Eagulls: The Best of What’s Next
Eagulls wouldn’t be here without the Internet.
The Leeds-based punk quintet—guitarist Mark Goldsworthy, drummer Henry Ruddel, guitarist Liam Matthews, bassist Tom Kelly and singer George Mitchell—are yet another band in a long lineage of acts that broke out on the strength of digital buzz. Just four years into their career and with their debut full-length still forthcoming, Eagulls are already budding industry darlings with stints at SXSW and CMJ under their belts—not to mention the backing of Partisan Records, the label set to release their self-titled debut on March 4. But as much as the Internet has done to speed Eagulls’s rise, it also risks getting the band stuck in a narrative rut, doomed forever to answer for the shit-talking open letter they posted to their blog last year in the wake of their inaugural SXSW appearance.
Since then, there’s been much discussion about the nature and implications of the letter, which called out beach bands, the press, music industry honchos, bands with girls in them and pretty much everyone who isn’t in Eagulls. Was the letter satisfyingly “punk”? Or were Eagulls just trying to parade their “punk” credentials in a cynical attempt to get their names on our lips? What’s wrong with having girls in your band?
All that think-piecey head clutching, however, is beside the point. The point being that Eagulls make delightfully loose, melodic, sneering music. Fortunately, as those of us in the know scramble to come up with a new angle on the state of punk music and Eagulls’s place in it, Mitchell and his cohorts have kept their focus squarely where it belongs.
“Tom’s walking around the Partisan Records office with a baseball bat right now. Is that punk?” Mitchell asks with a jeer audible over the telephone line. It’s January, and he and the band are on one of the first of what’s sure to be many trips to New York, for a handful of gigs.
“It’s just one of them things. [Punk’s] meant to be the one genre that’s supposed to be lawless. But then there’s all these transparent rules about what you can wear, or how you’re supposed to act. I don’t get it.”
Too much attention too early in a career can be a real mind-fuck, stunting an artist’s growth with the weight of all the eyes on them. But Mitchell and the rest of the band seem unfazed, maintaining a playful attitude, open demeanor and pleasantly nonchalant position on what the world outside their creative machine thinks about them. But is that punk?
“It’s like Chinese whispers,” Mitchell says. “People obviously see you online or at a show, and they don’t talk to you. God knows what people think of me. But I think we’re friendly. We like to talk to people. We’re not gonna sit there stone-faced and be like, ‘Ugh.’ That’s what the music’s for.”