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03/13/2008 03:33 PM
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The Mozart effect is one that has been around for a long time. Studies suggest that when a child under age 3 is subject to the music of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, their brain development is increased.Whether or not the stories and studies prove anything, the question remains: Does music have an effect on people?Psychology professor [...]
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03/13/2008 11:34 AM
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She Wants Revenge

She Wants Revenge
Artist: She Wants Revenge
Genre(s): Alternative

She Wants Revenge Biography

Save Yourself

"We just wanted to make a record that would make girls dance or cry".

Justin sips his coffee, sits back in his chair and smiles. "Or both", Adam 12 chimes in, finishing his sentence .Justin gestures wildly, wanting to rephrase that last. "Not in some manipulative or malicious way, it’s just that it’s like the highest honor. What could be better than having someone want to cry, fuck, or get up and dance to your music?"

Adam - "We're both fans of music and we made the album we wanted to hear. Everything you get on record and live is very, very honest. And artistic output that is truthful can only elicit truthful responses… people know, the kids know when they’re being lied to, when something feels manufactured as opposed to being made. We are those kids."

Justin, who until now has been meticulously applying a She Wants Revenge Sticker to the table at which we’re sitting, suddenly speaks up.

"Yeah, and there’s a hundred bands doing mediocre period/genre music, but none of it makes me feel like I did when I was a kid sat in my room listening to The Queen is Dead or Purple Rain on the record player. It’s easy to capture the style of the music, but writing songs that speak to people is a very different thing".

Adam sips from his Pellegrino and talks in careful measured tones. It’s as if he’s the wise one, or at least the one less likely to pull a knife out mid-interview…."It’s very hip now to be into new-wave and post-punk and to know what contemporary bands are influenced by Gang of Four, but Justin and I were listening to all that shit IN the 80s! And besides, when we were growing up people called us fags for listening to Madonna, Prince and The Furs…but now everybody’s fronting like they always loved that shit, and I don’t mean guilty pleasure, I mean play list in your ipod..."

Justin laughs, then obviously wound up, jumps in."We can play spot the fakes if you want, we can call them all out by name….serious.".And they ARE serious. Still, I elect not to take the bait. If for no other reason, only because such grand pronouncements from new bands are usually just so much hype coupled with false bravado and the kind of raging testosterone that makes for good record sales and sound bites on their "YOU HEARD IT FIRST", but with these two I sense something far more sinister, and it’s statements like these that belie the two’s hip-hop roots. More than the clothes, which are more uniform black and vaguely militaristic than b-boy, and more than the beats, which though they speak of post hip-hop, probably owe more to Manchester than the South Bronx — it’s THE ATTITUDE that truly let’s slip the bands best kept secret and what may very well be their secret weapon — that they are two b-boys from the valley who came together to make hip-hop and somehow ended up making the best 80’s album we’ve never heard before.

Finally there is a record that makes you want to dance till the lights come on THEN go home, read the lyrics, and have fuck your partner.

Instead of making nostalgia rock, these two valley boys have unwittingly crafted a masterpiece of a record that will be looked at for years to come as nothing short of inventive, groundbreaking, pop-perfect dance darkness that will have future generations harkening back to their salad days of clubbing, make-outs, break-ups, and long nights.

Speaking of make-outs, a piece on S.W.R. wouldn’t be complete without mentioning the pronoun of the group; the "she" in she wants revenge.

From the notorious "girl-list" in the album’s liner notes, to the famous girlfriends, the public break-ups, and of course….the lyrics.

Adam fields this one first. "I knew we couldn’t escape this one. (Beat) - Look, passionate people are attracted to passionate people, artistic people are attracted to artistic people, no matter what the medium... The ones that are amazing at what they do usually become "famous" on some level and tend to hang in small circles... We DJ and hang out in these circles, so It's inevitable we would connect with some of them..."But do you ever date anyone that’s not famous?Justin — "that’s a stupid question".Adam - "Of course".Justin — "He’s lying".They laugh.So is there a specific girl that the songs are about, because the album seems to more or less they follow a thread - boy meets girl, boy gets girl, boy obsesses over girl, boy leaves girl, boy regrets leaving girl, boy obsesses over girl…
"That’s one interpretation, albeit the wrong one, but that’s ok. I won’t address the lyrics except to say that they are all about love. They are torch songs, standards really, ballads of lust and want -songs of love, obsession and sex. Basically everything I write is based around male-female interpersonal dynamics and the minutia that entails. To me it’s in the details. How did she smell? The bat of an eyelash, the uncomfortable pauses. That’s what I care about, love in all it’s forms"And the list of girl’s names?Adam- "We wanted to honor every girl we’ve ever had a crush on or had some sort of love affair with, either real or imagined - it’s a crush list. And each one of them is special and holds a place in our hearts to this day. It is a thank you note of sorts."Justin — "A love letter".

Got it. Are you at all worried what success could do to you, both musically and personally? I mean, in this day and age indie-cred is almost as important to kids as the music, so keeping that in mind, are you afraid of what could happen if your music "blows up"? Because let’s face it, you guys have like 4 or five singles on your album, there’s a lot of "hits" on there.

Justin laughs. "We’re going to be huge Johann. Seriously. And it’s not by accident, we want to be successful, it’s not a bad thing, and I’d be lying if I told you we didn’t want that. The fact is, we want to reach as many people as possible with our music, and if that means selling millions of records in order to do so, then I call upon the words of Happy Harry Hard-On and I say "so be it".

Adam — "Look, the bands we grew up wanting to be were not "INDIE" bands. Depeche Mode was on Mute, but they were fucking HUGE! We want to be huge too, but that doesn’t mean that we’re not willing to do it fan by fan, sweating our ass off in a van for the next few years to do so. People need to get back to the time when ROCK STAR wasn’t a dirty word. That’s an unfortunate outgrowth of the post-nirvana phenomena - the demonizing of the rock star. You can be a rock star in the best sense of the word and still be real, authentic and accessible to the people who got you there."

Sensing that we will never get off this topic, I turn back to the music, but before I can get out another question, the two have stood up, gathered their things and are about to leave when Justin lights a cigarette and says…

"Our music is a modern extension of a time in the late 70’s and early 80’s when music was colliding in ways it never had before. We’re talking about New Order hearing what Arthur Baker and Bambatta were doing in New York and what was going on with Chicago house, then taking that back to the UK and incorporating that into their dark Northern view of punk rock. Then there’s the birth of early hip-hop in NYC coinciding with the club music coming out of Danceteria, Nels, The Palladium, The Latin Quarter, and The Mudd Club. You had Madonna, Basquiat, Blondie, John Lurie, the New York City Breakers and the Rock Steady Crew. Liquid Liquid, James Black and ESG all in the same time and place - it’s unheralded. There’s been no other time in the culture of art and music where you could you be dancing to a Nile Rogers disco classic at Studio 54, then hop in a cab and ten minutes later be watching The Voidoids at Max’s Kansas City with Warhol, Bowie and Schnabel in attendance. This is what we are doing today - only there are no flashing camera’s or Legs Mc Neil’s following us around documenting the shit we’re doing"….Not yet maybe, not yet.

Johann Wellesley Daughters March 16, 2005
Sheffield Rock Times

"Sister"/"Out Of Control" is out now on Perfect Kiss Records
Cover Title Year Tracks Download album
She Wants Revenge : This Is Forever
This Is Forever 2007 13 Download album  

She Wants Revenge : Live Sesion
Live Sesion 2006 4 Download album  

She Wants Revenge : She Wants Revenge
She Wants Revenge 2005 12 Download album  

She Wants Revenge : These Things EP
These Things EP 4 Download album  




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