
Regional Justice Center
Monday, September 30, 9 p.m., $12
Local 506, Chapel Hillย
Last yearโs World of Inconvenience introduced the scathing hardcore ofย Regional Justice Center,ย a remarkably broad audience for such an intense band. Outlets from Bandcamp to Noisey featured the outfit, which is led by multidisciplinary artist Ian Shelton.ย
When Sheltonโs brother Max was incarcerated, the musician gained firsthand experience of how the American criminal justice system affects not only those entrenched within it, but also those surrounding them. World of Inconvenience, which was released by Raleighย label To Live A Lie Records, in collaboration with several other imprints,ย was heralded by Bandcamp as both, โa personal narrative that finds Shelton grappling with his brotherโs incarceration”ย and “a piece of prisoner advocacy, a text that rails against Americaโs malignant prison-industrial complex.โ
For his part, Shelton isnโt as comfortable being labeled as a political messenger; he hopes people will use his story as an opportunity to reflect and reach their own conclusions. But thereโs no question his band has resonated with people. The follow-up EP, Augustโs Institution EP builds on the nuanced lyricism and blunt-force hardcore that made World of Inconvenience one of last yearโs most exciting and compelling hardcore albums.
We caught up with Shelton in the middle of an extensive cross-country tour, which arrives at Local 506 in Chapel Hill on Monday.
INDY WEEK: How has the tour been going so far?
IAN SHELTON: Itโs been amazing. I booked it all a long time ago and itโs been a lot of work, and itโs really crazy how hard itโs paying off. The shows have been crazy. It blew my expectations away. Last night was Omaha, and it was insane. It was one of the craziest shows weโve ever played.
Thatโs fantastic. You said at one point that this band was really the first time youโd ever been able to make something that was completely your own vision, and not have other inputs. How do you think that affected the outcome ofย this project?
IS: Itโs just because I wasnโt able to be slowed down by anything else. When a band is a democracy, it ends up with a lot of bickering about what it should or shouldnโt be, and I think the process of art gets a little watered down, in terms of it being a true vision, or saying something really concisely when youโre trying to speak for so many people. When itโs just one person, itโs very clear what youโre trying to say and what youโre trying to do.
Do you imagine that Regional Justice Center will ever have a permanent lineup, aside from yourself?
As far as permanent lineup goes, itโs me and our guitar player, Alex [Haller]. Alex is also always there with me. He misses the occasional show, but other than that, heโs been there from the first show until now, and heโs been on every tour. Him and I are the permanent thing. And then thereโs friends that will always go in and out, but I donโt foresee that weโll have the ability, unless weโre really making money and can make sure people are getting paid enough to really miss work, that we could have a steady lineup.
And your brother Max has contributed as well, in terms of writing lyrics, but also in the phone conversations that were a part of World of Inconvenience. Do you consider him a member of the band, even if heโs not on stage with you?
Yeah. And he is on stage with us. We play his voice every night at the show. I donโt speak at all when we play live. I just sing the songs, and then he talks between. For this tour, specifically, I did a new interview with him, so when youโre seeing us live, itโs all new sound clips and itโs not the same thing that you hear on the record. Itโs its own new experience.
Heโs a part of it. And he hit me up the other day because his media player in prison is broken, so weโre taking band money and buying a new one. Heโs getting part of the band fund any time we do anything. Heโs 100 percent a part of the band.
I was struck when Iย read that you didnโt really consider this a political project per se, that it was more of a personal story. How do you define for yourself, the intersection of the personal and political?
Itโs somewhat hard. I donโt ever try to speak for anyone besides myself. Thatโs kind of the goal. So for me to say itโs political means that I think Iโm speaking for something larger than myself. When it comes to this thing, I think itโs just a relatable situation. Itโs political in nature due to the fact that itโs governmental force, itโs societal. There are so many things that shape the experience that so many people are sharing, whether it be family members or people in the system.
Itโs inherently political in that sense, but I just want it to be my personal story, my brotherโs personal story, my familyโs personal story. I think when you start to try to speak for things that arenโt yourself, it becomes unrelatable, even if youโre trying to broaden it. By trying to do that, you make it an unrelatable experience.
That makes sense. Itโs always seemed to me that the music that leaves the deepest political impressions is often intensely personal. Itโs about an issue, but mostly itโs the story of a person and thatโs what connects.
When people talk politics, itโs really easy when youโre doing this branching, overarching narratives, but itโs not what people care about. You go to a movie to watch the story of one person. Youโre not going to see a thing thatโs all-encompassing of every human being that ever lived. Every human being relates and puts their story upon the story of one person. Thatโs what it is in the end. Itโs just the way humans are built. They want something intensely personal because theyโll put themselves in it.
With the Institution EP, that just came out, I noticed in reading the lyrics, it goes a lot of different places, and none of it feels like youโre talking at somebody. It feels fairly confessional, as a style of songwriting.
Part of the concept of it being called Institution was I wanted to look at different concepts as institutions, and the way theyโve intersected with my life. I think a major differentiation between what happened with my brotherโs life and what happened with mine was that he was put on depression medication really young. We grew up really rough, and I think my family figured that was some sort of solution for him, to put him on meds. Thatโs what the song โMedicationโ is about: showing someone early on that drugs can be a crutch, and then blaming them when they use drugs as a crutch later on.
It was the same with โInstitution,โ I was thinking about the way the school systems and other things deal with at-risk youth that might just be funneling them into the system, even though itโs meant to be an intervention. If you take people out of the mainstream of school, and putting them among other people that are also into drugs, also into crime,ย I think itโs creating a system for them to enable each other to some degree. These are things that Iโve thought about for a long time, how these preventative things are actually forcing people into the system, in a way.ย I donโt know the solution. Iโm just observing it.
And in that, thereโs also songs that have nothing to do with that. The song โDismantledโ is about how I recently dismantled my life, and thatโs purely confessional, personal stuff.
Itโs interesting because, like you said, it asks more questions than it answers. But from a listenerโs perspective, that seems more engaging.ย
I think if anyone says they know the answers, theyโre full of shit. I donโt claim to have any.
Do you find yourself approaching other art in the same way? I know youโve made some music videos and other film work, as well as other musical projects.
As far as filmmaking and writing goes, Iโm still pretty early on. I do approach everything with a sense of ambiguity. I want to interpret it and feel it for myself, even if itโs the wrong interpretation according to the artist. I think thatโs a very important part of the process. Itโs so important to let people draw their own conclusions. So, yeah, Iย think everything I do is going to be morally ambiguous, itโs not going to be didactic and explain everything to you.ย
I think people are too often looking for something thatโs black and white, instead of looking for the nuance. That โyouโre with us or against us mentality.โ
Yeah, itโs easier. Itโs so much easier to say, โOh, thatโs that anti-cop band,โ instead of, โOh, thatโs a band that has a personal story to tell about the relationship between prisoner and family,โ or whatever. The easiest thing is to say itโs an anti-cop thing. And thatโs what people want in the current moment. Maybe they donโt even want something as nuanced as what weโre doing.
Do you have anything you hope people get out of it when they hear a record, or see a show?
I hope it spawns some sort of introspection. It was coming into focus last night, while we were driving at night, what I want to achieve with our next record. Ultimately, Iโm trying to ask the question, โWhy am I the one traveling the world while my brother is stuck in prison?โ I want to unpack all of the trauma that weโve been through in a way that is productive. Iโm going to have my mother involved in the next record, and talk to her about everything, and talk to my brother about it, and have these overlapping narratives. I hope ultimately that it serves as a way to unpack everything that you go through in life that you donโt realize how it affects you.
I think all my lyrics are very selfish and introspective, and theyโre not about things bigger than myself, and I hope that people take those lyrics and think about it in relation to their lives in whatever way that it applies. If itโs not at all what I mean it to, thatโs cool. I just hope that it is an unpacking of the things that shape them, and the trauma that theyโve been through. That would be my ultimate goalย because Iโm trying to do that for myself. Iโm trying to figure out why I am the way I am, and why the things that happened happened.
I would imagine thatโs a pretty cathartic process, doing the work of exploring all that, and then being able to share it with an audience, to be able to put it into something and get feedback.
Iโve always been deeply influenced by my family life. I think early on, I just realized what it was. Being a boring white guy, having a really traumatic childhood is one of the only things on earth that ended up making me interesting. So that was my influence, getting into art, and sharing that with people and realizing the way people would light up and listen to me when I would share these traumatic, crazy things. I learned thatโs just the way I cope with it. Itโs always been a cathartic experience, and now I get to really put it on the forefront and be more articulate as an adult and actually try to better myself through it.
Would you consider Regional Justice Center an act of activism or advocacy of any sort, or is it purely a self-contained pursuit?
Thatโs an interesting question, because I use the platform to talk about the ways prisoners and families are exploited, which I think in itself is an act of advocacy and that is a very political thing. Iโm able to talk to big news outlets and tell people about it that wouldnโt otherwise hear anything about it. So in the end, yes. But I hesitate to call it that, because weโre trying to keep our head above water financially, as a band. To say that weโre doing anything bigger than being a band is kind of inaccurate.
Itโs self-serving at this moment. Weโre not donating money. Weโre not doing things that we could be doing, because weโre going so hard at touring and doing things that require so much money. Itโs tough to say, because I really havenโt wanted to put myself out that way, because I donโt want to be inaccurate or be, like, โWell, you could be doing X, Y and Z,โ because we could be doing those things, but we simply canโt currently because weโre trying to keep our head above water.
Aside from this tour, do you have any other plans in the fairly immediate future?
Weโll have ten days off, and then we go to Japan, which will be a really cool experience. Itโs basically just grind all the way until we get through with that, and then weโre going to lay low for a while. Institution has been successful in itself, and I think weโve been going for the better part of two years straightโour first tour was in September 2017โand weโve spent a lot of time away from home. Our goal with 2020 is to not do as much, have the things we do be more important, and I want to write another LP, a proper full-length. Now that we have this EP out, I really want to release another LP in 2021, so I just want to get to writing and recording. We love the process of recording, so weโre trying to get back to that as soon as possible.


You must be logged in to post a comment.