By Dave Satterwhite
Apr 22, 2016 16:01
Soaked in sweat and spotlight, Wil Wagner looks like he just got off the Roaring Rapids ride at Great America, his bootleg Kendrick Lamar t-shirt so drenched you’d have to wring it out into a kiddie pool. “We have to go now,” he says. “But please stick around. I want to talk to each and every one of you.” Immediately upon leaving the stage, he grabs me and says we should do the interview now, while he’s got a good fifteen minutes of post-show adrenalin.
Nearly twice my size, draped with his stage towel like an albino Bedouin, Wagner leads me through the all-smiles, all-ages crowd, graciously accepting high fives and back pats of adoration. We descend the stairs to the basement mop closet, adjoining the Beat Kitchen’s truly covetable green room area, where he promptly changes into a fresh Hard Girls t-shirt and pops open a beer on a stray strip of metal framing. About half an hour ago, he told the crowd tonight that he was worried that this tour would be “embarrassing.” I ask him how sincere he was.
“Very,” says Wagner. “The last four times we’ve been here we’ve played to big rooms where people just didn’t know who we were, so I tend to keep low expectations. But it’s been better than my wildest expectations so far. That was like the fifth or sixth show that’s sold out.”
On this, their first headlining U.S. tour, the Smith Street Band rolled the dice against unknowable odds. While they’re no strangers to sold-out crowds, their American audiences have all been by proxy, the benefits of covetable supporting slots on the tours of far more popular acts. Until now, Wagner and co. have had no mechanism to gauge an accurate figure of their stateside audience. But the results have proven staggering.
“We’ve been so fucking spoiled. We toured with Frank Turner, the Front Bottoms, AJJ, playing 3,000 capacity theaters with three dressing rooms, a washing machine, a chef cooking for everyone… so with this tour, whatever was happening it was not gonna be playing to thousands and thousands of people every night and getting treated like fuckin’ royalty just because we’re on the bill. I was hoping we’d get like fifty people out in New York and Chicago and LA, and if we get ten, twenty people in the smaller towns that’d be fucking awesome. But the turnouts have been unreal. And talking to the kids after the shows… I feel really inspired and rejuvenated after this tour.”
When he performs, bounding about the stage to his own melodies as if possessed by some demon of empowering catharsis, his incredulous grin routinely returning as a cough to a sick man, Wagner is the living, breathing character of his songs. He is lovesick, insatiable, knowingly imperfect in the way we’d all like to be—a beatified, heroic mess. His songs are little monuments to the depression and anxiety we face so often they become parts of ourselves, little sanctuaries to slip into and worship when the cruel wind of reality gets too dense and prickly. As their narrator, his lyrics thick with that endearing coat of Aussie drawl, Wagner’s role is that of translator, giving voice to those familiar yet shunned feelings.
Here in this mop closet, I get more than a sense—I am told outright—that Wagner is aware of this character. In spite of his post-show adrenalin, as we speak, I can tell that my questions are not just ideas that Wagner has parsed out in previous interviews, but in his own free time. Perhaps all the time, it seems, he remains concerned. He’s a natural onstage but he’s a genius interviewee, the glint in his eye slowed to a steady beam as he breaks down how the Smith Street Band has remained so accessible in the face of rapidly increasing attention.
“Between the first record and the second record, I was very preoccupied with trying to write a song that would be popular. I wrote this whole record that was just shit. We scrapped pretty much all of it, nine or ten songs for what I thought would be the follow-up to our first record that just reeked of ‘I’m trying to write songs that will be on the radio.’ Some people can do that really well but I’m not that kind of songwriter. I can portray emotions that are very personal to me. I guess traditional songwriting, I can’t really do. So that was a big thing from the first record to the second record, freaking out that people were going to hear it.”
When most songwriters blow up, they fall victim to the tendency to read reviews and try to emulate the media’s reductive image of themselves. Disastrous, self-conscious follow-up records are the result, usually snowballing into discographies of self-referential garbage that leave fans sick with nostalgia for the early years, when they still had heart, pain, talent. It’s a common problem, one that’s often simply the result of the newfound, idyllic life of a touring musician, nearly devoid of relatable subject matter for the average listener.