Over the last few months, The Driver Era â aka brothers Ross and Rocky Lynch â have been steadily releasing a stream of new music, from the lo-fi alternative pop of âPlacesâ to the yearning âOMG Plz Donât Come Aroundâ. Each track has been accompanied by a music video made by the band and their collaborators, seeing them build their own indie cottage industry and keep themselves occupied in quarantine.
In the latest edition of NMEâs In Conversation series, the pair discuss their plans for a second album, keeping it in the family and their pursuits outside of music.
Their latest single âFadeâ details the âinevitability of fading awayâ
The duoâs most recent release comes in the form of âFadeâ, a slow-burning piece of soulful pop that continues their streak of delivering a series of brilliant standalone singles. It was first written three years ago when they were still signed to Hollywood Records, and they say the was process was âhow songs should be writtenâ â no second-guessing, just doing things because it sounds good.
Speaking about the subject matter, Ross explains: âItâs all about the inevitability of fading away. Itâs just about making the most of every moment.â
âWe were predicting coronavirus two years ago,â deadpans Rocky. Heâs joking, but itâs a valuable message for us all to take note of, given our circumstances.
Theyâre being spurred on to make a strong second album by ânon-musiciansâ, releasing singles and the prolific nature of rapp
Although theyâd previously suggested their second album â the follow-up to 2019âs âXâ â would arrive late this summer, weâre going to have to wait a while longer for it to arrive. But donât fear â when it does eventually materialise, it should be a considered, proper body of work spurred on both by artists they admire (and some they donât).
Ross explains that they’re tried of âpersonalitiesâ randomly releasing tracks, rather than legit artists. âFull transparency: weâre kind of fed up with all the non-musicians releasing singles in the world. So we want to do a large release, we want to make a whole bunch of music to go against that trend.â
At the moment, theyâre predicting a record made up of somewhere between 15 and 20 songs, to be released next summer, and say having a jam-packed tracklist was inspired by the hip-hop community. Says Rocky: âRappers are really good at that because they just get in the studio and theyâre just like, âYo, this is dopeâ, and theyâre just flowing. They put out 20-song albums every year.”
Working with their extended family lets them pay things forward
When youâre in a band with your brother you might want to widen up your pool of collaborators to beyond the rest of your family. Not if youâre in The Driver Era, who regularly work with other brother Ryland and teenage cousin Gordy Destjeor on their self-made music videos.
âThe biggest pro [of working with family] is giving someone the opportunity,â says Ross. âFor instance, Gordy could go to film school or he could come and do some music videos with us. Heâs getting that hands-on experience in a real-life scenario and heâs getting the opportunity to work.â
âIt happens naturally because we live with Ryland and see other family members often,â adds Rocky. âIt just makes sense. Why fix what ainât broken?â
Donât expect to see them touring until the social distancing era is over
As the pandemic continues to trundle on and lockdown conditions fluctuate, weâre seeing more and more artists coming up with ways to perform in accordance with social distancing regulations. Some are holding gigs in parks and others are giving punters their own little pens, six feet apart from anyone else.
The Driver Era recently announced a UK and European tour for next May, when the world is hoping to be back to some sort of normality. If itâs not, though, donât expect them to turn the gigs into socially distanced ones.
âI think [touring post-Covid] will be pretty chill, even if itâs at a point where a lot of the crowd is wearing masks,â Ross says. âPeople are used to being like, âOh, let me just throw a mask on and do my thing and go outâ now. I think itâll be exciting.â
Thereâs one problem that Ross envisions, though â the very nature of their gigs. âAlmost every show that we ever have done is a mosh pit full of people that are sweating on each other and dancing on each other,â he explains. âThe people coming to our shows are trying to have a good time. I just hope there are no restrictions â at that point, I think weâd just wait to tour. We want people to have the time of their lives.â
We should have seen more of Ross as Chilling Adventures Of Sabrinaâs Harvey
As well as being one half of The Driver Era, Ross is also a rising actor and is best known for his role of Harvey Kinkle in Netflixâs Chilling Adventures Of Sabrina. Unfortunately, the show was cancelled by the streaming platform after its fourth season (which will air later this year).
According to Ross, that series shouldnât have been its last. âWhatâs funny is we probably would have had 10 more episodes had Covid not happened,â he says. âBut it just didnât make sense financially for Netflix, essentially.â Add that to the list of things the pandemic has robbed us of, then.
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