Mob rules

Bang Camaro gang up for round II
By BARRY THOMPSON  |  November 11, 2008

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BROS AND CONS: "We'd walk around with Bang Camaro shirts on, and people were like, 'You guys are assholes.' "

If you're seeking creative and/or social success in the Boston rock scene, there are certain faux pas you must avoid at all cost. Don't appear to be having too much fun at a show. Don't dance. Keep that facial expression neutral. If you absolutely must rock out, simply nod along to the beat, but never to the point of pedestrian "head-banging." And never, ever wear the T-shirt of the band you're going to see. Don't even dream of wearing the T-shirt of a band you play in.

Maybe this all sounds counter-productive, even self-nullifying, but it's very necessary. Back when irony was still alive and kicking, the overlords got cocky and lifted the rules for Bang Camaro, and look what happened. This past August, Bang opened up one of the Lollapalooza main stages for an audience of approximately 3000. Meanwhile, your roommate's cookie-cutter indie-pop project will be lucky if seven people watch his set at P.A.'s this Tuesday. It's just so unfair . . .

"We remembered watching videos when we were young, where Metallica would always wear their own shirts. We're like, 'Fuck it! We're going to bring that back!' " recalls lead guitarist Bryn Bennett while lounging in the restaurant of the Middle East upstairs, the band having just returned from a Halloween performance in Orlando. "We'd walk around with Bang Camaro shirts on and people were like, 'You guys are assholes.' "

"We'd show up at the bar and start high-fiving each other," adds Alejandro "Alex" Necochea, the other guitar lead.

Bennett: "It's weird how, now that we've been playing for a while, people look at us and they're like, 'Oh, it's Bang Camaro. They've been in video games. They're sellouts,' or whatever. When we first started, we were just being assholes and loving it."

It would take some balls just to conceptualize Bang Camaro — a glam-metal/'70s-arena-rock throwback with a choir of lead singers numbering six to 20 bros per show. But Bennett and Necochea — formerly of bygone Boston indie acts the Model Sons and the Good North, respectively — were sufficiently enthused to rock, despite their correct assessment of Bang's inherent ridiculousness and their incorrect assumption that everyone would hate them. Before anyone knew what Guitar Hero was (and, yes, they understand they owe their ability to tour nationally to Harmonix), before "Don't Stop Believing" was in the finale of The Sopranos, Bang Camaro humbly set out to play songs about the songs that had entranced them before they had quite come of age. Like, before they had time to become self-aware enough to know what snark is. The real irony of Bang Camaro is their lack of irony . . . well, except for the 20 lead singers. That's way ironic.

"All of a sudden, we had this vehicle to write hard-rock songs, which was awesome," says Bennett. "We were like little kids in the candy store. Like, 'I'm going to write a riff like Metallica! And record it! And I want this one to sound like GNR or Dokken!' And grabbing things like riffs we wrote when we were, like, 14."

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Related: Bang Camaro fight the business of rock, Players only, Soundgarden | Telephantasm, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Paradise Rock Club, Swearing and Invective, Guitar Hero,  More more >
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