Melbourne monster-punk upstarts Going Swimming are on a mission, and it involves a heavy helping of the F-word, an excellent debut album and an upcoming national tour.
Hold the language warning, though, as singer Nick Leggatt explains exactly what the F makes his band tick.
“If you’re having fun, people have fun with you,” says Leggatt. “We don’t take ourselves too seriously. We try to play shows that we think are going to be fun, with bands we like; shows we think we would want to go to. And I can’t see us [writing about] any subjects too hard-hitting or anything. One of the guys tracked a demo the other day that was about three-and-a-half minutes and we accused him of writing an epic.”
The quartet has taken three years to get to the point of releasing an album, after Leggatt and guitarist Aswin Lakshman spent time in several bands together since meeting at school. Wanting to play music that better reflected the tunes they listened to, they formed Going Swimming with bassist Callan Trewenack and drummer Ben Barclay. The result is the hot-off-the-press Deadtime Stories; a 12-track collection of raucous garage, surf and punk tracks, executed with a healthy dose of piss-taking posturing.
“The four of us have all been in a lot more serious bands [with] longer songs [which were] a bit more wanky,” says Leggatt. “We thought it was time to put all our new songs into an album, and thought it wouldn’t take us very long, being a very no-fuss, lo-fi recording. We thought it would come together quicker than it did, but we got there in the end and we’re stoked to put it out and move on to play the newer stuff. Progressing as a band has felt pretty natural; we’re still enjoying it and having fun.”
Not quite garage and not quite punk, Going Swimming might have invented a genre of their own: monster-punk. It’s a fitting description for not only the Goosebumps-inspired album cover and title, but the often ramshackle way they attack their music.
“When you think of the word ‘punk’, I don’t think we fit that bill,” Leggatt says. “And we’ve played with a bunch of garage-punk bands, and sometimes we don’t fit that bill either. So we’re kind of our own little niche, and I think part of that is my vocals; I yell and do weird stuff. I like to try to riff on a working title and see if I can keep the working title as the final title. It’s not like I have a big scrapbook of heartfelt lyrics I want to put into song. That’s the fun part of it, just writing little ditties.”
A quick glance over the Deadtime Stories tracklist reveals an additional level of humour with some creative and funny song titles.
“‘Yoko, Oh No!’ was a tough one as it’s an instrumental,” Leggatt says. “That song has changed titles a million times. At some stage it was called something like ‘YOLO’, but we decided we can’t have that. ‘Cosmonauts And Crosses’ was a riff on the original title, which was something about being a cosmonaut. The lyrics are a bit messed up and all over the place; we almost wrote it as we recorded and I couldn’t get the lyrics right. We got really drunk one night and I just spat out the verses.”
A national tour is locked in for October and November, so expect to be experiencing the F-word on a stage near you. “It’s that fun vibe,” Leggatt says. “We’re pretty loose onstage. We try not to be loose musically, but sometimes that works its way in. Our songs are short and sharp; we smash them out and pack as many songs as we can into a half-hour set. We want to leave them wanting more, so hopefully they’ll come to another show.”
Going Swimming’sDeadtime Stories isout now independently, and they play Frankie’s Pizza on Sunday October 18.




