TRAVELLING AND PLAYING ROCK Nβ ROLL WITH MY FRIENDS
AN INTERVIEW WITHΒ LUKE BENTHAM OF THE DIRTY NIL
Their vocals are almost as wild, loud, and crass as the feedback that guitarist/vocalist Luke Bentham uses as an instrument of his own. Their untamed energy comes alive in their songs nearly as much as it does in their live show. Such a stark semblance of chaos in sound and performance shows that raw sense of personality as well. So itβll be no surprise to anyone thatβs heard their music or seen them live that Bentham took it as the compliment it was when I told him that the loud, hard to tame sound may have something to do with the personalities of the members of the Dirty Nil.
That said, the love from Southern California that shone down on these Southern Ontario rockers is no big shocker either. Years of basement tours, releasing singles and 7 inchβs, and playing all around the GTA really paid off when they got a call from Fat Mike, frontman of NOFX and founder of Fat Wreck Chords. The group had been working with Dine Alone records over here in Canada, and the two joined forces to put together the Dirty Nilβs first full length release, Minimum R&B.
In most cases, a group can be designated to a specific genre, or sonically aligned with another type of music, but with the Dirty Nilβs, itβs an endless guessing game of what the next person is going to label them. Bentham says they donβt have any long standing relationships with any type of music other than Rock Nβ Roll, so he finds it fascinating when people tell him they sound like a certain band, and that it surprises him almost every time. βWhatever people call us, I have no problem with it. We welcome any kind of titles, we just do whatever we want to do and we donβt reject any titles. Whatever you want to call us, whatever you see, itβs there, or whatever you hear, itβs there. We arenβt going to try to colour your interpretation of the ridiculous ruckus that we create.β
While their influences lie mostly in the music of previous generations, (MC5, Minor Threat, The Stooges, etc.), having grown up in this generation inevitably leaves some imprint of 90βs music. It may not have been their main influences, but Bentham said bands like Nirvana, Dinosaur Jr., and Weezer influenced them a lot. For himself personally, he said it was a lot of different people, from Fred Durst to Eminem, Prozzak, and Stompinβ Tom Conners. Growing up in Dundas, live music is limited unless you head into Hamilton, and thatβs exactly what they did. Bentham said aside from classic rock, it was βa lot of whatever was coming through the Casbah,β adding that theyβd go there in High School and liked it no matter what it was. βIt was all good to us.β
One thing you wouldnβt expect after getting to know the Dirty Nilβs music, is that on his time off, Bentham listens to a lot of country music and Frank Sinatra. While he still has an inkling towards music like Jesus Lizard, Culture Abuse, and Minor Threat, his love for country music and oldies may lend a hand to him having been unfamiliar with NOFXβs music when he got the call from Fat Mike. He went so far as to say it was crazy when Mike called him the first time and wanted to collaborate, because heβd never listened to NOFX before. He just knew they were a big band. The interesting and fortunate thing about that is when you come about a relationship in that manner, both parties are on the same level. Had Bentham and the rest of the Dirty Nil been fans of the band, they wouldnβt have the same relationship. He said many people were astounded that he was able to just shoot the shit with him without being star struck. βItβs because I know who he is, but he wasnβt my Kurt Cobain. I understand that he is for some people, but to me heβs just the really funny guy that calls from Southern California and gives us money to make Rock Nβ Roll.β
Even if you donβt know who they are, if youβre in the music industry, you know the name and furthermore, you know the label. Although they werenβt NOFX fans, Bentham said he was βsuper downβ when he got the call. βSo we did it, and weβre doing another one right now, and then weβre going to do another one later. Lifeβs good and thanks for the love from Southern California, Mr.Mike.β
Most of the bands on Fat Wreck Chords have a rather distinct βpunkβ sound, and while the Dirty Nil definitely holds up that persona, their sound doesnβt exactly resemble any of the other bands on the label. Again, theyβve been given many titles, but to me it sounds a lot like Benthamβs reference to Mike not being his Kurt Cobain is reflected in their sound and approach. I get a distinct grunge vibe from their music, and even more so in their live performance. While seemingly surprised by the comparison, Bentham was more flattered than anything. βCool! We have heavily borrowed from that era of music and been very inspired by bands of that era, so any resemblance to that is ultimately flattering to us.β In his eyes, βlike any band,β the Dirty Nil is a concoction of all of the different rock videos and pictures that they absorbed in their formative years, but done out their own way. The ultimate goal to them is rock music, and Bentham expressed how much the ingredients that are used enhance that product. Which is not surprising, as the band has quite the affection towards gear.
Itβs quite astounding just how much goes into the production of music. Most people donβt really sit back and think about how many pieces of gear are used to produce sounds, aside from the instruments themselves. The funny thing? Most of these pieces are trivial. When you think back to how Jimmy Hendrix could outdo a pedal by leading his teeth up and down the neck of his guitar, guiding them across the strings, or about all of the bands that came before these intricate programs and pieces of technology that are behind music production today, itβs really quite astounding how much could be done without all of these expensive pieces of equipment. With much resemblance to the simplistic approach of many of his influences, Bentham said heβs always tried to do what he can with what heβs got and that thatβs always whatβs inspired him as a guitar player. βInstead of saying βoh, Iβll just get a new blinky pedal thatβll have a new sound,β I try to come up with a new sound using my fingers or whatever the guitar can actually do, rather than expanding. I donβt like guitar pedals. Itβs always a good way to get the most out of your rock band, rather than opening up your MacBook and triggering along samples. (laughs)β
However dated, much of the iconic music we know and love was made with very little at hand. βWhen you think about some of the best bands, they made their worst albums when they had all of the options open to them and they made their best stuff when they were just slashing away with what they had. I think itβs a medium thatβs done well when itβs restricted in some way,β Bentham said after he explained that gear is something thatβs very special to him, mostly for itβs imagery. He said that certain pieces of equipment look more imposing than others and although you canβt hear what a band sounds like when youβre looking at their photos, the first time he saw pictures of bands like the Stooges, he thought βthat band looks like they sound fucking crazy! And they do.β
Although the way he absorbed Rock Nβ Roll was through βitβs mythological touch stones of photography,β his love affair lies with guitars and amplifiers. If you want to get into a conversation about gear with a member of the Dirty Nil, you better know your stuff going in, or it wonβt be much of a conversation at all. A love for guitars and amplifiers leaves you with almost insurmountable options, but every musician has their sound, and if theyβre lucky, thereβs a guitar and amp combination that aligns with that. For Bentham, that starts with the old 1970βs Les Paul Customs. βThe fancy ones that some people complain [are] heavy, but I love that theyβre super heavy. The fanciest ones are always played by the worst guitar players, like myself. Theyβre meant for Jazz guys, but itβs usually guys just slashing away on them with big shirt collars and smug looks on their faces, like myself, who utilize them. Hands down those are my favourite guitars.β
When it comes to amplifiers, Benthamβs thirst has been βsomewhat permanently quenchedβ by the Marshall Super Lead amp. Not only did he attribute the amp to most likely being used at some point by guitarists like βJimmy Page, Angus Young, Wayne Kramer from MC5, and Jimmy Hendrix,β he said that itβs the original stadium amp and that for him, itβs βthe one.β βI used to have a lot of old amps that would all die at some point and Iβd get them serviced and theyβd keep wearing down. One day I got this old, well itβs not old, itβs a re-issue of an amp,β the Marshall Super Lead 100 Watt amp and heβs used it every day since. This takes us back to that loud, hard to tame theme. βItβs the reason recording Higher Power took so long. I was fighting with our engineers who didnβt want me to use it. So we went somewhere else and I was like youβre going to record my insanely loud guitar and they were like okay, sounds good.β Adding that if you want to make them any kind of reasonable volume, you have to know how to do it and do it a certain way.
Earlier expressing his distaste for guitar pedals, he went on to say that he does still have affinity for the Vintage ProCo Rat pedal. Not being too keen on pedals, it makes sense that heβd have an attraction to this βsimple, imposing, and cold lookingβ distortion unit. βI really like those pedals. You can pretty much plug them into anything and Iβll sound like me, which is a cool thing to have so easily available.β
Having such a wide knowledge of gear can sometimes cause judgement to be passed when presented with a set up that isnβt up to the buffβs standards, but Bentham says heβs grown out of that mindset. βI used to, but Iβm over that shit now. I used to be more vein when it came to gear. βIf youβre using that, fuck you.β Now if you have terrible gear, I kind of in a way like you more. Youβre more charming in a way.β Over the years, touring and seeing so many bands use so many different types of gear has given him a bit more of an objective view on other bandsβ gear choices. Itβs something he pays attention to because he knows a lot about it, but it no longer influences his opinions negatively. While there are a few things, like heβs got a quite apparent loathing towards simulators, thatβs a βred flagβ to him. βI just donβt get why youβd spend 5,000 dollars on something like that when you could spend a very small fraction of that and get an excellent amplifier.β That being said, he does appreciate the fact that itβs another approach, just not one that he could get behind taking.
The approach is different for every band, with every aspect of their careers. One thing that rings true for every band though, is that you have to start somewhere, and thatβs usually at the bottom. Since their formation, the Dirty Nil has had quite the sporadic approach to releasing their music and that was not solely a reflection of their monetary means. Of course that was one of the factors, but Bentham said that it was also an aesthetic choice. βIt was a quick way to make something bold and physical in our minds and it seemed like a good system, so we did that for a while and then it became clear to us [it was time to] make a full record.β They also didnβt want to release a full length album until they had more demand for it. βWe knew we were going to have to work it, but we wanted to have some momentum before we threw that log on the fire. We wanted to have some flames going already.β
Now that wonβt be much of a problem going forward, at least in Canada, with their recent success as Breakthrough Group of the Year at the 2017 JUNO Awards. Quite like the phone call from Fat Mike, Bentham was not at all expecting them to take home the JUNO trophy. βI remember being at our table and it was just us and our manager and everybody from Dine Alone. When our category came up I was so sure we werenβt going to do it that I had half an ice cream sundae in my mouth. (laughs) I was eating our managerβs sundae while he was watching the screen very intently. So when it happened, I lost my mind, it was crazy. I didnβt think it was going to happen.β He said it was pretty surreal to have the attention of the room and that Kyle Fisher (drummer) is always bailing him out, having prepared a list of people to thank, just in case.
All of the excitement from that and the new caliber of touring that theyβve been afforded βafter so many years of investment, is really exciting and very fulfilling.β Their careers have reached a new height and as βbullshit and cliche as that sounds,β Bentham says that being on the road is where heβs happiest in life. βTravelling and playing Rock Nβ Roll with my friendsβ¦ itβs the only thing Iβve ever wanted to do and I feel very fortunate that I get to do it.β
At the age that theyβre at, all of the members in their 20βs, that much excitement and success can come with a lot of partying, but Bentham says he tries to stay away from anything thatβs going to keep him from playing a really good show to the best of his abilities the next day. βYou learn that if this is going to be your job, then you have to treat it as a job and pick your nights where you enjoy it.β Adding that he does still like to enjoy opportunities when theyβre afforded and that there are those days once in a while, especially when theyβre in Germany.
All in all, it seems that those βyears of drinking all the timeβ in their early years got the partying out of the way and allowed them to be more serious about being career musicians and βdo this 250 more times this year and be standing at the end of it, if possible.β While as Bentham agreed is not the case for all bands, βI know bands that can throw βem back every night and still deliver every night,β it is for theirs and of course thereβs time for that when theyβre not on tour. Thatβs when they can βgo drinking at the bar and come home and try Dance Dance Revolution,β a funny fact about the Dirty Nil that Bentham gave me the pleasure of being the first to share. His favourite song to dance to on DDR? “Walk Like An Egyptian”.