When Sam Matlockâs previous band Dead! broke up, he started drinking too much and sending terrible song ideas to his friend Milkie Way. Bonding over a love of cock rock, cyber pop and wanting to cause the same amount of chaos that comes from playing Limp Bizkit at 3am at a house party, the pair started making bedroom demos together as Wargasm. Turns out mixing riot grrrl and nu-metal together is the perfect combination: Matlockâs song ideas stopped being bad, Way quit her job as a session bassist for folk-pop musician Barns Courtney, and the duo have been on the move ever since.
Wargasm â who say they eventually want to create a stage show to rival Rammstein‘s â arenât interested in being role models: they get bored too quickly to think beyond just releasing singles, and they’re not afraid of calling out a twat when they see one. âWe’re kind of abrasive, in real life and in music,â Way says from their lockdown hideaway in Ireland.
Early Wargasm tracks sat comfortably in the realm of hyperactive alt-rock, but this year theyâve gone in a more âwhat the fuck?â direction. The nu-metal thrash of âSpitâ and the bloodthirsty âBackyard Bastardsâ position Wargasm as the chaotic yet logical reaction to this hellfire world weâre living in.
NME caught up with the pair on Zoom recently to talk the nu-metal revival, touring with Yungblud and creating a soundtrack to peopleâs anger in 2020.
NME: Wargasm make âangry music for sad peopleâ, which feels like the perfect genre for right now.
Milkie Way: âEveryone is angry and everyone is sad, so we might as well get some good bangers out of it.â
Sam Matlock: âOur music is 100% influenced by whatâs going on around us, but weâre not the kind of people to mope around and put on a brave face. If the world feels heavy and dark, obviously your sound is going to reflect that. If you feel a bit lost and confused, your sound is going to feel all over the place and quizzical.â
Tell us about âBackyard Bastardsâ…
Matlock: âWe wrote it at the start of lockdown before the government started being massive cunts. Itâs about that feeling of homicidal rage: everyone tries to hide it, but youâve definitely looked at someone and wanted to peel them.â
Way: âNo one sees Dominic Cummingsâ face on TV and thinks: âI definitely donât want to hurt himâ.â
Matlock: âIt got immediately banned by Ofcom, even when we replaced the swear words. Itâs probably better to let those feelings out via a song than me doing this interview about Milkie trying to break me out of jail, though.â
Are the lyrics âwhen you wake up do you feel hollow? Do you wash your hands of all the sorrow?â aimed at the Tories?
Matlock: âI had given up being angry at politicians who are twats. Theyâre never going to change and they’re never going to care what we have to say. My rage is more directed at the people who enabled that sort of thing by voting for them and then going: ‘Yeah, but…’. If you have to justify your political choices with a âbutâ, then they arenât the right fucking choices. The next track we’ve got coming out is a pissed-off political one, though.â
Where does the nu-metal influence come from?
Matlock: âItâs just more fun than other stuff, isnât it? Radiohead are fucking great but you donât always want something that complex. Youâve now got Poppy, Rina Sawayama and Loathe [who] all [have] a nu-metal influence, but when we started out the bands that were playing Reading & Leeds didnât have that violence or that energy. It felt like that primal fun was missing from the rock scene.â
Way: âThatâs what you do with your art: you fill the void and make the things that you want to listen to. If you want to see a certain type of representation of a type of sound or people, the best thing to do is fucking create it yourself.â
âItâs OK to be fucking angry at things. Itâs good when you have a soundtrack to do that to, and that’s what we’re creating”
Youâre touring digitally with Yungblud ahead of a proper IRL tour next year. Thatâll be fun, right?
Way: âDom’s a good mate and the new shit heâs putting out is very fun and very cool; he’s smashing the visuals as well. There might be some new shit heâs putting out soon that’s extra angry and extra fun, but I donât know what else we’re allowed to say.â
We wonât get you in trouble about a possible collaboration, then! You sit at the heavier end of what Yungblud does â are you worried about what his fans will think?
Way: âNot at all. Weâre opening with a new song and itâs very shouty. If they donât like that, then they wonât like the rest of the set. Itâs a warning: if you donât like it, at least you know early on and you donât have to waste your time or ours.â
So thereâll be no attempt to sugar-coat it, then?
Matlock: âThat’s just not the kind of people we are. I donât think you should go in as a take-no-prisoners kind of band, but if that’s the way it comes across⊠The reason it feels raw and in your face is âcause maybe we’re not the smartest or the fastest people, but maybe we just donât care about sugar-coating stuff.”

What do you want Wargasm’s music to mean to people?
Matlock: âThe band exists as an agent of chaos. We’re not role models, but we’re relatable. âSpitâs about wanting to scream that things are disgusting. It could be the way your ex-boyfriend treated you, how you feel when you turn on the news, looking in the mirror and hating what you see, or someone not putting their mask on on the Tube and you wanting to kill them. Iâm not saying go out and act on it, but your dark thoughts arenât always the worst thing in the world. With our music, itâs not [about there being] someone out there [who is] as fucked-up as you, but [you] worrying about admitting that you areâŠâ
Way: âItâs that itâs OK to let it out. Itâs OK to be fucking angry at things. Itâs good when you have a soundtrack to do that to, and that’s what we’re creating.â
How ambitious are you?
Matlock: âI donât know yet. Some people talk about us headlining a stage at Reading one day, but I donât see our sound reaching that point. I donât know if we care yet, either. Weâd just want the free ticket. There’s no lid on the ambition for the music, though. This is the first time in my life that, as a writer, Iâve got no fucking idea where anything is going. Itâs why people are sticking around â they have no idea what’s going to happen next.â
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