ideas for the
skits/dares?
Basically, a few years ago we got this opportunity to be on
this huge show in Providence when we were first starting
out, and we didn't know how to promote, because no one knew
who we were. So me and my friend, Alan Sousa, wrote a five
minute promo video advertising the show, and just promoted
it online. The video got a huge response, we sold tons of
tickets, and we just kept doing the videos.
It got to the point where people kept telling us to release
a DVD. We would always do two types of videos:
1. Real, documentary stuff with pranks or crazy things
(putting 300 pumpkins in our guitarist's room for Halloween,
the Ipecac skit)
2. Scripted comedy, like a very physical sitcom
We decided to release a documentary of the band that was
based in that first type of comedy, where it explained the
band and who we are, and was also highly entertaining. We
just felt that type of humor went well with our energetic
music. So we got our best stuff together (almost completely
unreleased) and created this movie. We sold out the
premiere, 350 people, in Providence, and it got this huge
response and now a lot of people are checking it out and
loving it. It's called "VBW Attack: The Senior Discount
Movie" and it really just introduces people to us. We do a
thing every year called the VBW Olympics and it has a
Scavenger Hunt where, instead of having to find things, you
have to do things and film them. Get a bar dart in the
spine, get hit by a car, things like that. That's all in
there. There's just a lot of crazy stuff– I get arrested for
a public enema, there's a skit with Ipecac that is the best
vomit-based segment I have ever seen, the aforementioned
"Pumpkin Caper" – it's just a lot of fun, high-impact
entertainment that is totally about creating entertainment
and music and fusing the two together. We've got a ton of
positive responses on this.
Basically, like with the Pumpkin Caper and other "pranks" we
sort of just come up with them coincidentally. We plan them
out ahead of the point of execution, but it's never like "We
need to do a prank at this point in time" or "What can we do
for a prank?" – it's like our drummer will say "Hey, let's
fill Tom's room with pumpkins" and we think about whether or
not we can do it, and if we can, we do it.
As for the stuff in the Scavenger Hunt, we kind of sit
around for a month or so before the actual Hunt and think of
what would be difficult, but also possible, to do. My
favorite things to think of are things that sound easy and
then are completely awful. Like "Swallow A Tablespoon Of
Cinnamon". Sounds easy. Go try it. Or go watch the movie and
see what happens.
How long has the band been
together? Did you know each other before the band got
together?
Basically, my cousin Christian (drummer) and I (rhythm
guitarist/singer) had never played instruments (besides my
very short-lived piano lessons). Kevin (our bassist/singer)
had wanted a band for a while. We were all best friends who
hung out constantly. So the summer we graduated, we decided
to start a band and that forced Christian and I to learn how
to play. For a year we just practiced, maybe played out
twice towards the end of the year, and wrote some simple
songs. After that we added Tom Wells (lead guitarist) and
wrote more serious songs and started focusing on writing
good songs and playing out. So we've really been together as
a full band for about 5 years. Tom was like our "new" friend
when he joined the band, but we were definitely all friends
first. We are in the process of adding another member to the
band right now, Alan Sousa, who has always been insanely
close to Senior Discount (we write and film ALL the video
stuff together). Kevin and I (who write the music) are going
in more layered directions musically, so we wanted to add
another instrument. Sousa is going to take over bass while
Kevin will join me on rhythm guitar.
Who are your heroes/role models, musically and otherwise?
Personally, the people I look up to are Kevin Smith, Larry
David, Mark Hoppus, Mick Foley, Tom Gabel, and Chuck
Palahniuk. These all just tend to be people who really
create their own form of art and do it in a unique way,
which is what I'm always trying to do. As a band we've
always been heavily influenced by Blink 182, because they
were about writing good songs and having fun. I feel like a
lot of bands (now more than ever) are about business and
image and things that are more about exposure or money or
being "cool", when we've always believed in the people who
just want to share ideas and touch other people.
Musically, we all come from different places. I'm into a lot
of punk stuff that's not new but definitely can't be
classified as old. I like a lot of acoustic stuff and in
general a lot of very random music. Tom is more into metal,
Kevin is into very poppy punk, Sousa is into a lot of reggae
and ska stuff, and Christian is really interested in music
that's experimental. I think at the end of the day we're all
just really focused on creating good music that people can
relate to and can have fun listening to.
Tom wanted me to add that his personal role model is
Liberachi.
What is the most important
thing people need to know about Senior Discount?
The most important things people need to know about Senior
Discount is that we're not just a band. We don't want fans,
we want friends. We want to create as many different types
of art as we can, we want to blend them together as much as
we can, and we sort of just want to make people happy in as
many different ways as we can.