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So Gung Ho

If you’re a music fan, sometimes you sense such a connection with a band that you feel compelled to join the group by any means necessary. Even non-musicians know the feeling: “I have to be in this band!” Jared McStay, who first burst upon the scene with the Simpletones (aka the Simple Ones) in the early ’90s, then went on to become a co-owner of Shangri-La Records, felt this way about the Turnstyles, Seth Moody and Graham Winchester’s guitar/drums duo, back in pre-Covid days.

As Moody describes it, “Jared wanted to play bass for the Turnstyles so bad! We were like, ‘No, you don’t get it! It’s a two-piece. There’s no bass!’ But he was just relentless. He’d come to see us and in between sets he’d say, ‘Dude! That song needs a bass on it!’ So I told Graham, ‘Let’s just start a different band and do the songs that don’t work without bass.’ There are certain songs where you just can’t cover everything with guitar. And I’ve tried, doing pretzel chords while I solo and all that. And So Gung Ho started that way: ‘We’ll just do all the songs we can’t pull off as a two-piece.’”

But a funny thing happened on their way to being a trio: McStay had a lot more to contribute than just a big bottom end. “Then we realized that Jared’s got this treasure trove of awesome originals,” says Moody. “I’d only heard one or two of them at that point, two or three years ago, but he had a whole portfolio of great, kind of Kinks-y pop songs. Cool lyrics and neat chord changes and hooks that stuck in your head. So we were like, ‘All right! Let’s utilize his catalog and pepper in a couple originals from me and Graham.’”

The result was a self-titled LP, bursting with energy and fun, which has been in heavy rotation on this writer’s turntable since its release on Blast Habit Records last year. (The launch of the label, run by Jared McStay, his wife Lori, and Winchester, was detailed in our blog last June.) It turned out that McStay, Moody, and Winchester were on the same stylisitic page. And not a page from, say, an Anne Sexton anthology, more of a page from an Archie comic.

“It’s fun,” says Moody. “It’s kind of like tongue-in-cheek rock. Like meathead rock. We’re making fun of the guys that take it too seriously. The unspoken rule is, ‘nothing too introspective.’ Make it fun or aggro. If a song has a little more testosterone, throw it in the So Gung Ho bag. We’ll never do a Beck thing, where it’s fun, then depressing, then fun. We’ll skip the depressing ones!”

Nothing expresses that sense of levity more than McStay’s “Free Man Band,” which makes use of cod-Cockney to obliquely chide groups with an overwrought sense of mission. “As usual you’re half past late/Hangin’ around on some date/Wif your uvver group … This was ’sposed ta be/A free man band/And you ain’t gonna be/No free band man!”

Though much of So Gung Ho’s origin myth hinges on the sanctity of two-piece versus three-piece lineups, the song was conceived much earlier. “I would bet $14 that that song was at least a year or two old before So Gung Ho came into existence,” says Moody. “It’s funny, I’ve been put in that situation a few times. And it’s fun to picture these British blokes arguing with each other. It’s harder to understand in Memphis. We all recycle our band members like mad in this town. That song wouldn’t make much sense with Midtown musicians.”

The sense of play, undergirded with choppy riffs, propulsive bass and drums, and chiming background vocals, is downright contagious, especially when combined with the lyrics. The band’s theme song (and album closer) captures that attitude in a nutshell: “We were so gung ho/About doin’ that thing/That we wanted to do … and I can’t recall what we wanted to do/But it was probably cool!” Nowadays, with the hopes of the last two years so clouded by deferred dreams and postponed plans, it’s easy to forget what we were on about, way back when. But, as this band reminds us, what’s important is that we remember that feeling — the feeling of being so gung ho!

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Blast Habit Records Lifts Off This Saturday

Memphis has long been a city of independent record labels, and now a new contender is throwing its hat in the ring — or on the turntable, as the case may be. Blast Habit Records is the new project being launched by local musical scene makers Jared McStay (Shangri-La Records), his wife Lori McStay, and Graham Winchester. Tomorrow, they’ll hold court at Bar DKDC to celebrate this new chapter in Memphis music history.

Given the prolific and diverse musical output of all three, together and separately, the prospect of a label providing a platform for them is a promising one. I asked Jared McStay about the beginnings of Blast Habit recently, and he clued me in to what’s in store.

Memphis Flyer: You and Lori have been great collaborators around town for years now, forming ad hoc bands with other musicians, and generally following the path of fun. Is the new label an extension of that?

Jared McStay: A couple of years ago, I started a band called So Gung Ho with Graham Winchester and Seth Moody, and we did a whole record in 2019 with Andrew McCalla. We were going to put it out last year, and then the pandemic hit. But the record was finished, and I really liked the way it turned out. So, talking with Graham about wanting to put this record out, and not wanting to shop it around, we decided,’ Let’s just do our own label.’ And Lori is part of the label, too. I’m kind of a package deal with her these days [laughs]. The radio show, the label, married.

Seth Moody is also in So Gung Ho. Is he involved in Blast Habit?

Just the three of us. It’s me and Lori and Graham. The Moody’s [Seth and Coco] are going to be on the label, but they’re so tied up with other stuff. And it’s such a small thing right now, three people seemed like plenty. But we’re going to do a record with the Moody McStays, the group Lori and I have with the Moodys, and there are a few others we have in the pipeline. We all have other projects. Graham obviously has quite a few.

So Gung Ho (Credit: Lori McStay)

Blast Habit. What’s it mean? “Blast” sounds like a cyberpunk intoxicant or something.

Well, we fooled around, trying to think of a good name, and came up with Blast Habit. Like, “making a habit of having a blast,” I guess.

It grew out of So Hung Ho, but you plan to feature other artists?

It did, and hopefully there’s going to be more. Not just more people that sound like we sound, but diverse. And we’re going to focus on our own act at first, but then we’re hoping to branch out in Memphis, and then everywhere. I’ve had a lot of out of town people call me who are interested. So it’s kind of exciting. We’ve never done this. And Graham is so fun to work with. He’s so gung ho!

All of you are very prolific. Will you release some of Graham’s solo stuff?

I think we probably will do something or other. But Graham has so much stuff, and his group with Seth, the Turnstyles, are on Black & Wyatt Records. So he has other avenues.

We’re having a big party for it at Bar DKDC at 10 p.m. on Saturday. The Moody McStays and So Gung Ho are going to play, and we had t-shirts made up. And hopefully the So Gung Ho record will be out soon. Lori did all the artwork. She’s great with computers and formatted the cover. I’m excited about it!

Will Blast Habit mainly be focused on vinyl?

Yeah. Probably all the releases will be on vinyl. We might put some CDs out, but I kinda doubt it. I don’t know. Maybe if we sell out all the vinyl. But nobody’s figuring we’ll get rich from this or anything. We just want people to hear it, and what better way than to just bet on yourself?