
Time & Location
25 Aug 2020, 19:30
The Grand Social, 35 Liffey Street Lower, Northside, Dublin 1, D01 C3N0, Ireland
Guests
About The Event
MCD proudly presents
Dune Rats
MONDAY AUSGUT 25th ( Rescheduled due to the shitty Coivid19)
The Grand Social
Tickets from €15 incl booking fee on sale now
Dune Rats announces headline show at The Grand Social
For Dune Rats, the key to making their third album, Hurry Up And Wait, was coming back to where
they began. After the success of their 2017 breakthrough The Kids Will Know It’s Bullshit, Brisbane
trio Danny Beus, Brett Jansch and BC Michaels could have gone anywhere in the world and worked
with anyone they wanted for their new LP.
And, at first, that’s what they did. After starting the writing process in Australia—at the rural Victoria
farm belonging to their mate Ross Knight from legendary punk act Cosmic Psychos, and at a rat-
infested farmhouse in Boonah, Queensland—the band flew to the very different surrounds of LA to
work with legendary music producer John Feldmann. There, they found themselves in a surreal
whirlwind of personal trainers, Soho House sessions, movie star sightings and gated communities.
But after spending ten days in Calabasas working on music, they realised the lyrics they were singing
didn’t feel like genuine Dunies. As lead singer Danny Beus put it: “People were trying to make us
write songs about being in the club. Well, where I’m from, the club’s the Bowlo.”
America made Dune Rats realise what they did—and didn’t—want their music to be. They returned
home and changed approach, swapping superproducers for old friends. Their right handman became
James Tidswell of Violent Soho; a longtime mate who, rather than trying to shape their output,
acted as an incubator for what was already there. Later, they recruited engineer Mitch Kenny,
producer and songwriter Miro Mackie, got Mike Green on board to mix the album and recorded it all
at The Grove studios in the Central Coast with Tidswell and Kenny.
All three names were vital to the process of making the album, in part because they knew when to
hang back and let Dune Rats be Dune Rats. With trusted hands holding it down, the boys were given
the headspace to make music at their own pace. As bassist Brett Jansch says: “We were doing
exactly what we wanted to do.”
On ‘No Plans’, the album’s anthemic lead single, Dune Rats sing about both the bonkers and boring
bits of playing in a band with your friends. On ‘Rubber Arm’, it’s about letting yourself get talked into
going out (as they put it, the nights when you “go to the pub for one drink and end up in Vegas with
your undies on your head and a fresh Nickelback tattoo”.) Elsewhere, they sing about making the
best of bad situations (‘Rock Bottom’), the ridiculous scenarios you can’t believe happen to you
Dune Rats will play The Grand Social on Saturday 4th April 2020 with tickets from €15 on sale
now
For all media enquiries please contact Sive O’Connor at MCD Productions.
sive@mcd.ie