In case you didn't know, The Young Knives are a three piece rock band hailing from Ashby-de-la-Zouch. They started their musical career playing covers of Neds Atomic Dustbin songs.
Quickly realising the error of their ways, they relocated to Oxford and released mini-album 'The Young Knives Are Dead' in 2002 on local imprint Shifty Disco.
Those recordings came to the attention of BMG, whom the band inked a publishing deal with, and the fledgling Trangressive Records label. Both, presumably, were impressed by their combination of classically English songwriting sensibilities with wiry punk hooks. Either that or their decidedly 'individual' dress sense.
An EP, 'Junky Music Makes My Heart Beat Faster', soon followed and sold out. The band started work on their debut album with Gang Of Four legend Andy Gill and released a single, 'The Decision', in December 2005. DiS meets the quirk-pop trio before their Sheffield gig in support of latest release 'Here Comes The Rumour Mill' and finds them in jovial, if cantankerous, mood.
What's the most annoying rumour you've heard about
yourselves?
Henry (guitar/vocals): The NME said we looked like
paedophiles which isn't very nice... it's interesting if that's good
journalism.
House Of Lords (bass): Our reaction was, "No we're
not!"
Oli (drums): Then the lawyers got involved.
Henry: They didn't really.
The NME have been pretty harsh to you, haven't they?
They didn't seem to like the new single...
Henry: I couldn't work out whether it was a good
review or not. They always say our vocals sound like The
Darkness which is really offensive.
House Of Lords: It's because they've got no other
reference points for slightly falsetto vocals
Oli: We were thinking more like Supergrass
with the high harmonies.
Henry: The bands we listen to like Adam
and the Ants, Sparks and Devo
all do that. They're all ten times cooler than The Darkness. We like
stuff that's quite English. We're not just into garage rock bands.
Oli: But we like them too.
Is there anything contemporary that inspires you?
Henry: We like Mystery Jets.
They're more than just a guitar band.
Oli: Larrikin Love are
interesting, too.
House Of Lords: We like stuff that's a little bit
different. Have you heard The Noisettes at all?
DiS has and wasn't too impressed
Henry: They're still a garage band but every so
often they go off into a sort of jazz-rock thing. There's some soul in
there, too. She reminds me of Billie Holiday.
House Of Lords: Interesting voice, good stage
show... sexy body.
Any thoughts on the Brit Awards?
Henry: Load of wank. Sack of shit.
House Of Lords: It's just a load of industry types
patting each other on the back isn't it?
Henry: It's people like Damo Suzuki
who deserve acclaim, not people who are commercially
successful. He's been on an endless world tour for years. He picks
musicians from each city he goes to as his backing band and then
shouts over the top. It's all improvised.
Oli: You got asked to play bass for him, didn't you?
House Of Lords: I wouldn't do it. I wouldn't want to
play a duff note in front of Damo Suzuki, he'd be like (cue
awful Japanese accent): "What the hell you doing?"
Oli: Good impression, though.
Henry: Yeah, a bit like Benny Hill...
You're working with Andy Gill on your album. How did
that come about?
Henry: We sent him some demos last year and he
called us and said, "I'd like to work with you".
House Of Lords: It was nice. It wasn't our label
calling him and offering him squillions of pounds, he wanted to do it.
Henry: So we got a loan and did it.
Oli: He even gave us a mate's rate.
Henry:Yeah, but his idea of a budget rate is
different to most people's.
What did he bring to the recording process?
House Of Lords: He's got a great ear. There's one
guitar part we wrote and we had this really complicated thing. He just
said, "Why don't you break it down?" He simplified it to two drawn-out
notes, and you'd never think to do that because it's too pretentious.
Henry: But he did, and it sounds really good. It
creates a tension and he's really good at that. He's also good at
making us put the chorus in the right place. We always want to leave it
until the end but he said, "The chorus is the best bit, put it at the
start and repeat it again and again".
House Of Lords: That makes it sound really
formulaic... but it's not!
Henry: It's just about highlighting the best bits,
like Gang Of Four. People always say they're a big
influence on bands like Franz Ferdinand, but they
write finely tuned pop songs that are about as Gang Of Four as the
Tweenies. And Bloc Party are more like an emo band.
You're releasing the album on Trangressive Records.
What made you choose them?
Henry: Well, they made us the first offer and we'd
worked with them before on an EP. They'd come to a gig, liked it and
wanted to put something out. And they let us do what we want, pretty
much.
The House Of Lords: They're both musicians and it's
refreshing to work with people who are that enthusiastic about music.
Henry: It's better to work with people like that
than labels with 4,000 bands on their roster who don't necessarily care
about your music.
The album seems to have taken a while to make... any
particular reason for that?
The House Of Lords: We wanted to do it properly.
When we sat down with Transgressive they asked us how we wanted to do
it and we didn't want to be one of those bands who do a couple of
singles, like Hard-Fi, and then release an album
with posters everywhere.
Henry: We wanted to release lots of singles, tour
them all and play everywhere so that people had actually heard of us
before the album came out. We saw a massive poster of The
Kooks the other day and thought, "Who are they? That's a bit
distasteful".
What are your festival plans for this year?
Henry: We're doing Reading and Leeds, also V
Festival and maybe T in the Park. Then some smaller ones like Guildford
and Truck Festival in Oxford.
House Of Lords: They really are the good ones. We
did V last year and although it's good to walk out on a big stage you
get much more of a response at little ones like Truck.
Finally, and I know you must get asked this all the
time, what's the deal with the name 'House Of Lords'?
Henry: I like to make up new explanations all the
time. My
current favourite is that when he lies on his back his profile
resembles that of the House Of Lords.
House Of Lords: But that's not true.
Henry: It's just a joke because he's an idiot and
he always says our ideas our rubbish, just like the House of Lords
does. That was the idea.
Oli: But it's got horribly out of control.
House Of Lords: They hate it because they gave me a
wacky name and now that's the thing that everybody remembers about us.
And I get all the girls...
We suspect, dear reader, that he may be lying. The Young Knives' debut album is released on Transgressive Records in May.
The Young Knives play the Drowned in Sound party in New York (The Annex) with Brakes on 21st February.