The Borneo Post

Gang of Youths: Hell-raising rockers whose songs grapple with God

- By Travis M. Andrews

DAVID Le’aupepe was looking for salvation. Instead, he found rock stardom.

With his tight black jeans, black button-down, wild mane of curly black hair, unkempt beard, armful of tattoos and silver nose ring, the 26-year-old looked every bit the rock star during a recent interview. But his is a strange origin story.

The rocker, born to a Jewish mother and a Samoan father, grew up in Sydney, where he became involved with Hillsong, a Pentecosta­l megachurch that connects with its young congregati­on though music. It was there that a hammered-drunk Le’aupepe met a girl who was suffering from an aggressive form of cancer (before they eventually married — and, later, divorced). In an attempt to lighten her dark days, he and some friends recorded songs, which he released on YouTube — where they were seen by an “A&R guy, and that was that,” as he described it. Gang of Youths was born. The unabashedl­y sincere and tremendous­ly loud rock band has become one of Australia’s most famous groups but remains relatively unknown here in the United States. Its 2015 debut studio album “The Positions” was nominated for several AIRA awards — the Australian version of the Grammys. The band swept them in 2017, winning best group, along with best rock album and album of the year for their newest studio album, a two-LP epic titled “Go Further in Lightness.”

The songs concern all manner of philosophy, religion and humanity’s darkest impulses, while being absurdly uplifting at the same time. Still, it’s not Christian rock by any stretch of imaginatio­n. Le’aupepe creates the rare mainstream music that grapples with whether God exists.

Much like the Book of Revelation, his songs are studies in contrasts — in this case, between loud music and quiet ideology, between believing in the Almighty and declaring that He doesn’t exist, between bars and churchs, between love and fury.

“What is the most engaging, contrastin­g way to make this

I think we sort of hit our stride here, because I think here there’s kind of an absence of broad, appealing rock music that attempts to be relatively insightful or intelligen­t. I’m not saying we’re succeeding in that, but we’re attempting it. I always thought there was a deathdefyi­ng hope and courage in humanity that was really underrepre­sented in rock music. — David Le’aupepe, rocker

music appealing and hopeful? I believe in exploring every avenue of the darkness of the human condition,” he told The Washington Post during an interview at the 9:30 Club in Washington this month before taking the stage. “I guess it was the church in me and how I was raised, but I’m always looking for the minor chord and the major lift, in a Leonard Cohen sense.”

In that vein, “The Positions” deals with his ex-wife’s illness, their marriage and subsequent divorce, his drunken suicide attempt — you know, light topics. “Go Further in Lightness” focuses on his late father’s cancer, the death of a friend’s newborn, his attempts to define his relationsh­ip with God — you know, more light topics.

On the song “Fear and Trembling,” in which he tries to find some capital-T Truth, Le’aupepe references writing by Søren Kierkegaar­d (“If faith is to lose the mind to win God, then I guess I got nothing to prove”) and Shakespear­e (“A kind of existentia­l loneliness that struts and frets a stage”) before screaming, as if in pain, “I feel everything! I feel it all! I feel it in my bones and in my f---ing skull!”

Another song, “Persevere,” finds him having a conversati­on with the friend who just lost a baby. “I couldn’t count the times I’ve ragged on heaven as an opiate invented by the weak. ... So I throw him 40 lines about how I don’t think He exists,” Le’aupepe sings. Then, the friend replies with what must be the most expletive-laden argument for a greater power ever recorded: “God is full of grace and his faithfulne­ss is vast. There is safety in the moments when the sh-has hit the fan. (He’s) not some vindictive motherf---er, nor is he sh---y at his job.”

The lyrics may be personal, but the music is bombastic. The songs are gargantuan, many stretching well beyond the sevenminut­e mark without losing their pounding energy, bolstered by Donnie Borzestows­ki’s mercilessl­y relentless drumming and Joji Malani’s soaring guitars.

“The synergy between lyrics that are introspect­ive and turning the gun on myself combined with music that feels grand and beautiful and resolves well ... I think that works for people,” Le’aupepe said

It does seem to be working. After years of touring in the United States, Gang of Youths has finally moved from barrooms to larger venues like the 9:30 Club after the band’s US television debut in March on “Late Night With Seth Meyers.”

“I think we sort of hit our stride here, because I think here there’s kind of an absence of broad, appealing rock music that attempts to be relatively insightful or intelligen­t,” he said. “I’m not saying we’re succeeding in that, but we’re attempting it. I always thought there was a death-defying hope and courage in humanity that was really underrepre­sented in rock music.”

Gang of Youths probably shouldn’t be popular. Irony has long been the currency of the Pitchfork brand of indie rock.

But Le’aupepe never considered placing his heart anywhere but on his sleeve, a remnant of the earnest singing at Hillsong. (He paints a picture in one song: “We were raised by the preachers. They danced in the aisle, with a mosh pit up front full of youths.”)

“I hate irony. I can’t even do it well. Irony is inherently divisive, and I don’t like to be divisive.” Music “puts people of all creeds, colours and on the political spectrum together,” he added, before bringing up a libertaria­n he met who also happens to be a fan of the leftist band Rage Against the Machine. To Le’aupepe, music connects people if it’s honest, and that’s what he’s trying to achieve. He belts out his mission statement in “Say Yes to Life”: “Go be part of the new sincere.”

Bring up David Foster Wallace’s comments against irony, and he’ll pull up a sleeve to reveal a DFWthemed tattoo and begin quoting “Infinite Jest.” Bring up fellow rockers like the Hold Steady or Titus Andronicus, and he’ll wax poetic about the “honesty” of their respective lyricists, Craig Finn and Patrick Stickles. Bring up contempora­ry, irony-free artists like Julien Baker or Leslie Feist, and he’ll immediatel­y begin stumbling over his words to point out how fraudulent he feels being mentioned in the same sentence as them.

Most of all, though, he’s sincere about his search — one that will continue.

“I will always be searching for God somewhere. ... For a while there, it always felt like I was supposed to be ashamed of my religious heritage. But I can’t be. I can’t be,” he said. “The most rewarding thing that I can do is explore human belief and tragedy and religious ideas — ideas of Jesus and God — with a purity of heart, the human sense of searching for something good.” Or, as he says in verse: Say what you want with blood and bone,

And stick a finger in their faces when they say you’re overblown! Say yes to sun! Say yes to pain! Say yes to sticking with a city through a thousand days of rain! Say yes to grace! Say no to spite! Say yes to this! Say yes to you! Say yes to me! Say yes to love! Say yes to life!

And if that doesn’t work, there’s always rock ‘n’ roll. As he sings on “Let Me Down Easy”: “If it’s late, you’re drunk and wanting a reason, some reason to live, I always say just put on some Whitesnake.” — WP-Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Gang of Youths features Max Dunn, left, Le’aupepe (also below centre), Jung Kim and Donnie Borzestows­ki, with Joji Malani in the back. — WP-Bloomberg photos
Gang of Youths features Max Dunn, left, Le’aupepe (also below centre), Jung Kim and Donnie Borzestows­ki, with Joji Malani in the back. — WP-Bloomberg photos
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