Life comes at you fast. If you’re not paying attention to what’s happening in the present, the most magical moments of your life may pass you by. It’s something that Greg Barnett has been thinking about a lot lately. As one half of The Menzingers’ songwriting engine, he has always used his lyrics to document chapters in his band’s life and, as their new album Everything I Ever Saw shows, there has been a lot to write about recently. On one hand, getting married and welcoming his first child, Ruby, into the world promised new beginnings. At the same time, his co-conspirator guitarist and singer Tom May was going through a divorce and starting over. The sense of doors opening and closing is reflected across Everything I Ever Saw and capturing this time has resulted in immediate storytelling that ranks among the band’s finest.
Alongside the release of their eighth album, 2026 also marks The Menzingers’ 20th year together. “In true Menzingers fashion, I think it will be the 21st birthday that will be the big one,” chuckles Greg, noting their long tradition of soundtracking boozy parties. While Greg, Tom, bassist Eric Keen and drummer Joe Godino have all grown together in the band, their fans have grown up alongside them with their songs soundtracking some of the most significant moments of their lives. For all the memories they’ve gathered on this ride from the sweaty house shows of north-eastern Pennsylvania to travelling the world, it is the present and what is to come that excites Greg the most…
Your albums always seem to capture a moment in time. Was that songwriting approach heightened by all the big changes you were going through personally?
“Yeah, it was one of those records that felt very organic, like how we did [2012 classic] On The Impossible Past. Particularly on this album, I got married and my wife was pregnant while we were writing. Tom got a divorce and he started a new relationship. We had these really huge life changes that were happening and it felt like a moment in the band’s life where we needed to document exactly what was happening. And if some of our albums look towards the past or the future, this one feels so immediate and in the present. It felt exactly like what was happening in our lives.”