There’s a rock ’n’ roll cliché about musicians achieving stardom and immediately becoming insufferable. By any standards, IDLES have earned the kind of success that can send egos out of control. Their last album, Joy As An Act Of Resistance, broke their label’s record for most pre-orders, earned them a top 5 chart debut and a stack of awards, and led to a Glastonbury Pyramid slot. Their 190-date 2019 tour climaxed with a headline show at Alexandra Palace that sold out in 24 hours. It’s a relief, then, that they still talk just like the band who used to gig around clubs in Bristol. Their songs rail against sexism, racism, and toxic masculinity, so it would’ve been disappointing if they’d rocked up to the interview full of rockstar pretensions. Still, it’s refreshing to talk to musicians with feet so firmly connected to the floor.
When we ask guitarists Lee Kiernan and Mark Bowen about the giant amp rigs they now get to use on a nightly basis, they sound genuinely grateful for the opportunity. “They are sick!” exclaims Bowen. “We get giddy every time we look at them.” Lee still can’t quite believe it: “You always dream of having such huge setups, and for most of our career and for most people you just can’t use this sort of thing. It’s ridiculous. We’ve somehow got to a place where we actually can, and now the feeling of those amps hitting me on stage every night is incomparable. The actual feeling of those speakers kicking you is insane.”
This story is from the October 2020 edition of Total Guitar.
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This story is from the October 2020 edition of Total Guitar.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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