Ahead of their performance at Manchester Punk Festival, Colin caught up with Plot 32 for a lovely chat.
How did Plot 32
start?
Gaz: Myself, lead guitarist Adam and Stash were at Rebellion
2016 and we just watched Bar Stool Preachers play an acoustic set and were all
feeling very emotional and said “there doesn’t seem to be that much ska punk
going on in Leeds at the moment besides the usual suspects, how about we form a
band.” Then Stash said “well aye man, that sounds cannae.”
Liz: I remember recruiting Rachel, we were on a Rocky Horror
night out, we dressed up, and I was like “you’d be the perfect person to join
our brass section and then you agreed so that was nice.”
Rachel: “I somehow ended up accidentally in a ska band when
I was at school and I randomly mentioned that to you on a night out.
Liz: I Had to learn drums for this band, Gaz had to learn the
bass.
Stash: A few had to start from scratch.
Liz: We started in February and we had our first gig in May
which was very soon as I’d never played any drums before.
Stash: That’s pretty punk rock that, innit.
Who are the members
of Plot 32?
Liz: I’m Liz and I play the drums, shall we tell you our
favourite vegetable as well?
If you want, the
answer is broccoli.
Liz: Yeah, my answers broccoli.
Gaz: I’m Gaz, I play bass guitar and my favourite vegetable
is a beetroot.
Stash: My name is Stash, I’m 42 years old, my favourite
vegetable is mushroom and I’m the singer.
Cat S: I’m Cat, I’m the rhythm guitarist and my favourite
vegetable is a carrot.
Rachel: I’m Rachel, I play saxophone and my favourite
vegetable is fresh peas.
Liz: We’ve got Adam, he plays guitar and his favourite
vegetable is sweetcorn because he’s a sweet person and he’s pretty corny and
then there’s Cat Robbins, she plays the trumpet, she love an aubergine
apparently.
Who are your
influences?
Stash: I think we’ve all got different influences. The bands
probably influenced by bands like Operation Ivy, Bosstones, ska punk….
Cat S: I listen to a lot of Reel Big Fish, Less Than Jake,
also I love anything a bit pop punky like New Found Glory as well.
Liz: Cat and Adam tend to write most of our songs but then
other people chip in, Gaz and Rachel and Stash have all written some things, I
haven’t written anything so I guess my influences wouldn’t come out that
strongly but I love things like drum n bass, dance music but all of my
favourite gigs growing up were Reel Big Fish. I think me and Cat spent years
going to every single Reel Big Fish gig. I used to love King Prawn and saw lots
of ska punk in Leeds back in the day.
This is your first
time playing MPF, have you been before as attendees?
Stash: I’ve volunteered there before. We’ve been there as
punters.
Liz: I’ve been almost every year. Infact I met Cat Robbins
at the thing that was before MPF. There was some sort of anniversary show that
the same people put on the year before MPF and I met Cat Robbins in the queue
so we wouldn’t even have her as a friend or band member if it wasn’t for MPF.
This sounds like a proper geeky thing to say but my drum teachers reminded me
of it last week. I was talking about playing MPF and the stuff I wanted to work
on and they were like “ooh, they said last year that playing MPF was your
dream” and I was like “I wouldn’t of said that would I?” but clearly I did.
Gaz: You say it all the time Liz, when you’re drunk.
Cat S: I’ve never been, I’m really looking forward to it. It’s
normally difficult for me to get time off work to get to it. But we’re playing
some I’m forced to get time of work for it so it’s great. I can’t wait! It’ll
be a good opportunity to see loads of bands that I’ve never seen before and get
introduced to new stuff and seeing some old friends as well.
Stash: It’s nice when all you’re mates are there from all
different cities coming together. You can spend a lot of time chatting to
people with people you’ve not seen for a while.
Liz: It’s one of those few festivals where you know that
everyone you know from across the country will be in the same place and you’ll
bump into them at some point over the weekend. And they always have an amazing
line up too.
Stash: I normally miss a lot of bands just through nattering
and smoking.
Who are all you
looking forward to seeing?
Liz: I have been doing so much research on this, I’ve got a
playlist that I made myself. They do have an MPF playlist but I wanted to extra
curate it. Shai Hulud, I know they’re quite famous but I’ve never listened to
them before I knew they were playing MPF. Really love them. Really love
Belvedere, Elephant March is a great song, just love all that relentless, fast
pop punk stuff. And then there’s some really nice ska like Popes, JB
Conspiracy, all the people that we love seeing and have maybe played with
before. I quite like Riskee, some of that rappy stuff, Karl Phillips, we’ve
played with him before haven’t we. Jeff Rosenstock. I’m trying not get my hopes
up too much with anybody because you don’t know who’s gonna clash and you don’t
know who’s going to have to pull out.
Cat S: We’ve had Brassick at Nice As Pie before so I’m looking
forward to seeing them.
Liz: There’s all of our friends bands as well. Smoking Gives
You Big Tits, I love them. Great name, great band. Monolithian, that’s Simon
from Rash Decision’s band with that lady in Bobby Funk. They’re gonna be great.
What can people
expect to see from your live set?
Stash: They’re probably see seven drunkards falling about
all over the stage.
Liz: We’re not a polished performance but we’ll be very
friendly.
Stash: If we’re anything we’re friendly.
Cat S: We want everyone to have fun and we’ll be having fun
and hopefully that’s all that matters.
Liz: There might be some cheesy, bad jokes. You might get
some very light political and environmental messaging but the overriding theme will be fun.
What’s your best
experience at a Plot 32 gig?
Stash: Outciders always a good thing.
Liz: Remember when we played that really weird festival and
then somebody came up to us and told us and told us that she was Miss Chesire
2018. I don’t know if this was the same person or I’ve got it confused in my
head…
Stash: Didn’t she call us weirdos?
Liz: She said you’re the weirdest bunch of weirdos that I’ve
seen in the same place at the same time and I thought to myself that I really
understand what you mean; we are all quite different to each other, we’ve got
quite different opinions and we act quite differently and I just loved that she
thought we were so strange.
Cat S: Illusive Festival was dead good as well.
Liz: That was definitely the weirdest festival that I’ve
ever been too.
Stash: It was like a drum n bass festival with a random ska
stage.
Liz: Everyobdy was off their face to the point where they’ve
built little sort of caves under the stage for people to go and hide if they
want to have some private time.
Stash: That sounds rude.
Gaz: We played two sets that weekend. We played one of the
first sets on the Friday and we were all fresh and energetic and there weren’t
that many people watching us. Then on Sunday we were all a bit worse for wear,
we were depleted with serotonin and dopamine and I think the majority of us
were hung over and we played the other set and people were absolutely loving
it.
Stash: I think between us we probably introduced ourselves
to everybody at the festival by that point .
Liz: They really had no choice but to come and watch us
after we bombarded them with our friendship for the whole weekend.
That’s a solid plan,
are you going to do that in Manchester as well?
Liz: We’ve already said that we really hope we play the
Sunday so we get so we get to make friends with absolutely everybody at the
festival and then relentless pressure them into coming to see us.
Do you know where
you’re playing yet?
Liz: It doesn’t really matter. Early is good, late is good,
middle is good. They’ve all got there advantages.
Have you got a venue
that you particularly want to play?
Liz: I love the Zombie Shack which I guess might be where we
play as it’s a bit of a small one. It’ll be lovely to play in a smaller venue
that’s packed out.
Stash: I’d rather play a smaller venue with more people in
than a bigger venue with the same amount of people.
Cat S: Somewhere with a big enough stage to fit seven of us.
Liz: Yeah, so basically we want a venue where the stage is
half as big as the crowd space so we’ve got room but no-one else does.
Stash: Not too high though, as I’m prone to falling off.
Liz: I would like a drum riser so we could have a
combination of those things.
Cat S: Are you going to build our ideal stage here Colin?
I will send Tree a
message and ask him very nicely.
Stash: It would be good if the drum rose over from the
floor, that would be good.
Liz: We played for Tree the other day didn’t we and the
drums were on a bit of a riser. It was the first time that I thought people
could see me and I loved it.
Stash: I mean coming up from the floor as you’re playing.
Just fly across the
room.
Liz: Who is it that does that?
Cat S: Do Slipknot do that?
Stash: A zip wire would be good. A good entrance on a zip
wire.
Liz: Nobody had done zip wire drumming have they? Perhaps I
could be the first.
That would be a lot
of wires that you would have to time very precisely to make sure all the kit is
in the same place.
Stash: You’d imagine that the kit would already be on stage
and you’d just arrive and land on the chair.
Liz: Oh no, I imagine you’re going to zipwire a platform
with the drums set up already.
Gaz: This is just sounding like a death clock out of
metalopolis with the ridiculous stage set up.
Stash: When people book us we should start requesting these
things and see what we can get.
Liz: We must be halfway between getting nothing on a rider
and getting some flying drums. Perhaps if we aim high we might get a crate of
beer.
Stash: We’ll take £20 if we can get a zipwire.
Is there anything
you’d like to add?
Gaz: I guess we could say we’d like people to come along and
make friends with us. We’ve been told we either get the party started or we
keep the party going or we end the party really well so really your choice is
across the board.
Stash: Take care of yourself and each other.
Plot 32 play at Zombie Shack at 22.15 tonight!
Check out Plot 32 on Facebook here and Bandcamp here.