Having endured the full gambit of clichéd rockstar triumphs and hardships in their 15-year career (financial woes! break-ups! rehab! reunions!), the unapologetically outlandish classic rock-revivalist outfit known as The Darkness are back with Last of Our Kind, a fourth installment of their uniquely glorious brand of throwback face-meltery. And this time, they’re throwing their gaze 1,100 years back, delivering 10 tracks of medieval-rock with enough mandolin to make Nicolas Cage blush. From “Barbarian”, which details the death of Edmund the Martyr, to “Roaring Waters”, which doesn’t shy away from a good poop-deck joke, Last of Our Kind makes a strong case for earning The Darkness a second Ivor Novelo Award for songwriting.
On the eve of the new album storming American shores, Nerdist had a chance to speak with wily frontman, Justin Hawkins, a man on a many-headed mission. Better yet, call it a crusade. A crusade to free musicians from the stifling shackles of radio-friendly meekness. A crusade to re-blanket our cargo vans with murals of helmet-headed warriors and buxom maidens. A crusade to… persuade people to eat conscientious and balanced diets? That’s right, and he couldn’t be more serious, or silly, about it. Read why below.
Nerdist: The Darkness reunited in 2011, and subsequently released âHot Cakesâ, but there seems to be a lot of buzz about Last of Our Kind being the quote-unquote âReturn of The Darkness.â What’s your take on that?
Justin Hawkins: All of that stuffâs quite tedious, if Iâm honest. Itâs just a fourth album! We werenât even apart for that long. I mean, everyone says it was five years, but actually it wasnât. You know, Dan and I started working together again in 2009, so it was only three years at the most, you know? Itâs all been played up a little bit towards that angle, but for us itâs really, [chuckles] really tedious. But, you know, itâs great. Iâm glad there is buzz about the album. Weâve worked really hard on it and weâre delighted itâs getting positive feedback.
N: The Darkness has always had this light-hearted self-awareness about itâs place in the spectrum of current rock musicâhow you have no peers in this generation, how you guys are kind of an anachronism, having more in common with bands from thirty years ago like Thin Lizzy, AC/DC, Queen. Is that what you mean with the title track, âLast of Our Kindâ?
JH: Itâs about the community of people who appreciate the important things in rock, as I see them. And that means nonconformity. It means guitar solos. It means doing whatâs right for the composition and not what youâre supposed to do. Itâs about the feeling. The world of rock-and-roll, as I know it, is diminishing, and I think itâs because the mainstream doesnât allow that kind of virtuoso guitar playing, and it shames people out of celebrating the glory of classic rock. And so our numbers are dwindling. New bands that come through, theyâre either gonna be completely retrospectively doing rock and roll as a tribute, or theyâre gonna be doing what they need to do to get on the radio and make a good living out of music. And that sucks. Our numbers are diminishing, and we need to stick together, because we are the last of our kind. If we roll over and die, then this particular genre will die with us, and that would be a disaster.Â
“The world of rock-and-roll, as I know it, is diminishing, and I think itâs because the mainstream doesnât allow for virtuoso guitar playing.”
N: I heard you do a lot of your songwriting in the gym.
JH: Haha, I used to, yeah. I donât really go to the gym anymore. But I run outside; I like to collect the wind in my beard. The writing process is different now; we all spend time together focusing on what we are actually doing, as opposed to me taking the opportunity to bench-press my own weight whilst coming up with an empty ballad. It wasnât always the most sensible approach. It was quite a triumphant testosterone-laden rock bit, but it wasnât very helpful.
N: The artwork for âBarbarianââthe animated lyric-video and the accompanying poster— are fantastic. Lots of characters. Who was the artist?
JH: The artist is a man called Nick Roche, who is a friend of the band. He is an Irish guy, whoâs done a lot of work for Marvel and draws Transformers comics, but most importantly he does The Darkness stuff. Haha.
N: Is there a chance we will see “The Darkness vs. Ivan the Boneless” as a comic book or cartoon down the line?
JH: We havenât spoken about it, but youâve just given me a brilliant idea. Thereâs a good possibility we would do something like that. Iâll wait to ask Nick if there is any chance to explore that. Iâm not quite sure, but I got millions of ideas and heâs got tons of talent. Maybe itâs something we can get along.
“I feel like the best party is an intergalactic space party.”
N: If you did something like that, we at Nerdist would go crazy.
JH: Ha! Cool.
N: Permission to Land had a spacey, extraterrestrial magic to it. One Way Ticket to Hell⦠and Back had a touch of demonry. Now, Last of Our Kind is influenced by Nordic mythology. Tell me, from your experience, who parties harder: aliens, demons, or Vikings?
JH: Wow. Thatâs a really great question. Actually the demons party the hardest, but thereâs something quite sour about it. You get a terrible headache when you party in hell. It must be the heat. I feel like the best party is an intergalactic space party, because youâre really exploring existence. The spacial magnitude of it is celebrated, and the possibility of an endless myriad of experience available to you. I would say Norsemen, theyâre pretty limited in what they do âa lot of raping, a bit of pillaging, drinking of meed or one of those other medieval beer-drinks. In space, the world is your oyster, and thereâs plenty more fish in the sea, as it were.
N: And how are you celebrating the release of the new album?
JH: When it drops on Monday, Iâll be in Germany, actually. And then Iâll be getting a plane back to England, and expect weâll go to a nice meal. Hopefully, the record company will treat me to something delicious.
N: Will the âBlast of Our Kind Tourâ be making itâs way to the States?
JH: Yes, it definitely will. What weâre trying to establish is the routing, because we either want to go to Australia before or after. I can promise you that, quite soon, weâll be in America and touring in the way that only The Darkness knows how.
N: One last question: Is there anything you wish people asked in interviews and never do?
JH: I feel like Iâve covered a lot of ground in my career as an interviewee. I suppose if there was one thing, I always like it when people ask me about sexuality. I want the opportunity to reprimand somebody, you know what I mean? Itâs a lot of fun. It happened once and I was able to sort of maintain ambiguity, and made the interviewer feel awful âdownright awfulâ for having asked. So that makes me question my motives. I want to be asked those things just so I can tell people off, and then make myself feel like Iâve got the moral high-ground with my ambiguous answer.
N: Haha, catch them in their pre-conceived notions?
JH: Iâm here to promote albums!
N: Hey, if you have a soap boxâ¦
JH: Yes, Iâm afraid if there was a soap box available, Iâd stand upon it and say, âWhy is it so difficult to create food that doesnât have animal products in it?â Why is it always necessary to use butter and cream, fish, meat, eyeballs, brains, bones, hands? Human hands? Why do we eat this stuff? Itâs quite obvious you donât need all that protein. And I think itâs misleading, saying âprotein,â when what youâre really talking about is something that will undoubtedly âwithout correct exercise and supervisionâ end up manifesting itself in your physique as fat. Haha. We donât need that. You donât need to kill animal-people to achieve fatness. You know what I mean?
“Be nice to animals and stop eating them.”
N: Absolutely.
JH: Iâm not âfattist,â by the way. Iâm not one of those people that likes to body-shame folks. Iâm just making the point that our food groups are incorrectly labeled. Thereâs protein in all vegetables. You just need to eat a bit more of it if you want to become Arnold Schwarzenegger. If you donât want to become Arnold Schwarzenegger, you donât need to be eating that stuff. There needs to be a re-education about what these food groups are, what they mean, and what you actually need to survive. I think once that happens, the world will be a much less precarious place. If I had one thing to say, it would be: âBe nice to animals, and stop eating them.â
N: Itâs fun and refreshing to see this sensitive side of you, considering, as you said, youâre music is often testosterone-driven.
JH: Hahaha, I do have an over-active testosterone gland, but I use it for love-making, not killing.
The Darkness is founding members Justin Hawkins, his brother and guitarist Dan Hawkins, bassist Frankie Poullain, and recent addition drummer Rufus Tiger Taylor (son of Queen’s Roger Taylor). Last of Our Kind is available everywhere Tuesday, June 2nd. Hey, that’s today!