TORONTO, ON*–If you ever wondered what your favorite pop punk band would sound grown up, look no further.

RoyalTusk_026

Royal Tusk are two parts members of the (now-defunct) band Ten Second Epic, supplemented by a weathered gang of musicians. Their debut EP, Mountain, was released June 10th via Hidden Pony Records. The Hamilton, ON-based record label celebrated its fifth anniversary during this yearโ€™s NXNE at the Horseshoe Tavern. We caught up with frontman Danielย Carriere and bassist Sandyย MacKinnon at the party on Friday; dialogue below.

Are you all from Edmonton? Are you still based out of there?
Dan, Sandy: Yes.

Whatโ€™s happening in Edmonton right now?
Sandy: Iโ€™ll tell you โ€“ itโ€™s June 20th.
Dan: Isnโ€™t tomorrow summer solstice?

Is it?
Sandy: It is! But only in Edmonton. Nowhere else. [laughs] Our days are way longer than they are in Toronto, actually. Because weโ€™re so far north, the sun actually stays out a little longer than it does here.

Alright, Iโ€™ll take it.
Sandy: Just call me a science man.

So howโ€™d you feel about the city growing up?
Dan: Oh, love[d] it. Itโ€™s a cool city, very blue collar, down-to-earth. I mean, youโ€™re going to get your fair share of conservative, intolerant-type people anyway.
Sandy: Me and Dan grew up in the same neighbourhood; you could throw a punch by the time you were five.

Was that because you had to, then?
Sandy: Nah, it was all because you wanted to.
Dan: I had to, he wanted to.

How do you feel about it now?
Sandy: It is what it is. Itโ€™s still a super rough city, but I like it. I like the hockey team.

I was just about to ask that: how do you feel about the Oilers?
Sandy: Well, theyโ€™re dog shit, but I mean, like Iโ€ฆ

Sam Gagner went to my high school.
Sandy: Was he a nice fellow? Mr. Cool? Walking around collecting high-fives?

I wouldnโ€™t know; he was a few classes ahead of me! Itโ€™s great that youโ€™re able to play in Saskatchewan and across the prairies. That part of the country tends to be neglected by non-local performers, who go from Vancouver to Toronto to Montreal and nowhere else.
Dan: Iโ€™ve found that some of the best fans and supportive people come from those cities where people appreciate you showing up.
Sandy: If you enjoy being in a band, you enjoy playing, right? It shouldnโ€™t be a burden to play in cities where people want to see you play.

How do you think this affects the musical style of the prairies? I know we have the internet and all, but what did you grow up listening to?
Sandy: Punk and heavy metal; smaller bands that always played in the cities.
Dan: Edmonton isnโ€™t the cultural centre of the world, but it actually has a great music scene.

Thatโ€™s promising. [Actually, The International Jazz Festival is this weekend and Cashmere Catโ€™s in Edmonton on Sunday. Itโ€™s more happening than youโ€™d think.] But letโ€™s talk about Royal Tusk. Just for the record, who are you and what do you do?
Dan: Iโ€™m Daniel and I play guitar and sing.
Sandy: Iโ€™m Sandy and I play bass. [with Dan] Weโ€™re Royal Tusk.

Why โ€œRoyal Tuskโ€? Is there a story?
Dan: Itโ€™s pretty censored. We canโ€™t really share it.
Sandy: There was an orgy. There were a lot of fireworks. If you like red wine, you will not like this story.

Boo, I love red wine. Now the first thing I thought when I listened to Mountain was, “this is not Ten Second Epic.” Not that I was expecting it to be. Itโ€™s catchy; is there anything in particular that you explored on this EP thatโ€™s worth mentioning?
Dan: Juxtaposed to Ten Second Epic?

Sure. Just anything new.
Dan: We didnโ€™t have a foresight to shoot at any one kind of music. Itโ€™s just what happens when you get different guys in a room playing. You get a different sound. TSE was more of a rehearsed performance; you donโ€™t really improvise. This is looser; the guys will change their parts.

Youโ€™ve used the phrase โ€œplayer-orientedโ€ previously. From the sounds of it, it sounds like group-writing. What exactly do you mean by that?
Dan: In some formats, you canโ€™t change your part because it fucks everyone up. But in this band, thereโ€™s always something interesting and creative that happens during a show that youโ€™re not expecting. Sandy and I live together, we flesh out the ideas, and we bring it to the guys.

Any new styles?
Dan: Maybe a different kind of vibe with how we approach the guitars. Maybe a less is more thing. A focus on tone.

Thereโ€™s a folk influence, actually.
Dan: Oh, I love folk music. Itโ€™s interesting that came through, itโ€™s a pretty upbeat record. Itโ€™s interesting you caught that.

Oh, it did. [Come through. Especially on “Shadow of Love”.]
Sandy: With TSE, we were more concerned about sounding massive.

https://soundcloud.com/hiddenpony/sets/royal-tusk-mountain

Who did the album art?
Dan: This guy named Jud Haynes. He used to play in Wintersleep and he lives in Newfoundland; really great guy doing graphic art. We met him through the label and jumped on the opportunity to get him to work with us.

From what I understand, Royal Tusk originally started as Danโ€™s project. Did Ten Second Epic calling it splits cause you to change it from a solo endeavour to a full-fledged band, or did you always have that in mind and just no time to execute it?
Dan: Iโ€™ve always wanted to get a band together and sing in it.
Sandy: Dan had been writing songs for years and years and years. When he asked me to join, I was more than stoked to do it.

While Ten Second Epic was still going on? And then afterwards it all fell together?
Dan: TSE ending definitely made room on the calendar.

In this interview from May 2010 when Ten Second Epic first debuted in the UK, you liken TSE to โ€œa soup: whatever ingredients you put in, it tastes like that.โ€
Sandy: I soundโ€ฆ was I intoxicated? Iโ€™m going to go with a good yes.
Dan: โ€œMy nameโ€™s Daniel and Iโ€™m the guitarist. Two days ago we partied but last night we took it easy.โ€
Sandy: We sound like total tools.
Dan: Wow, these guys are insightful. [laughs]

Iโ€™m going to ask you the same question about Royal Tusk–who provides what?
Sandy: Josh is like a fine cheese, like a you-have-to-climb-a-Greek mountain cheese. I would say Dan is the beef stock, which is what the soup is cooked in. Iโ€™d like to compare myself to a rare lotus leaf that is coming into the soup to make it intenseโ€ฆ but itโ€™s base, so you can take it or leave it.
Dan: Kurtis is like four pills of MDMA, and Mike–
Sandy: Mike is like a little sprinkling of weed.
Dan: Weed and McFlurry from McDonalds.

โ€ฆ sounds like a bitch cup.
Dan: Iโ€™d try it. I try everything once.
Sandy: Thatโ€™s what life is all about.

Pretty much. How did you find Hidden Pony?
Dan: The guy who recorded our record was friends with the owner, and shared it. The guy seemed to dig, so I came down to Hamilton, we had a little boy-date and we got along. Soon after that, we had a deal.

Do you feel as though youโ€™ve had a head start this time around, with a decade of experience?
Sandy: I would say weโ€™ve had a bit of a head start from me and Dan having been on the road for the last twelve years.
Dan: Thatโ€™s the toughest thing.
Sandy: Itโ€™s finding your groove. Some of the other guys might not have had that sort of experience, but theyโ€™re learning. Me and Dan may have been the most โ€œabsent-mindedโ€ ones in TSEโ€”
Dan: Now weโ€™re band dads.
Sandy: Itโ€™s the blind leading the blind.

What advice would you give to other artists starting out, especially from a place like Edmonton thatโ€™s not a cultural centre?
Dan: Do it if you like it. Donโ€™t expect anything, because youโ€™re not going to get anything for a while. It sounds like the most jaded thing to say, but really, you should like it when itโ€™s shitty. And if you donโ€™t, get a different job. If you donโ€™t like it, I donโ€™t want to hear you play.
Sandy: At the end of the day, these kids think theyโ€™re going to get a record deal and wind up in Mรถtley Crueโ€™s tour bus.
Dan: On Mรถtley Crueโ€™s tour bus! Doing blow off Vince Neilโ€™s ass!
Sandy: But in all seriousness, itโ€™s the most fun you can have, but take it for what it is, because it could be all gone the next day.
Dan: Weโ€™re all in this together.

Sounds like youโ€™ve โ€œbeen there, done that.โ€ This next question might put you between a rock and a hard place. What is your favourite Nickelback song?
Dan: Itโ€™s the one where heโ€™s like, โ€œnobody wants to be the last one there.โ€ Pretty epic tune. And I like the one where heโ€™s like, โ€œI want to be a baseball, I can play basketballโ€ฆโ€

Youโ€™re butchering that one. Isnโ€™t that โ€œI wanna be a rockstar?โ€
Sandy: Whatโ€™s that one I was laughing about while we were driving? Itโ€™s like, โ€œYou look so much better with something in your mouth?โ€

Oh, shoot. Itโ€™s either โ€œAnimalโ€ or โ€œS.E.X.,โ€ I think. [Not quite. Turns out, thereโ€™s actually a song titled, โ€œSomething in Your Mouth.โ€] Alright, finish the sentence: if you werenโ€™t doing music, youโ€™d beโ€ฆ
Dan: How do you type this sound? Errrrgggghhhhhโ€ฆ. Errggghhhhh.

Thatโ€™s going to slow this whole [transcribing] process down, Dan. You just screwed this up.
Sandy: Iโ€™d be sleeping on the street.

So. New EP. Upcoming music video. These Hidden Pony showcases, a mini-tour, and a larger nationwide tour towards the end of the summer. What follows?
Dan: If we havenโ€™t gotten this across, we just like touring. So another tour. Also, weโ€™d like to get into the states instead of just falling into the graveyard of Canadian legends.

Do you write on tour?
Dan: A bit, yeah. There is a time to jam. Itโ€™s a big party foul to bring a guitar out when it shouldn’t come out yet.

Can you pinpoint that time?
Sandy: No, let someone else do it.

[sirens; an emergency vehicle is coming down the road]
Sandy: Okay, I gotta get going. I think theyโ€™re after me.

Weโ€™re about wrapped up anyway. Good luck at This Ainโ€™t Hollywood tonight, and thanks for your company!

*This summer, The B-Side reports from locations worldwide including Berlin, London, Los Angeles, and Toronto.

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