The decision to tour their sophomore album,听Grand, in full to commemorate its 10-year-anniversary wasn鈥檛 an obvious decision at first for indie-pop band Matt and Kim. 鈥淲e battled it for a little bit,鈥 says Matt Johnson, who serves as the duo鈥檚 vocals and keyboard player alongside Kim Schifino on drums. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 want to look back, but that album changed everything for us.鈥 A decade after its release, Matt and Kim have five more albums under their belt, but the adoration for听Grand听and the album鈥檚 single 鈥淒aylight鈥 鈥 which reached No. 6 on Billboard鈥檚 Hot 100 chart when it premiered 鈥 remains strong. 鈥淧eople tell us about these experiences they had, and all these lyric tattoos from songs,鈥 Johnson says. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 let this anniversary go by without doing it.鈥
A stop at Royal Oak Music Theatre, on Oct. 21, is part of the听Grand 鈥 10 Year Celebration Tour. Along with performing the album in full, the band will play other fan-favorite songs and tape an episode of their听Matt and Kim Podcast听in front of a small VIP audience before the show. In anticipation of all of the above, Johnson spoke with听糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit听on what makes the Detroit area one of their favorite stops and why he thinks the material on听Grand听still resonates with fans.听听听
糖心vlog安卓版 Detroit: Is it true that you haven鈥檛 played all the songs off听Grand听live before? And, if so, what are you excited to play this time?听
Matt Johnson:听It鈥檚 true, yeah. For some reason, we鈥檙e not one of these bands that when we put out a new album we play the whole thing. I like to know songs when I see a band live, so we warm up to it slowly and sometimes we never play them all. There鈥檚 an instrumental [on Grand] called 鈥淐inders,鈥 which is one of the fastest songs we鈥檝e ever wrote. There鈥檚 a slow song called 鈥淭urn This Boat Around.鈥 I mean, 鈥淕ood Ol Fashion Nightmare鈥 has been this beloved Matt and Kim song for many years. It comes in and out of our set time and time again because we just haven鈥檛 quite figured out how to tackle it correctly on stage. I think we nailed it this time.
Aside from playing听Grand听in full, how else are you celebrating this anniversary during the tour?听
We鈥檙e always adding new things to our shows. We now have these terrifying naked blowup dolls with our faces printed on them that we send out into the audience. The new one has been this 6-foot inflatable unicorn. You hook a hose into its butt and it sprays water out its horn (laughs). We鈥檝e been bringing that on stage. Our whole thing is how to break that front wall of the stage where it鈥檚 not just about what鈥檚 happening on stage but it鈥檚 about what鈥檚 happening the whole room. I put the Detroit area in my top five cities as places to play because of the energy of the crowd. That鈥檚 everything to us. People are jumping around and moshing and crowd surfing and getting wild. If I was looking out at an audience and they were just bopping their heads it would be like a comedian telling jokes and nobody laughs. I can see the immediate reaction and feedback of people singing along and yelling and dancing and jumping around and all of that. that鈥檚 everything that fuels the show. We get that there, so I鈥檓 excited.
How do you think you鈥檝e evolved since the album came out in 2009?听
Evolution is a weird thing. I don鈥檛 like to think that we鈥檙e evolving in one direction. I put up [on Instagram] a month or two ago how crazy it was that 鈥淒aylight鈥 hit 100 million plays on Spotify when Spotify wasn鈥檛 even out in the U.S. when it came out. It鈥檚 about people who just kept coming back years later, and now I was just on Spotify the other day and it got another 4 million plays in the last couple months. It鈥檚 just so wild. I don鈥檛 know if we were ever meant to have a song like that. We鈥檙e a proud indie band that is happy to have a sort of cult thing, and it鈥檚 weird to have that one song that found its own life. People are still walking down the aisle to it. It鈥檚 unbelievable for a song that me and Kim were sitting in a bedroom in Vermont writing (laughs).
Why do you think the material is still resonating?听
I assume maybe its authenticity and honesty. I think there鈥檚 a beauty, for a lot of bands early on, when they have no expectations of having a big single or whatever. They鈥檙e just honestly making the music that鈥檚 within them without other expectations. Sometimes I find that bands have a tough time recapturing that because they have all these label people around them and people that are searching for a certain sound when it鈥檚 not what just comes out. [Grand] was our second album, I don鈥檛 think our first album is that great. I don鈥檛 think there was much expectation for it when we made that album. Going back to me then and saying, 鈥渋n 10 years from now, you鈥檙e going to be playing rooms of thousands of people and playing this,鈥 yeah, he wouldn鈥檛 believe it if I told him (laughs).听
What do you have going on past this tour?听
The podcast has been a weekly thing that we鈥檝e been doing. We鈥檙e having fun doing it. It鈥檚 just casual and a fun way to put ourselves out there aside from the music. We are working on new music; we鈥檝e been in the studio quite often. Some of the songs, I think, are going to terrify Matt and Kim fans and some of them are going to be perfect for them. But I don鈥檛 know exactly what the plan is. I鈥檓 not in a rush to make a new album. I want to do some collaborative stuff. I鈥檓 excited to be making new music but I can鈥檛 say there are any real plans for it.
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