“Have you seen these platforms? Who the hell do we think we are?!” Staring at the towering structures rising from a tanked-up stage rig bearing Malevolence’s name, complete with ‘MLVLTD’ cut into steel sheets, it’s a fair question for affable vocalist Alex Taylor to wonder aloud. And that’s without even mentioning the tour bus parked outside Manchester’s O2 Victoria Warehouse with his band’s giant mugs plastered on the side…
“We all love Malevolence’s bus. Hell, I want one!” says Emma Boster of Dying Wish, the inventive Portland metalcore mob who alongside Malev, hardcore nuts Speed and newcomers PSYCHO-FRAME, have been tearing up huge venues across Europe on one of the biggest, baddest tours to hit the road this year. It’s a bill hand-picked by Malevolence themselves, bringing together some of the most exhilarating and exciting bands from the worlds of metal and hardcore.
Right now, ‘Vicky’ Warehouse feels cavernous despite the noisy rattle of cases being loaded in and boxes of killer Malevolence and Speed caps unpacked, but later this room will be crammed wall-to-wall with 3,500 loyal fans throwing down. This huge near-hometown celebration for the Sheffield sluggers, with family, friends and a “dream line-up”, is living proof of how far the band have come, but also how the scene around them has grown exponentially.
Spirits are high across the touring party as Alex and Malev guitarist Konan Hall, Emma, Speed’s Jem Siow and PSYCHO-FRAME’s dual frontmen Mike Sugars and Colter Cuthbertson sit down to reflect on the snowballing momentum of these shows and, by extension, this moment in heavy music…
How’s this tour been?
Alex Taylor (Malevolence): “It’s been absolutely sick. Every show has been a lot of fun, and from what I’ve seen everyone’s been received really well. The comments on all our posts have been about how sick the support bands are and how they’ve discovered new bands, which is exactly what we wanted to do when we put this line-up together. We had our dream line-up, and it’s very rare that you get the chance to do that. It’s worked out perfectly on this run. Everyone’s cool as well.”
Emma Boster (Dying Wish): “These have been the best European shows we’ve ever played. Historically, Europe has been really tough for us. That ocean of separation is huge when it comes to success as a band for us, so we’ve had to work extra hard over here. But these crowds have been super open-minded. Every night kids in Malevolence or PSYCHO-FRAME shirts are in the pit for us. It’s really cool. And now we’re in the UK where we do really well, so I’m excited for these shows.”
Mike Sugars (PSYCHO-FRAME): “I couldn’t put it better. For our band’s first time here, this is unbelievable. It’s not lost on us, the chance to be a part of this group of bands. They’re bands that we respect and whose music we love.”
Jem Siow (Speed): “I feel like on this line-up, even despite the difference sonically between bands, people are more coming for the vibe. They’re coming for the energy. They’re coming to feel something that’s real and that’s a reflection of the culture Malevolence have with their audience. I think it’s easy to look at genres, but at the same time we’re all part of this underground, heavy subculture, and it all just works.”