Home. It’s where the heart is. It’s the places we retreat to for a sense of safety and stability when everything else in our life is in flux. It is the people we hold close – friends, family, partners – who we can can also inadvertently hurt the most by our actions.
For Brutus, home is still the Belgian town of Leuven. It is where they formed the band in 2014 and it is where their rehearsal space is. Although, as drummer and singer Stefanie Mannaerts explains, neither she, guitarist Stijn Vanhoegaerden or bassist Peter Mulders actually live there anymore. “Peter and I live in Ghent and Stijn lives in Brussels,” she says, sat in the practice space with her running mates on a sunny day in the university town. “There was a time when we wrote [2017 debut album] Burst and everything before where we were living next to each other in Leuven, in the same building. And now we all moved out with our boyfriend or girlfriends, and we're trying to be adults. Our rehearsal space is still here, so it’s about an hour drive instead of being 10 minutes away.”
A lot has changed for Brutus in the two years since they released Burst. A collision of window-smashing punk, scything guitar crescendos and seismic post-rock immensity with Stefanie’s piercing vocals at the centre, the album was a word-of-mouth success that put the band’s name on the map after years touring Belgium’s small club circuit. Tastemaker label Sargent House signed them, leading to support tours with labelmates Chelsea Wolfe and Russian Circles that thrust the three-piece in front of gobsmacked crowds around the world. Not to mention the high praise from The Black Queen’s Greg Puciato, Thrice’s Riley Breckenridge and Lars Ulrich, who played the band on his radio show and asked to meet them during Metallica’s WorldWired Tour.
“That was really crazy,” says Stijn. “Peter was texting him…”
“Well, his assistant,” Peter interjects.
“Right,” Stijn continues, “well, we got to meet him after a show he was playing in Belgium and we talked for about 45 minutes. You wouldn’t expect it of someone who is doing this for so long in such a big band, but he was only interested in what WE were doing.”
“He wanted to know what our influences were,” says Peter, “what mine and Stijn and Stefanie’s favourite music is. Then he referred to how they made their first albums, mixing genres a little bit and how we make music together as a band. It was surreal.”
While the band are grateful for the opportunities that have come thick and fast, you also get the sense that they still find it hard to believe. Stijn and Stefanie have known each other since meeting as teenagers in local punk band Starfucker, only a few months after the precocious drummer first picked up sticks. “Stijn’s my big sister,” she says, the pair now working together at her parents’ music shop in Leuven when they’re not on the road. Peter – definitely the cool, older brother of the group – came into the mix when the Refused tribute group he and Stefanie played in split up. They called up Stijn and formed Brutus based on their personalities, rather than a desire for recognition. “I’m living in denial,” says Stefanie, only half-jokingly. “Right now there are a load of cool things hanging in the air and for me it doesn’t exist until it’s happening.”