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>>The Cribs

The Cribs are three brothers from Wakefield. It's a suburb outside Leeds. They have been playing since they were teenagers. They have done a few albums. The New Fellas (2005) is their most recent. They were ready to go ahead and do another. The Cribs are busy guys. They have been on the road constantly the past few years. They had a single in the charts. I got to talk to Ryan Jarman for a few minutes during their show in Los Angeles in November 2005. Look for more from this band.

the cribs

Ryan Jarman: guitar/vocals
Gary Jarman: bass/vocals
Ross Jarman: drums

AL: I don't have to ask you how you met because you are all brothers. How do you all write songs in the band?
Ryan: I don't know. It's weird. We have only started writing songs for the new album. It will be our third album. It's been so long. I have forgotten what it is like being in the studio and not on the road. We don't think about writing too much. We go to our rehearsal space in Wakefield. It's in this really old building. They are going to knock it down to make yuppie flats. Nobody wants a yuppie flat in Wakefield anyway.

AL: Are you going to get a real estate deal there for having been there already?
Ryan: Yeah. And then sell it for an over-inflated price a year later. We just finished making it nice. We fixed it up. We just put in a ping-pong table. We have a Double Dragon, the arcade game, in there. Some guy was selling it down the road. When I was a kid I always wanted one. We were able to buy it for a hundred pounds with our advance. Being in a band, and buying that machine, we have been able to satisfy one childhood dream.

AL: What is the studio like? Do you have a lot of gear?
Ryan: We have a lot of stuff. It's like a youth club down at our place. We don't do anything strenuous or anything where we run around.

AL: Do you want to move to London?
Ryan: Everyone asks us: "When are you going to move to London?" I don't like big cities. I like going back to small towns. People in small towns tend to be weird and more interesting. It's good to go back to. You know that you don't want to live there, but it is okay to end up back there.

AL: There are more fashionable things to do in London. If you live in the suburbs you end up working more and not being distracted.
Ryan: Yeah. If you are in a band, the record company always expects you to be at certain parties and gigs. If you lived in London you would have to hang out with a bunch of these people. I can't be bothered with these people. That's not what I want to do. I would just rather go home and sleep. It's just us three and we hang out all the time.

AL: You go to the NME awards?
Ryan: Yeah. We will go to that party. It was fun. We went to the Q Magazine after party and stuff. It was just like hanging out with lawyers. It was all about getting pissed and slapping each other on the back. I don't know why we bothered going there for a round. It was the opposite of what we usually enjoy doing.

the cribs

AL: You played in California in June 2005. Then you came back for one more show at the end of the year. Did you plan a bigger tour?
Ryan: Yeah. The second time around we just did New York and Los Angeles. We were supposed to do a larger tour. But for financial reasons we wanted to share a bus with another band. Nobody was happy with sharing a bus with another band and a crew. It just turned out that we couldn't do the whole tour and it was canceled. I would like to do a proper tour of America, and not just a few dates. We played CMJ and SXSW. WE have played east coast and west coast with Kaiser Chiefs. And we would play some extra shows on our own when we could. It was a long tour but not long by American standards. It was only like three weeks.

AL: What do you think about some of those articles in the NME about The Cribs being part of "the new grunge?"
Ryan: It is just one of those things. It is just a label. We don't get involved in it too much because "grunge" was a stupid word anyway. Every band that was called grunge was probably embarrassed by the name. I am not sure what the fuck it means. It was just some fashion term. People used to wear ripped clothes. There was also a focus on being a band from Leeds. We were the first band signed. Then there was the Kaiser Chiefs. Then there was this New York-shire term. That was Leeds and Sheffield and everything in Yorkshire. Whenever there is this new tagline, you have a bunch of shitty bands that get signed. I never really liked Leeds. In Leeds at the time there were all these bands dreaming about getting a deal. They are really bitchy. They were going "Who are these guys from Wakefield, and how did they get a deal?" We paved the way for all these bands in that area to get signed. We got them exposure. It's sort of irritating. We were known way before we had a deal because we had played so many live shows.

AL: You had a website back then?
Ryan: No. I didn't know anything about computers back then. We just did it by pressing a lot of vinyl. We played a lot of live shows and handed out records. Didn't know that the Internet would make such a big difference.

AL: I know you are all brothers. But does the one brother feel left out because he is not a twin?
Ryan: Probably not because Ross has a girlfriend. He doesn't need us. I have been hanging out with Gary all the time. The funny thing is I don't think that he likes hanging out with me anymore. I don't know how the whole twin thing works anymore. We all get on really well. But when we go to hotels Gary and me get put together as one entity. We never intended it.

AL: We all this song "Hey Scenesters!" over here. How do you choose the subject matter for the lyrics?
Ryan: Either my twin brother or I write the lyrics. We don't sit down and think about these things. The main hook line was written when we were practicing. We are from a small town. Last year we started to go to other places like London. A lot of these shows were like being in the playground. There were all these fashionable people. They would look down their noses at people and they thought they were cool. We were just shouting at people like that for a laugh. It's all about having a main idea and a hook for the song.

AL: You sing all the songs you write the lyrics for?
Ryan: Yeah. Whoever gets to the microphone first. Much of the time we sing together.

AL: What do you think of the shows in America this year?
Ryan: I really liked it. I was really excited about the Kaiser Chiefs shows because it was like a party in the crowd. Our own shows went pretty well too. We were told that American crowds are quieter but we had fun. It's fun to go to different places. It's great to go to New York to California. In New York it is fucking freezing and in California right nice weather. It's cool. Unfortunately we have to leave tomorrow. We have to fuck off. We have played like 300 shows in the past year. I usually have one day off a month.

AL: Do you ever get to see other bands?
Ryan: It's rare. You only get to see bands that you are on tour with. There is nothing going on in Wakefield. There is nothing going on in Wakefield. You have to go to Leeds if you want to see bands. We play Leeds all the time. I see bands there quite often. But we started putting on gigs in Wakefield. They started out just like rehearsal. But every time we put on shows the cops come because people are drinking. We stopped doing it. It is a lost cause.

AL: Do you have any other hobbies?
Ryan: I do a lot of writing. I write lyrics but I am always writing. I like to read books too.

AL: Are there any writers you like?
Ryan: It's all clichˇd but I read the Beat Generation writers, like Kerouac. I like this guy named Italo Calvino who is this surrealist type of writer. I really like If On A Winter's Night A Traveler. That is my favorite.

AL: How do you record the albums?
Ryan: We do it all live. You can't think about it too long. You have to enjoy it. It's like if you think of a word too long it loses its meaning. Producers have to be open to our ideas. You always have to have control of your record. We trust Edwyn Collins who did the New Fellas record. Bernard Butler did the latest single. It was a brand new song. I like both those people. It's hard to let anyone mess around.

AL: I heard Bernard Butler was really into production and Pro Tools.
Ryan: That is what I heard too. He lots to do a lot of layers. He likes to have loads of guitar tracks. It's cool. It's the first record that was played on daytime radio, which is proper mainstream shit. I just heard that today. It's a song called "Your Gonna Lose Us." It's not on the album. The radio played the wrong version. They played the one with all the swearing. They got us in trouble.

AL: Are you going to take some time off and do an album?
Ryan: We are going to England and play a few shows before Christmas. We were going to take off loads of time. But it turns out that we are going to Japan in January 2006. Then we are going to Australia and Germany for a little while. After that there will be another tour of England. I don't know when the fuck we are going to have some time off.

AL: When did The New Fellas come out in England?
Ryan: It was around June 2005. We want to get on with the new album. Before we basically did two albums in a year. We don't want to take too long doing the new album. We have loads of ideas at the minute. I want to get on with it.

AL: What are your shows going to be like in Early 2006? Are you going to play new songs?
Ryan: It will mostly from the second album. When we released the first two albums we played 200-300 shows a year for two years. We have played some of those early songs so many times. Maybe now it will be cool to play an old one because we haven't play them in such a long time.

AL: What bands that you have played with have you liked?
Ryan: There is this guy from New York called Jeffrey Lewis. He used to be in The Moldy Peaches. We took him on tour in England. It was just him and his brother playing acoustic. We played some big halls. He was doing some songs without a microphone. He would just stand onstage and shout. He is a genius songwriter. He is one of those guys who don't give a shit. His songs are really good. He played with us at Mercury Lounge. We saw him play the other night.

AL: What is the best part of being in a band?
Ryan: I like it all. It's all a good laugh. I don't see it as being a job. Especially in England right now, many people see it as being a job. With Indie Music being so big in England at the minute it can be seen as a career move. You can sign an Indie band for a million pounds. I can't understand how that can be done. I think that a lot of the bands are losing the attitude. We get to go out to a different city every night and meet people and get pissed for nothing. I am not worried about TV appearances. People have lost the plot.

AL: You were always doing music?
Ryan: Yeah. In Wakefield there is naught to do. I was maybe into video games. When I was ten years old, some guy burgled our house. He took all our computer games and all we had left were guitars. We had nothing to do.

AL: What does your parents think of the band?
Ryan: They come to shows when we are close to home. They are really into it. Before that it was either go to college or work in a factory. They are pleased. My mum plays piano and guitar. She could play songs by the Beatles. She played them like they were nursery rhymes. I didn't realized that these were songs by the Beatles. I think she was in a band in the 1960s.

AL: Are you into collecting guitars and gear?
Ryan: I love my guitar. It has been broke so many times. It was nice when I got it. It's like a diseased guitar. People say that I should get some expensive guitar. I have been offered some ghastly things. It makes me want to keep my guitar because it is so disgusting.

An interview with The Cribs
By Alexander Laurence

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