We meet Black Country punk duo Big Special in an east London boozer. Singer Joe Hicklin and Callum Moloney are in town to launch their new single āDesperate Breakfastā at Billyās Cafe, just round the corner. Theyāll be jetting off to play showcase festival Reeperbahn in Hamburg the next day, but theyāre far more accustomed to the scenes of staving off monotony in pubs and greasy spoons than all this newfound music industry lark.
āI toast my tea in mourning ā for a morning come too soon,ā pines frontman Joe Hicklin on the life-weary new single, spitting acid in the face of an unwanted day of grind in another loud and heady dose of reality.
āItās about getting up, shovelling a breakfast down and going to do a day that you donāt want to do,ā Hicklin tells NME. āThatās the most common thing amongst us all. Itās about how shit the cycle of all that is. It exists whether youāve got a job or not ā itās a cycle of desperation.ā
With drummer Callum Moloney from Birmingham and Hicklin from the neighbouring town of Walsall, the pair first met as what they affectionately describe as āchildhood sweetheartsā in college back when they were 17. Having performed together under various guises, their chemistry and love of writing together kept them creatively bound ā returning to form Big Special a decade later to beat the boredom and frustration of lockdown.
Now with hype and radio support building along with some sold-out UK shows, it looks like that ācycle of desperationā could become a thing of the past, as we meet Big Special to talk about shitty jobs, politics, and what keeps them moving.
NME: Hello Big Special. What can you tell us about you landed on this sound that smashes punk with a little bit of soul?Ā
Hicklin: āIād done folk and Americana-type stuff for about 15 years on my own with an acoustic guitar. Iād always been writing poems as well, but kept it separate. A good few years ago I remember saying to my wife, āIād love to shout my poems outā. I never wanted it to just be poems with music underneath, and I wanted to do it in my accent. Callum was the only person I wanted to do it with. It really breathed life into everything to get Callum on the drums.
āIām not comparing us to these guys because that would be narcissistic, but Tom Waits, Nick Cave and Neil Young ā whatever they do, itās just them; whether itās a quiet piano ballad or a mad fucking experimental thing. We knew that if we got the central voice of the band down, then we could do whatever we wanted.ā
Across your three singles āShithouseā, āThis Here Aināt Waterā and āDesperate Breakfastā, youāre looking to show where social concerns meet your personal lives. What does it take for an idea to become a lyric?Ā
Hicklin: āYou canāt always say something new, and you donāt want to. You can talk about your life and people relate to it because youāve said it in your way. I like gothic imagery, I like dark imagery and things like that, but I like talking about the normal stuff. Itās the difference between painting a picture of something and taking a photo.
āāShithouseā is about a breakdown and hard times, but someone thought it was about me seeing someone again and getting into a fight. Itās funny how people hear things. I like people adding their own meaning. Thatās class, because it shows people are really listening.ā
āDesperate Breakfastā deals with the start of a very sucky day. Whatās the shittest job youāve ever had?
Moloney: āIām a trade plate driver, and thatās pretty crap. I used to work in Wetherspoons, but that was a laugh. Working in posh bars and restaurants is so much worse because they make you feel so small. Warehouse work being on my own stacking boxes for 12 hours a day, that sucked. You go and see your mates and youāve forgotten how to speak to people.ā
Hicklin: āI was a labourer with my stepdad and my brother, who also do waste removal. Itās also the best job Iāve had in the sense that youāre not under some faceless boss, but it was the hardest work. To clean a bath full of shit out into a wheelie bin and get it down the stairs of a terraced houseā¦ My worst job was probably working in a call centre for home insurance, but Tesco was also quite demeaning. I used to sandblast stones, I was a trainee barber. Weāve done a bit of everything. This song is about being in a greasy spoon facing down all those bad jobs.ā
Moloney: āI have no negative feelings about it. I actually have more respect for the people that do it than I do for anyone else because they donāt have a choice. Whatever is hard about this, weāre not digging holes, stacking shelves or serving some stuck-up bastard at a posh bar.ā
How would you describe the politics of Big Special?Ā
Hicklin: āThatās a good question. I donāt want to sound like a dickhead or like weāre above our station, but weāre just on the side of the people. All of the music comes from a personal place and is about experience and everything around it. Obviously I fucking hate the Tories, I fucking hate Keir Starmer, itās all against the people. There is nothing there looking to look after the people. The working class might as well be completely fucking invisible. Itās all wank.
“I just wish it would all burn down so we could start again. At least it would be different. Every day thereās less and less hope to seek, and it breeds either ignorance, confusion or hatred.”
Moloney: āIām not saying weāve got the answers, but itās not working. Thatās apparent to everyone. Anyone who is disenfranchised against this system built against us is going to understand our music.ā
What do you see when you look out into the audience of a Big Special show?Ā
Moloney: āA bunch of fucking angels! This is the first band Iāve been in where I can comfortably say that people actively want to listen to us and we donāt have to force it! Theyāre endlessly supportive and beautiful souls.ā
Do you get frustrated with certain comparisons being a two-piece? ‘Are you Sleaford Mods or The White Stripes’?
Moloney: āI always thought I was a bit of a Meg White, so Iāll take that! Because we play to track and weāre a duo thatās so synonymous with the punk sound and the punk look, weāve been waiting for someone to be like, āWhereās the shredding solo?ā But no one gives a fuck. That attitude has gone of people saying, āI need to see someone play thatā. Weāre very emotive while we play and we put 100 per cent into it.”
Hicklin: āSometimes people canāt get past the aesthetics. We got compared to Royal Blood once because there are two of us. Weāre aware that thereās less on stage, so we give it beans.ā
Are you going to remain a duo?
Moloney: āThis is our sound and our influences pushed together, and we love it. Plus we tour in a Ford Focus, thatās the dream of being in a two-piece. Itās just a hell of a lot easier. Weād love to do something with an orchestra one day though, or my mumās rock choir ā but weāre not looking for any new members just yet.ā
Whatās your overall dream for Big Special?
Moloney: āThereās that line from Boondock Saints: āHow far do you want to take this? How far are you willing to go?ā
Hicklin: āWeāve been doing music for 15 years and this has all happened in eight months. Iāve always just wanted to get somewhere doing what I do. If you compromise on anything then you might as well have stuck doing those crap jobs.”
Big Special tour the UK and Europe throughout the autumn. Visit here for more information.Ā
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