
The word โbratโ has followed Nathan Williams around for almost a decade, but at the age of 30, with a fully-fledged business to his name, as well as the ongoing success of band Wavves, his rebellious streak has proven not just purposeful but pretty damn inspiring. The San Diego native knows how to play the system, so when the major labels came knocking a few years ago looking to turn Wavves into the next so-called saviours of radio rockโnโroll, Williams and bassist Stephen Pope made sure they used it to their advantage.
โWe were just trying to go to eat at nice places in LA,โ he laughs. โThere were a few people from majors who would not stop reaching out to us. They were obsessed. They thought we had heat and they needed an edgy big rock band like they used to have in the โ90s. Me and Stephen were in our shitty apartments, Googling โnicest restaurants in LAโ. We went to eight or nine dinners. At the end weโd say, โnot interestedโ.โ
When Warners came along and offered them a cash advance too good to refuse, they accepted while being shrewdly aware of what they were getting themselves into. โWe still owned all of our shit, which was the most important part for us. For them it was a shot in the dark.โ The day to day of being signed to a major, however, was unpredictable and beyond their wildest nightmares. โI figured it would run the same as [prior label] Fat Possum, just with more people. I was wrong.โ By the time they were readying to release their second Warners album โ 2015โs โVโ โ shots were fired. Williams released single โWay Too Muchโ on Soundcloud before the label had approved it, the label forgot to sign off on the artwork and, in the end, Wavves felt swept under the rug. Ultimately it felt like a career step backwards.
โIโd never come in contact with such a poorly run company in my life,โ says Williams. โIt was anarchy. Nobody knew what they were doing. Turnover rate was like an American Apparel. It was really all cons โ unless youโre a cash cow. For everyone else, major labels canโt help you. Maybe at one time they could, but that time is dead.โ The birds-eye view on Warnersโ inner mess wound up pushing Williams to legitimize his own business โ Ghostramp. โI figured if these idiots could get by, we could do it a hundred times better.โ
With that fighting spirit, Williams took back control and realized his own teenage dreams. Today, during a Monday lunchtime hour, heโs making time between meetings to talk about forthcoming sixth Wavves record โYouโre Welcomeโ in the stock room at Ghostrampโs Chinatown-based LA skate shop. Opening in October 2016, Ghostramp is the physical embodiment of a vision that harks back to before Williams made the first Wavvesโ albums in his parentsโ garage. Itโs a merchandise store, itโs a label, itโs a tangible community in a time when the digital age has taken the confidence out of physical product. And โ whatโs more โ itโs working. โYouโre Welcomeโ is the soundtrack to this new lease of freedom. Itโs Williamsโ tongue-in-cheek rebirth as a self-released, self-actualized, self-promoting punk kingpin, and despite putting his money where his uncensored mouth is, heโs emerged not just unscathed but with the upper hand. โIโm my own boss and that feels great,โ he smiles.
In February 2016, months before Ghostramp opened, Williams took himself into producer Dennis Herringโs [โKing Of The Beachโ] studio in Downtown LA, and for the first time since the early records worked regular office hours and almost entirely alone. It was the polar opposite experience to making 2013โs โAfraid Of Heightsโ record, which took Wavves over a year and was โout of controlโ. โWe were so fucked up in the studio โ everybody, the producer, the engineer, everyone recording. Weโd waste days,โ recalls Williams. With this, Williams brought everyone in one at a time, ensuring it was the minimum amount of people possible. That prevented the recording from descending intomidnight oil-burning party sessions.
The album was put together wholly differently from โVโ, too, which was recorded live as a band album together with guitarist Alex Gates, drummer Brian Hill and Stephen in the studio. โYouโre Welcomeโ is mostly comprised of Williamsโ oddball, sample-led brainstorms. He came up with 40 tracks, now whittled down to twelve, fat-free punk zingers. โIโd come up with an idea, fool around with it, have Brian come in and play drums, then figure it out.โ A sample nerd, Williams delved into his obsession with 1950s doo-wop and โ surprisingly โ international folk, including Cambodian pop and โ70โs psychedelia from South America.
The results make for one of the most diverse and intricate Wavves records yet. โCome To The Valleyโ contains a Phil Spector meets Beach Boys โ60s High School dance vibe, whereas title track โYouโre Welcomeโ riffs on sound effects that could almost originate from Bizarro World, never mind Cambodia. Some of his ideas ran away with themselves a little too much, as Williams reveals one track was a little too close to Drakeโs โHotline Blingโ for comfort. โMillion Enemiesโ is right in his comfort zone though. Inspired by New York Dolls, Bowie and Gary Glitter, he calls it โthe anthem song.โ โItโs a song for the haters,โ he says. The lyrics โI got enemies, a million enemies, living in the streetstonightโ are a call-to-arms for anyone whose detractors are out to get them. โI donโt have a million enemies,โ jokes Williams. โBut probably 500,000.โ
The biggest shift of all, and the ultimate laying down of the gauntlet to Williamsโ doubters, is the subject matter. Where โVโ was a โbuzzkillโ record, all hangovers, loversโ tiffs and depression, โYouโre Welcomeโ is less navel-gazing. Itโs dealing with matters outside of Williamsโ own headspace. โIโm tired of writing about myself,โ says Williams. โIt got boring. On this record I tell more stories, talk about parts of my life from other peopleโs perspective.โ โStupid In Loveโ for instance is about a female junkie who lived near him back in San Diego. โAnimalโ is his anti-corporate, anti-establishment track. โThe whole world covered in gasoline and burning alive/I feel taken advantage of and empty insideโ go the lyrics.
On their last tour, Wavves banned members of the audience, including homophobes, anti-abortionists, racists, and Trump supporters. Ghostrampโs website is currently donating to the likes of ACLU, Planned Parenthood and National Immigration Law Center. On โYouโre Welcomeโ too, it seems Williams has decided to get political, particularly on the song โExerciseโ, with its lyrics โdancing while the world is burning downโฆ I canโt believe the shit they feed to us/Theyโre lying to our face.โ
โI never thought Iโd write a song like that,โ says Williams. โI donโt know if itโs because Iโm older or because shit got so fucked up and crazy but at this point now you shouldnโt be worried to say something. I wanna make it very clear what side Iโm on. If youโre quiet about it because you donโt wanna upset some of your fanbase, then thatโs part of your fanbase you need to weed out.โ
Thereโs also โ finally โ a love song, called โI Love Youโ that lays Williamsโ emotions bare unashamedly for the first time. Perhaps too, a sign of maturity. โItโs just a love song,โ he says. โIโd always skirt around feelings and find different ways of saying things unless I was literally saying, โIโm depressed.โโ
Offering a tour around Ghostrampโs store, Williams explains that theyโre already looking to expand and move into a bigger space next door this year. Back in 2013, he put out Wavvesโ โLife Suxโ EP by himself. It was too much of a headache and he realized he needed to build a team of capable friends. Now that team runs this daily operation, proving that DIY and business savvy can be bedfellows. Itโs still hilarious to Williams that even in the early days, people would chastise him for โselling outโ. โDid people think that when Iโm 45 Iโd still be recording records in my momโs basement? Being an entrepreneur, having a hold over your own business, being able to employ your friends and create not just a place for fans but for other people to share their ideas too is so cool.โ
Via Ghostramp, Williams isnโt just putting out Wavvesโ new record, heโs signing other local garage bands, funding his tours, schooling DIY artists in how to create and distribute merchandise in a way that supports your career and provides future security where nobody else can. As for Warners, that cash advance helped pay for this store. The rest came from the money Wavves made off merch during 2016โs Summer Is Forever II Tour with Best Coast and Cherry Glazerr. โI thought Ghostramp would be a hobby, doing 7-inches here and there. But now itโs a legitimate business,โ says Williams. โThe thing is Iโm not just interested in making music for Wavves. Iโm too ADD. Being an entrepreneur, being hands-on isnโt just smart, itโs necessary. Your art is everything you do, every choice you make. I was able to build my own thing, own it and control it all 100%. If I want to do something now I donโt ask anyone. I just fucking do it โ thatโs priceless.โ
Nathan Williams never went away, but now heโs made sure heโs here to stay far longer. And for that, girls and boys, youโre welcome.

Flaural
Itโs rare these days that a band founded on pushing sonic boundaries is conscious of not alienating the listener. In the case of Denver-based rockers, Flaural, their music feels like the spoils of deep exploration, brought back down to earth for all to observe in traditional rock outfit form.
Flaural / หflรดrษl / is the unified sum of four equal parts. The hypnotic pulse of Nick Berlinโs kraut rock drum grooves crystalize as the backdrop atop which sprawls the bandโs ethereal art-pop-songwriting. Connor Birchโs expansive synths and keys, the unique virtuosity and aggression of Noah Pfaffโs guitar playing, and the resonant croon of Colin Johnsonโs vocals and driving bass lines all coalesce into experimental psych rock that warmly invites the uninitiated listener into the unknown.
Following a string of EPs โ 2015โs Thin King and 2016โs Over Imaginary Cigarettes โ Flauralโs debut LP, appropriately titled Postponement, has been three years in the making. Early pieces of Postponement were initially recorded while touring through the San Francisco Bay Area at the, now defunct, Animal Room, but the album arrangements didnโt begin to take form until the band settled back in Denver and linked up with producer / engineer James Barone (Beach House, Tennis). Over the course of the next year and a half, the band found pockets of time to finish the recordings. Time becoming a central theme of the album as a whole.
