“That’s crazy!” exclaims Sam McTrusty. “You’ve caught me off guard there…”
Kerrang! has just put it to the frontman that his band’s new album Meltdown is the perfect Twin Atlantic record. Indeed, in our recent review of LP number seven, we even wrote that it “encompasses the finest attributes from their discography to date”.
For Sam, having spent his morning watching Mary Poppins with his kids before answering our Zoom from all the way in sunny Canada, it takes a few sentences for him to get out of dad mode and into the rock star zone for this chat. We’ve not exactly started out with a nice, humble question to ease him in, we’ll admit.
“Some of our albums we’ve tried to make perfect sidesteps into subgenres of different guitar music that interests us, and we’ve been more obsessed of getting the sonics of it right, or we’ve been more obsessed with getting the messaging or the aesthetic or whatever, you know?” Sam begins, pondering the different ideas of a “perfect” album with his morning coffee.
“On our first album, [2011’s] Free, we were obsessed with being ‘professional’ and sounding like a real band. On [2014’s] Great Divide we were obsessed with the songwriting being perfect in a classic sense, with pop structures and stuff like that. But this album, for the first time we were genuinely obsessing over the album as a whole. And it’s been a journey to figure out how to do that, I suppose…
“I mean, I do agree with you,” he grins. “I don’t know about ‘perfect’, but I do think that it’s our best album! And that’s quite a storied response from a band on their seventh album (laughs). Like, ‘Oh yeah, we’ve made our best album ever!’ Every band says that, but I would stand by that. I think it’s our strongest record, easily.”
Here, we dig into more of that with Sam – from its all-consuming creation, to Twin Atlantic’s sonic nods back to Free, to why, if it’s the last thing they ever do, Meltdown is one hell of a way to go out…
Tell us more about those “obsessions” that have impacted previous Twin albums. How comes they didn’t affect Meltdown?
“Just the years leading up to it. Every album we’ve learned something. I definitely have a massive ego when it comes to playing live shows, but not in the studio at all. I like to learn in the studio, and I like to look back on records and go, ‘Fuck, that was terrible, that part of it. Let’s never do that again!’ So that was definitely the big picture of how we got to making this record. But the short run up to it was, obviously, we were kind of forced to make an album during lockdown to survive – we’ve got families and mortgages, and we’re so, so lucky that being in a band has become our jobs. So we weren’t complaining about doing it, but once we got a couple of years away from that, [I realised that] we made Transparency [2022] in quite a throwaway fashion. I made it in my daughter’s bedroom in lockdown, which was quite a difficult space to be adventurous in (laughs).
“So then when we were able to make a record on our own terms again, I think we really, really dug down into that. And we went even deeper into that bubble – we didn’t work with another producer, we didn’t really send the demos to many people, and that’s why we then set up our own label to put the record out on. All that sort of became the theme of the record: ‘Let’s make an album with the most amount of purpose we possibly can.’ And I think that focused us into making better decisions on the songs and the lyrics and the sonics. We’ve only got ourselves to blame, basically, because we were the only people that had any control over the whole thing. So it was really in response to having to make an album in lockdown, which caused us all to question why we are even in a band, and what we’re really doing.”