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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > How Militarie Gun advanced from pandemic venture to indie-punk drive
How Militarie Gun advanced from pandemic venture to indie-punk drive
Entertainment

How Militarie Gun advanced from pandemic venture to indie-punk drive

Last updated: October 16, 2025 5:53 pm
Editorial Board Published October 16, 2025
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Strolling by the artist’s compound of Chicago’s Riot Fest early on a cloudy Saturday afternoon, dozens of artists, music trade professionals, and different VIPs are leaving their backstage trailers to move over to the principle stage, hoping to stake out a great spot to look at the following noteworthy band on the invoice.

It’s the form of motion you’d anticipate from a hometown hero’s set later within the afternoon or for one of many larger headliners within the night, however not for the second act of the day on the huge Riot Stage. But it surely’s additionally not sudden, contemplating how how a lot buzz the band Militarie Gun obtained on the competition grounds earlier than they got here on stage.

Since Ian Shelton based Militarie Gun in 2020, they’ve rapidly turn into a favourite of punk and hardcore bands (and followers) younger and outdated. Within the final 12 months alone, the Los Angeles band has been requested to play with punk legends like Gorilla Biscuits, Intercourse Pistols (though that present was canceled as a consequence of harm) and Alkaline Trio together with modern headliners like Knocked Free, Model Pussy, Touche Amore and Excessive Vis.

“We were on tour with Manchester Orchestra and then Knocked Loose, and we also opened for Limp Bizkit, so it’s all in our lexicon,” Shelton says, seated within the again nook of mid-Wilshire’s Met Him at a Bar. “When we toured with Manchester Orchestra, we opened the show with the soft version of ‘Never F—d Up Once’ to invite people in. We view ourselves as chameleons, because we want to be ourselves, but we want to play to the audience. We can play any version of these songs and it’s still us. The best version of us is when we’re inspired by the band we’re playing with — not even necessarily before that show, but watching their show and being like ‘We need to get better.’ That’s my favorite thing on Earth.”

That capacity to vary gears whereas staying uniquely true to themselves has remained a part of Militarie Gun‘s appeal as they’ve grown from native darlings to a global powerhouse. Usually mislabeled as a easy hardcore band from their early “All Roads Lead to the Gun” EPs and 2023’s “Life Under the Gun” debut album, Shelton’s relatably catchy songwriting has drawn in different musicians, followers and critics alike. Regardless of his insistence (between bites of garlic shrimp and rigatoni vodka) that his lyrics all stem from his naivety about life, there’s an intelligence and authenticity on Militarie Gun’s first two albums and handful of EPs that many bands spend a long time making an attempt to nail down.

Mix that top-shelf writing and musical versatility with a band that’s rising increasingly comfy in its personal pores and skin and you find yourself with Militarie Gun’s new album, “God Save the Gun.” However for these anticipating extra of the identical on the band’s sophomore effort, they could be shocked with the set of indie-punk singalongs that flood their newest launch. And as a gaggle that by no means actually thought of itself “hardcore,” it’s each a possibility for artistic development and an opportunity to unfold their wings into the music they’ve all the time needed to make.

“We always wanted to make a song that sounded like Third Eye Blind, but I couldn’t sing that well,” Shelton says, slicing on the disc of burrata atop his pasta. “I’m just a dumba— writing songs that are aspiring to be catchy, and we arrive at the most simple thing.”

When the band began, it was as impressed by Modest Mouse because it was iconic Chicago hardcore label Contact and Go Information, the singer stated. The Born Towards tune “Alive With Pleasure” was additionally a part of the prototype for his or her sound with noisy guitars and considerably melodic, shouted vocals. However greater than something, the band was fixated on unlocking the following sound that excited them. Inevitably, Shelton says the band are going to finish up making music that no person enjoys, as a result of they’ll have burnt out all of our receptors to the issues that folks like about us. “I used to say Militarie Gun was a hardcore band just to piss people off,” he stated. “I wanted people to be mad that we were referring to ourselves as something we clearly were not, but then Turnstile happened and we were suddenly part of a scene.”

Based on Shelton, a lot of Militarie Gun can truly be attributed to the world going the alternative approach of how he expects. What began as a pandemic-induced solo venture whereas on a break from his Seattle-area powerviolence band Regional Justice Middle was by no means actually supposed to go away his bed room, and the vocalist’s transfer from Washington to Los Angeles was to assist him get away from the his musical previous. After their rise as an unintentional hardcore band, it might’ve been predictable and sure simpler to decide to the bit and lean into the scene forming round them. As a substitute, Shelton stripped away the tactical vest he used to put on on stage, realized to “actually sing” whereas recovering from a vocal harm, and launched an acoustic EP together with some poppier single to soft-launch their new sound.

Even on “God Save the Gun,” Shelton and his bandmates — guitarists William Acuña and Kevin Kiley, bassist Waylon Trim and drummer David Stalsworth — couldn’t chorus from placing collectively an enormous, cinematic album that was greater than only a assortment of songs. Whereas the singer initially believed he was writing lyrics for the album from the attitude of “embracing desperation as a character,” he quickly realized it was all only a masks to defend his personal perspective on the world and stop himself from changing into too honest in his songwriting. “No song can ever be about someone else without also being about me,” Shelton explains. “God Save the Gun” turned a 14-song rollercoaster with an outlined narrative by Shelton’s innermost ideas.

The document begins with the road “I’ve been slipping up” and ends with “If you want to keep your life, you’ve got to let it go.” There’s a transparent arc between these two issues because the document strikes by its acts, Shelton says.

“The first three songs are about seeking fulfillment from places that you shouldn’t, and then it turns inward. ‘God Owes Me Money’ is about childhood trauma and how people do harm from not thinking rather than pre-calculation — which also means I’ve traumatized people by not thinking,” the singer stated.

From there, “God Save the Gun” goes to this self-reflection of trauma and rising with studying the improper lesson of — “I had bad done to me, so it’s OK for me to be bad and an alcoholic because I’ve seen all this stuff,” Shelton stated. “That’s the manic episode in the middle of the record, and then it takes a downward slope where it’s the depression and suicidal thoughts as a result of the embrace of destruction. Then ‘Isaac’s Song’ comes on to pick you up and dust you off, and the end is meant to be hopeful.”

Whereas the clear arc of “God Save the Gun” could also be a brand new endeavor for Militarie Gun, the bigger theme carries on what they began with “Life Under the Gun” and their early EPs. For Shelton, the band’s songs have all the time been about contextualizing his personal blunders, acknowledging exterior points and dealing by each of them collectively to hopefully construct towards a brighter private (and doubtlessly societal) future. That mixture of the songwriter’s inner struggles inside bigger society is without doubt one of the core tenets for Shelton and Militarie Gun — significantly in relation to making errors and looking for forgiveness and enchancment in a world that’s all too desperate to “cancel” individuals for prior transgressions.

“The worst thing now culturally is that people have to pretend that they’re perfect,” Shelton says. “People are throwing others in front of the cancel culture bus to slow it down, just so it can’t run them over. I’d rather stand in front of the bus like ‘Can it run me over? Do I withstand the test?’ instead of having to pretend I’ve never done anything bad. It feels better to admit you’ve done wrong than to say you never have, because then you’re living in secret, which is the scariest thing to me.”

Militaire Gun performs at 7 p.m. Thursday at Oblivion in Los Angeles (“God Save the Gun” document launch present).

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