JUNE 2008
VOL 18.12



PENNYWISE
THE PINKER TONES
BEAT UNION
MAYLENE & THE SONS OF DISASTER
MESHUGGAH
MGMT
TEST SPINS
NEWSWIRE

BACK ISSUES
BEAT UNION
By George A. Paul

Mod Squad
As a budding teenage musician in England, Davey Warsop eagerly read about the Vans Warped Tour every summer in local rock rags. Now he actually gets to experience it firsthand.

“We’re completely over the moon,” says the singer/guitarist, from Science Records’ office in Costa Mesa. “To finally be here doing it is an absolute honor.”

Beat Union will perform on the entire tour. Warsop cited Against Me!, Pink Spiders and GBH, “the old punk band from Birmingham, where we’re from,” as the acts he’s most looking forward to catching live.

In recent months, Beat Union got a first taste of American audiences while opening for Bedouin Soundclash, Authority Zero and Goldfinger.

“When you come to a new country, you don’t know how people are going to take your music…but it’s been absolutely crazy,” Warsop says, adding, “The crowds are [definitely] more enthusiastic here” than back home.

Formed three years ago by grade school friends Warsop and guitarist Dean Ashton, Beat Union went through various member changes before settling on drummer Luke Johnson (Amen) and bassist Ade Preston.

“We met them when we were teenagers, playing in different bands on the local gig circuit,” Warsop reveals.

The group immediately crafted an exciting amalgam of 1970s punk, pub rock and new wave sounds, did some demos and sent them everywhere. Goldfinger frontman/producer John Feldmann (The Used, The Matches, Story of the Year) heard one and was so impressed that he flew Beat Union out to California to record.

“We were absolutely blown away,” recalls Warsop. “We just couldn’t believe it.”

Tethered to a tight budget and time schedule, they entered an L.A. studio and bashed out the insanely catchy tunes heard on Disconnected in three weeks.

“For a debut album, that’s the best thing to do — especially for a band that’s influenced by a lot of punk music [like us],” Warsop says. “You get more of that desperation down on tape.”

Inspired by Elvis Costello, The Jam, Joe Jackson, Squeeze, The Police and The Clash, Warsop said he isn’t afraid to admit that “we wear our influences on our sleeves.”

When you’re starting out, “there is no songwriting handbook, so you’ve literally got to listen to what your favorite people have done before and take a little bit from here or there.”

Beat Union delves into ska territory (“Pressure Zone,” also heard in a hidden dub version with a King Tubby/Roots Radics sample), gang-style chants (“She is the Gun,” which was playlisted last year on England’s BBC Radio 1) and insightful storytelling (“Johnny Loves JoJo”). Musicians from Goldfinger, The Used and Good Charlotte also lent a hand.

On the blazing title track, Warsop sings about how we often let technology rule our lives: “Maybe I’m just out of place in the modern world/Don’t wanna go to their MySpace/I wanna talk to girls.”

“That was my mild contempt for the digital age that we’re living in,” he says. “I’m not saying I boycott all that stuff and hate it; I don’t. It’s just realizing how times have changed and not wanting to be left behind.”

On the web: beatunion.co.uk

View this band's Mean Street info page

 

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