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Push to Fire Q&A: Resolution 242
by Henry Raby

Resolution 242

Resolution 242 are Alex (guitar/vox), Adam (drums/samples) and Rev (who rocks bass and occasional tash!). They describe themselves as "a three piece politically minded,dub influenced,progressive punk-rock band" and they hail from Stratford upon Avon. We caught up with Alex earlier this year to find out more.

How did you get together?
Well it started as me just writing some acoustic/folk/ska songs and putting them on MySpace (when MySpace was king!), then weirdly, Adam came on the scene when our girlfriends re-met up (they were childhood friends from Kent) back in Stratford!! So Adam asked to jam and it started from there...several members, EPs and gigs later...here we are!!

And how would you describe your genre/music in three words...
Hench but mellow?!

Rumours flying around you might be hopping over to Rebel Alliance Records, if so why the jump from Do The Dog?
Haha...well, RA have had some great bands on over the last year, but the noises I'm hearing is that the SB6 lot are gonna concentrate on their band for the min, which is fair enough, as like Barney said it's a task in itself running a label and being in a full time band. So we'll have to see what happens in that respect, and Do the Dog released the first album/EP record, but we havent really spoke about putting the new one out on it. Maybe we'll put the new EP out ourselves... I have a feeling, having ditched the ska element, that the new one could be on something else...but you never know ;)

Can you talk about how you feel about political song-writing? Do you have a specific manifesto?
I think my lyric writing style has changed over the last few years really. I mean that first album was actually written 2 years ago! I think I've gone more subtle, I tend to not be so 'in your face' about things I'll write about nowadays. It's partly on purpose, but partly because I'm older and have a more rounded perspective on things I think. I also think that if your songs are really blatant you limit the people who can relate to it, so although the songs are still socio-political, the message is a bit more hidden than before. and to be honest I enjoy writing that way more - gives you more leeway with language.

Unlike punk, ska has not necessarily been the most overly political genre at times, but do you think these days more and more bands in the ska scene are addressing a political stance? What does the ska and ska-punk scene look like to you in 2011?
Yeah punk has always been political, and ska was traditional more skank and party, but we've definitely seen a shift lately. To be honest we've tried to move away from the 'ska' stuff in our music now as I find it quite limiting song writing wise, though there are still little bits here and there, but we've tried to go a bit darker and dubby. The scene looks good at the mo' but it fluctuates a lot and I guess it always will.

Where do the soundbytes you use on your self-titled album come from?
Just either on Youtube or through our good friend and producer George Lenton - he helped out with with a lot of them, but most are just mic up to speaker on a video ..DIY YEA! haha

Dominos Fall is a shift from the acoustic folk of your first album, why this direction?
We just felt that we needed to widen our musical horizons really and like I said earlier, straight up 'ska-punk' can be quite limiting to us as songwriters. and with Rev joining the band he added a bit more of 'rocky' almost indie/rock element to it...which is great for us as we like to dabble these days!

Best gig you've played so far?
Well, it should have been Rebellion 2009 but we had big old pedal malfunction and ended up only getting 15 mins, and I had only one guitar sound which was a horrid crunch sound....so yeah, that was a massive fail! Sooo I'd have to say either the Birmingham gig with Random Hand and The Skints, on the hottest stage known to man, or the Stratford gig we played the other day where we did a hip-hop collab' with our mate Mr Wheelz! Got a great turn out for Stratford which is very rare! But I love playing all gigs to be honest!

I read on your Facebook someone saying you track 'IMF' is daft because you never actually burned down the 'IMF', what's your response to this?
I'll tell you the response I sent to him on said facebook commment ..."haha! you clearly don't understand the concept of artist licence!! I never saw Howard Blake 'Walking in the air' or Fat Mike actually murdering the government?!? It's about the message and emotions of what I felt about the financial services and the fractional reserve system and not a recollection of a evening out in stratford on avon!"

You guys sing about Gaza, facism, bankers, police brutality etc. how important is it to link music up with actual physcial events and causes?
It depends on what your goals are for your music really. it's important if you want to raise awareness about a particular issue.

'Poet's Town'' tells your story of life in quaint, little Stratford-Upon-Avon, how do you feel about your hometown? What's it like gigging?
Aah It's a weird one to be honest. It's a nice place, clean and crime free, haha, but can be boring as shit and suck you in so you never leave! It's nice in the summer when you can chill on ample grass and drink and play footy and jam with guitars but it can get dull! However we've got a tight knit group of friends who support us. Loads of bands kicking around but quite a shit scene...but its getting better, slowly!

You've covered Bedouin Soundclash, any other influences you've like to namecheck?
It's hard to tie down influences as all of us are into completely different things,which is good for song writing purposes as there's stuff drawn from Hip-Hop/Punk/Dub/Indie/Prog etc so it always keeps the writing process fresh,but not so great when trying to find something to listen to on long journeys in the van!

What band or artist would you love to gig with?
I'd love to gig with Propagandhi or RX Bandits...

New EP coming out, what are the long-term plans?
Long term plans are get our music out there, lots of gigs around the world and eventually , world domination I guess....complete world domination ;)


Much thanks to Alex for taking the time to answer our questions. Find more info and music clips on their Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/resolution242.