The Presidents Of The United States Of America
Fifteen years after breaking out of the then overflowing Seattle music scene, The Presidents Of The United States Of America are still alive and well. Known for nonsensical lyrics and easy alt-rock hooks, the two-time Grammy-nominated trio has escaped obscurity by continuing to tour and produce albums, like 2008’s These Are The Good Times People. As the band gears up for a two-month tour around the U.S.—including a performance at 9:30 Club this Sunday, April 26—The A.V. Club spoke to drummer Jason Finn about DIY self-promotion, knowing when you’ve “arrived,” and why it's no Dishwalla.
The A.V. Club: With no new album, why go on tour now?
Jason Finn: There’s not really a good reason. We want to take a little break in six months or a year, but before we do that, we want to be assured that we’ve covered everything. We don’t want to get an e-mail from someone saying, “Dude, why haven’t you come to my town?”
AVC: An e-mail? So you guys have taken the new media plunge?
JF: We’re sort of a full-time part-time band, and we haven’t really put it all together with the online presence, new media thing. We’re not sure if it’s even appropriate to go whole hog because I don’t know how much more we’re going to do this. We love doing this, but we can’t do it the way The Rolling Stones do it with a different transfusion every week. That said, it’s all very exciting right now: A year and a half ago, MySpace was big time and now it’s over; Facebook is happening right now, but who knows how it’ll be two years from now. I’m actually having a drink tonight with Jonathan Coulton, who, without ever having a record label, has this enormous fan base online. He’s on the ground, picking it up, and building his Jonathan empire.
AVC: How is that different from when you sold Presidents cassettes from behind the bar where you worked?
JF: That was then. During the mid-’90s in Seattle, they were handing out record labels like candy. But that doesn’t mean that anybody was selling records. We had instant notoriety at first locally, then regionally, and then we put the record out on Columbia and then it was the planet. I don’t know how it happened—I’m still mystified. Back then, you would put out a cassette or a 7-inch and start playing where you could, then get a vehicle to get down the coast, and that was it—band promotion 101. Our meteoric rise was the exception, not the rule. I think it’s a lot more interesting with what’s happening now.
AVC: You came on board after Chris Ballew and Dave Dederer had been together for a while. How was it to bring drums into their preexisting dynamic?
JF: Chris and Dave had played together in basically the same band with a bunch of different names. It wasn’t that big of a stretch for them, but I was very wary of toning my style down. I got rid of my kit except for the drum and the snare—I’d even tape my wallet under the snare because I had nowhere else to keep it.