

Well, Turnover’s new record is going to be my Pumpkins’ Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness it’s time periods of Records to me, like Bush's 16 Stone Smashing Citizen just put out a new record that’s incredible. I just went and saw Pianos Become The TeethĪnd they’re incredible. So it was a catalyst for me to immerse myself in so many “newer” “You know, I refuse to believe that.” I feel like every generation of “Man, there’s no more good music, it’s over” and I was like, Was overhearing this conversation between these two older dudes in bands , Started to check out all these new bands that were coming out at Warped Tour. And then I startedīeing like- “I don’t want to be that jaded, old guy that doesn’t acceptĬ&S: Was there a specific thing that catalyzed that?ĭAVEY: Yeah- I was at Warped Tour last year and I had already Haven’t listened to anything new in years.”ĭAVEY: And that’s the thing, I hadn’t either. Listen to music, I’m around music all the time."Ĭ&S: I’ve talked to some artists that are like, "Well, we Not that I ever didn’t like it, but touring in a band it’s veryĮasy to get jaded on things and it’s very easy to say, “Man, I don’t wanna I grew up on, and that transitioned in to punk rock in high school and hardcoreĪnd metal and I got in to all that kind of stuff. Pantera and Nirvana- I went to middle school in the late 90s so I was a littleīit late to the grunge, alternative scene, but it was still there.

Gonna listen to whatever they listen to.” It was bands like The Pixies and “Oh, well these areĬool guys, these are the guys that I love and I look up to- I’m Knowing at all what any of the bands sounded like. Kids and look at their band shirts and I used to go buy those records, not When I was in middle school, I would look at the high school Or made fun of for it- that was a music kid. I was one of the only kids that went to my school- though not bullied “alternative music scene” wasn’t very large when I went to high On Vanna’s 2014 album Void, Muise opened up about some incredibly personal topics, and in talking about “Digging”, he has no hesitation when telling fans and listeners, “I almost killed myself.” Since its release, fans have reacted in ways the band perhaps never expected- but upon hearing that they’ve impacted someone, Muise says his first reaction is to hug them and “physically let them know that I’m glad they’re here.”įrom why he opened up to how he fell in love with music all over again, read on for the Inner & Outer Portrait of Davey Muise.ĬIRCLES & SOUNDWAVES: What music have you personally connectedĭavey: I’m old, I went to high school a long time ago the I learned then that he’s very well-spoken and direct, and always passionate about what he’s talking about. Davey Muise of Vanna is one of those when I first interviewed him nearly three years ago, as much as I knew about the band I had no idea what to expect of him as a person. It’s an amazing thing, but what’s important to note is that sometimes the interviews that have stuck out the most in my memory- the ones that have shaped me as an interviewing and a person, and the ones that have reminded me why I love doing this. Since I first started interviewing bands in the spring of 2011, I have done hundreds and hundreds of interviews. The goal? To showcase who they are from all angles, both inside and out. Inner & Outer Portraits features in-depth conversations exploring personal experiences and the connections that we all feel with music, in combination with photographs of the subject.
Turnover peripheral vision tattoo series#
This piece is a part of an interview series called Inner & Outer Portraits. Photos and interview by Molly Louise Hudelson.
