When Melbourne punks Press Club arrived with their debut album ‘Late Teens’ last year, it prompted an avalanche of praise for their ability to perfectly capture what it’s like to be, well, in your late teens. On their second outing ‘Wasted Energy’, they’re looking out to the world around them. Drummer Frank Lees tells us more.
Hello Frank, how's it going? Are you good? It must be an exciting time for you, with a new album.
I'm very good, I've recently fractured my shoulder, so I'm just on light physical duties, which is nice for a change. I'll have to get back to full form before we head out on tour again, but I'll be alright.
Yes, we are excited about the new album! We've had a heap of positive reactions, so we're quietly basking in that. All in all, I think everyone in the band is feeling very loved and excited to be touring this new record.
Tell us about the record - when did you start working on it, and what was the process of piecing it together like? Did you set out with any firm initial goals?
So we started writing songs for this record not long after we finished up with the first album, 'Late Teens'. We had grand plans at that time to try and release multiple albums a year, but we weren't quite organised enough to pull off a feat like that. It also got pretty busy after the release of 'Late Teens', with touring and gigs and things, so the process slowed down a hell of a lot. When I think about it like that, it kind of makes sense that I think this album sounds more diverse musically, because the songs were written in various stages in our lives over the last couple of years.
This one must've been on the way to being finished at the point you released 'Late Teens' in the UK, was that a bit weird?
'Wasted Energy' was basically done by the time we got over to Europe in April, so our focus was in two places at once. We hadn't been in that situation before, so it was a little weird. Although we had to go back and relearn some stuff off that first album. So it sort of gave a new lease on life on a few of those songs. We never thought people engaged with the single 'My Body's Changing' compared to a couple of other singles off 'Late Teens', but when we got over to Europe, we had such a huge response to that song live. People go a bit mental for it actually, which always gets us riled up.