Luke Spiller tapped into the zeitgeist of the current pandemic when he wrote “Strange Days” on tour last summer.
During the title track to The Struts’ vivacious third
album, he sings (alongside guest Robbie Williams):
In many strange ways, science fiction, I
believe, has become reality/Oh, these are strange times/Lost in our minds/We
don’t know/It’s unclear/Where we’ll be this time next year
“It just goes to show that if inspiration hits, you’ve got
to capture it, because a year down the line, you might end up listening to a
voice memo you left on your phone or a video that you recorded and it can come [into
good] use,” says the singer, in a phone interview from England. “That song
definitely applied. It’s funny how the journey goes.”
Formed in 2012, The Struts provided a vital injection of Seventies-styled
glam rock spirit, not to mention a riveting front man in Spiller, who often
seemed to channel Freddie Mercury onstage. They emerged with full-length debut Everybody
Wants two years later and have notched five Top 30 hits at alternative
radio in America.
This past September, The Struts served as halftime entertainment
at Soccer Aid for UNICEF UK. They performed “Strange Days” with a
larger-than-life hologram version of Williams (a co-founder of the annual
charity benefit game between athletes and celebs).
But due to COVID-19 travel and visa restrictions, the Los
Angeles-based group was holed up in its native country due to another COVID-19
lockdown.
“Obviously, it was a really big deal, and we couldn’t say
‘no,’ explains Spiller, 32. We went to leave and now we’re kind of stuck.”
Soon after, Strange Days entered the national U.K.
album chart at No. 11 – the highest placement of The Struts’ career.
Last spring, Spiller, guitarist Adam Slack, bassist Jed Elliott
and drummer Gethin Davies tested negative for the coronavirus. Then they entered
the Southern California home studio of producer Jon Levine and crafted all the new
songs in a whirlwind. The thoroughly engaging effort is among this year’s strongest
releases.
Additional guest appearances by Tom Morello (Rage Against
the Machine), Albert Hammond Jr. (The Strokes), Joe Elliott and Phil Collen
(Def Leppard) made the songs even more powerful.
Question: What is the early consensus among fans about the album?
Luke Spiller: For anyone who’s ever
wanted to hear The Struts in slightly more of a raw setting, with attributes
that come with us playing live, then ‘Strange Days’ is like the album for them.
Admittedly, it probably doesn’t have a collection of the most well-crafted,
massive songs. But it was a moment in time that was captured. The whole point
of the album was that we weren’t going to spend four or five days on one song,
which is normally what myself, Adam and our producer would typically do. It was
a very different process and therefore gave us a different album.
Q: Congrats on the title
track to the new album being your biggest debuting single to date in the U.K.
A: Technically, it was
our only debut out of the U.K.
Q: You did an Instagram
Live with Robbie Williams and hit it off so well that you immediately decided
to collaborate. What was it like going to the front porch of his L.A. home to
record the duet and video while being aware of social distancing?
A: I’m glad it paid off.
You just never know how these things are going to turn out. Robbie was so
gracious with his time and so enthusiastic. We were able to shoot an incredible
video. That was a lot of late nights drinking over the phone with director
Chris Applebaum trying to come up with a concept.
Q: While this album was
made under unique circumstances, it ended up working to your advantage and
sounds like a revitalized Struts. Do you agree?
A: Well, the whole entire
thing was a giant experiment - whether it was the circumstances in which it was
made or the fact that it was just the band members and one producer, one studio,
one set timeline. That was it. All of the [guest appearances] and everything were
stuff that we collectively wanted to do.
Then I had a very strong vision on how it should be
presented and how it should be approached. I think it’s gonna be a little bit
tough for the band to step backwards and make a record in the same way that we
have done in the past - which has been very arduous and normally done in
between the touring and whatnot. I think there’s something to be said [about giving]
people a small space of time to achieve something and the fact that you know
you have these parameters. Having a deadline to work towards definitely helps.
Q: In the liner notes to Strange
Days, you wrote that you had a creative breakthrough in part because you
guys weren’t under any obligation to make a full album and everything flowed more
naturally as a result. Do you think that sense of freedom is evident throughout
the album?
A: Yeah, definitely. I
remember there was one very special moment, I think it was maybe the third day
in, where we wrote ‘Cool.’ It’s amazingly upbeat and exciting, but towards the
end, it sort of just goes off on this jam, which in the studio, felt right. We
were all playing together and it was a lot of fun.
I think if we were under normal circumstances, we wouldn’t
have done that. We would’ve been like, ‘Radio’s never going to be able to play
it’ or ‘What are people going to say because it’s got some real potential? Maybe
this could be a single.’ Normally, we would chop fat off when it comes to
songs. But with this, it was like, ‘Yeah, it feels good, man. This is our
moment. This is our ‘Can You Hear Me Knocking.’ This is our ‘L.A. Woman.’ Let’s
have some fun and show everyone else what we can do.’
Q: Since the four of you lived and recorded this album together at the same time, did it have any effect on the band dynamic? Did you learn anything new about the others?
A: We know each other
very well and it’s kind of hard not to when we’ve toured as much as we have
together. What I would say is it was the first time in a very long while where the
band was pretty much by themselves. We didn’t have any tour managers, there were
no girlfriends, no managers, no one else from our exterior entourage that we
normally break away and do things with. It was very much the four of us and
John and the engineer. We hadn’t been that close, probably since before we came
to the United States about six years ago. It was a refreshing experience.
Q: Jed has referred to
the process of a making the album as like being at summer camp.
A: I’d like to know how
many summer camps Jed has actually been on!
Q: You’ve also said this
batch of song lyrics seemed to fall from the sky. Did you find it easier to
write since there wasn’t any pressure?
A: Yeah, lyrically, I had
worked tirelessly a few weeks leading up to the sessions…I did a huge amount of
work and prep before going into the studio with titles, concepts, mountains of
lyrics. Even melodies and stuff. But I think what was different this time around
was that I chose to write lyrically from a much more personal perspective - something
that I’ve rarely done, because I felt that I’m not very interesting. But I’m
getting to an age now where I can really draw from my own experiences and make
them relatable. I hope I do, anyway.
Q: “I Hate How Much I
Want You,” with the gang chant chorus featuring Joe Elliott and guitar by Phil Collen,
is tailor made for audience participation in concert. Does that spirit ever
come into mind when you’re writing choruses?
A: Sometimes I tend to
sit at the piano and wave my arms in the air when I’m singing [laughs]. It does
help. I imagine it. I channel it. If I can imagine a big crowd singing it, then
yeah, it tends to stick.
Q: Were you really
excited when Joe and Phil agreed to contribute to the song?
A: The entire process was
unreal. Being in such close contact with people like that - all of them. The
writing process as well. It was all a bit of a head fuck. I remember waking up
about five days into it and I literally couldn’t believe the amount of material
that was being made and the quality on top of that. I was also texting Tom
Morello, Albert Hammond Jr., Robbie Williams, the guys from Def Leppard, and
giving them little updates. They were like, ‘Can’t wait to hear it.’ It was all
very surreal.
Q: Did everyone you asked
agree to participate right away?
A: Some things had to be
ironed out ever so slightly, but for showbiz [sake], I’ll say it all went
absolutely smooth.
Q: I know you’re a
Harley-Davidson enthusiast. On the Deep Purple-meets-Stones riff rocker “All
Dressed Up (with Nowhere to Go),” you sing “Headlights glowing like the sun/all
revved up with nowhere to run.” Is that your homage to motorcycles?
A: Yeah, it’s a homage to
two things. The song’s written about my motorcycle. Then it’s also a little tip
of the hat to Jim Steinman who wrote “All Revved Up with Nowhere to Go” [from Meat
Loaf’s 1977 hit album Bat Out of Hell]. I know that he’s a motorbike
enthusiast as well…Normally, I might have second guessed it and thought, ‘Oh, it’s
a little to close to Jim and Meatloaf.’ But I think it’s cool. I’m a huge fan
of Jim. He’s probably one of my favorite songwriters of all time.
Q: The band did a fine job
on the stomping KISS cover, “Do You Love Me.” I read that you were actually more
inspired by the 1980 version by glam metal band Girl with Phil Collen. When you
record a cover, do you find it hard to walk a fine line between keeping the
spirit of the original intact and making it your own?
A: Yeah, this is why we
tend not to really do a whole lot of covers unless it’s live. We recorded a
version of Van Halen’s ‘Dancing in the Street,’ but that was for the paycheck.
We’d been approached by Dodge and they asked if we could give it a go. We were
like ‘Yeah, sure. It’ll keep food in our mouths for another six months.’
With this one, I genuinely felt inspired to throw it into
the mix. Originally, I wanted Joe and Phil on that song. I thought it might be
really nice for it all to come full circle. But they politely declined. I’m
glad they did, because ‘I Hate How Much I Want You’ became so much better of a
song once they got their parts on.
Q: The jangly “Another
Hit of Showmanship” with Hammond is a real earworm and the slinky album closer “Am
I Talking to the Champagne (or Talking to You)” is a standout. For the latter
song, were you going after a late 1970s, Stonesy, “Miss You”-type vibe?
A: Of course! I mean,
I’m a massive Stones fan. I’ve always been interested about what the band can
do in terms of The Struts’ wheelhouse. I’ve always described The Struts as
having the sophistication of Queen mixed with the swagger of the Rolling
Stones. By the time we had started working up ‘Champagne,’ it went [into] a
couple different styles and took awhile to massage it to get to where it ended
up being.
At that point, we definitely wanted to have something that
was super sexy and had that kind of groove to it because we can do it and get
away with it. I think we can do it well and put our own spin on it. I love it
and am really proud of my lyrics on that one.
Q: Last August, the band
did a pair of drive-in gigs in Pennsylvania. How was that experience?
A: It was different, but
it was better than doing nothing. If we get the chance to do them again, I’m
sure we’ll jump at the chance because it’s nice to get up on the stage. It’s
great to be around our crew, which is our family away from home. And it’s nice
to see the fans, even if it’s at a distance. It was a really cool experience. Obviously,
you can’t beat the real thing. But it’s strange days.
Q: Because the band has
toured steadily throughout its career, do you think everyone is a lot tighter
musically than when you started?
A: Absolutely. I think
the album is a testament to that. We wouldn’t have been able to achieve what we
had without all of these years underneath our belts and the experience we’ve
gained through endless touring. I’m talking about 120-150 minimum shows a year.
It’s been like that for six years. You can definitely hear it in the music - the
way we all play together. We have all these sixth senses of what we like to do,
where to go and how we like to communicate.
Q: In the past, you’ve
opened for legendary acts like The Stones and The Who. Did you learn anything
about stage presence and keeping a crowd in the palm of your hand by watching
those legends?
A: I think I had [all the
fans] in the palm of my hand before we opened up for [those acts]. A lot of
that is because I’ve always approached being a quote front man the same
way ever since I was 15 or 16 years old.
I’ve always wanted to get peoples’ hands clapping. Of
course, I wasn’t the great singer I am now back then. But I had the tenacity - some
might call it cockiness - to dance around like a maniac and have this high-octane
energy as soon as I hit the stage. From every group, I do observe. There are
different things I’ve learned from all of them in little ways. It’s proven to
be great for us and educational, for sure.
Q: What goes through you
mind when you hear people like Dave Grohl, Joe Elliott and Robbie Williams saying
they are Struts fans?
A: It really is great and never stops to be surreal. My mum and dad have a printed canvas - a really amazing picture that a photographer we had when we went out with the Foo Fighters took of Dave Grohl hugging me onstage after we did a show. It’s up on their wall. I walked past it and I’m like, ‘Hell. I can’t believe that actually happened!’ [laughs] It’s a lovely distant memory.
The Struts photo by Beth Saravo, courtesy of Interscope Records
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