Skip to Content
  • Thu May 24 2012
  • Welcome Guest!

Live Users (last hour): 818
Registered Users: 169,938

2012 Jan 04 Plan B: Simple Plan Makes Their Way Back

They had to cancel concerts in Beijing and Shanghai last August due to their lead singer’s throat problem, but only five months later, they are fulfilling their promise to return. In the years since Simple Plan formed in 1999, many pop-punk bands have boomed, ruled, fallen and quit. How has this quintet stayed strong with the same lineup for 12 years? Let’s find out.

Has pop-punk had its day? Do you feel any pressure to react to the trends of what’s popular in music?
Does it matter? That’s the real question. We just write the music we love and try to do it as best as possible[sic]. We don’t worry about genres. You’re one of a few bands that has never changed its lineup

Who are you going to kick out first? Seriously, how have you stayed together so long?
It’s because we all have the same vision for this band and we all feel like doing it for a long time. It’s pointless to break up over something small when you have something so good going on.

What are you listening to right now?
The Middle East, the new Rihanna and the latest from Florence + the Machine.

What are the three best punk songs of all time?
“I Wanna Be Sedated” by Ramones, “God Save the Queen” by The Sex Pistols, “Last Caress” by The Misfits.

What do you think about bands who play pop-punk but dress and tag themselves differently?
Sellouts.

Can you share a backstage secret with us?
We have a good one, but the band will remain anonymous. One of the lead singers made the promoters pick out all of the brown M&Ms from ten bags of the candy because he thought brown M&Ms bring bad luck. All you could hear him screaming was “No brown M&Ms!”
[Yawn – Ed.]

What would you do if only eight people turned up to a gig?
The same thing if 8,000 people turned up. Get our hearts on and give 110 percent. Except those eight people would get to hang out with us after the show.

Would you rather be popular while you are alive or be remembered after you die?
That’s kind of grim. We would like to be mildly popular while we’re alive, and have some people remember me after we die.

Follow the Simple Plan at Yugong Yishan on Jan 6.

Click here to see the January issue of the Beijinger in full.

Photo courtesy of the organizer.

Re: Plan B: Simple Plan Makes Their Way Back

Too pity it will happen on the 6th! When is their next show in Beijing, or anywhere on earth?

I like Welcome to my life the most. Smile

Ruby

Who knows what could happen, do your best just keep on laughing, one thing's true, there's always brand new day.

Re: Plan B: Simple Plan Makes Their Way Back

Don't mean to be pedantic (well, I do) but shouldn't it be "make their way back"?

You might also be interested in :

  • Notorious Punks: Drummer Marky Ramone Talks History

     

    Most of us would be intimidated by anyone brazen enough to scream “beat on the brat with a baseball bat” into a microphone. But most of us are not Marky Ramone. This is a man who says that “joining the Ramones wasn’t daunting at all” because he was already a pro. Marky told us about botching his first big audition, and holding his own with the rest of the Ramones.

  • Let's Get Ready to Rumble: Beatboxing With Shamik at Yugong Yishan

    As Canadian beatboxer Shamik warmed up his vocal chords for his visit to Beijing this weekend to hook up with the Funk Fever guys at Yugong Yishan, he took the time to answer a few questions about his training regime, playing live and how he took beatboxing down an electronic road.

  • INTRO-ducing ... Sonic Architect Gui Boratto

    Brazilian producer and DJ Gui Boratto studied architecture, but abandoned a prospective career in construction for a life in music. We asked him a few questions as he readied himself to headline this weekend’s INTRO Electronic Music Festival (May 26).

  • Three-Year Trip: Acid Jazz Pioneers Talk Flashbacks

    This month, Acid Live celebrates three years as Beijng’s pioneering acid jazz outfit. In those three years they’ve made an indelible imprint on the music scene in Beijing with their live shows becoming famed across the land. As they come of age (in dog years) and get ready for their big birthday bash, they reveal just how acerbic they’ve become down the years.

  • Q&A: International Day Against Homophobia

    The International Day Against Homophobia (May 17) was established in 2003 to generate awareness of unjust treatment and discrimination based on sexual orientation. In 2009, Tongyu (Common Language) made Beijing the first city in mainland China to celebrate IDAHO. We talked to local program director Karen Liao about how we can all rally behind the cause and join in on the festivities.

Copyright 2009 True Run Media. All Rights Reserved. 京ICP备11039980
Powered by CANDIS Infrastructure Services