1. Hello! Please introduce you to the
ones who don’t know you yet!
First of
all we want to thank you to contact us for this interview because we have a
weakness for paperzine. Marchi (the first guitarist) has a zine written by hand
named ‘Charge’). So…We are Ebola (Ultracore Bastards). We born in 2007 like a noisecore/grind/hc band.
The first line-up was Dany (singer and drums) and Marchi (first guitar)
starting doing rough noisecore. After several changes we added a guitar (with
Manu) and the actual drummer (Crema); we chose to have no bass because for our
kind of genre it isn’t primary. When I talk about ‘Ebola’ I prefer to consider
every people that share our way of expression and support us writing lyrics, DIYing
stuffs or simply helping and supporting us. Because of this the list of members
is very long, but we have to mention Stefania (who sings on the stage with us
the cover of our brothers of Kalashnikov Collective), Shnell & Auro (who
wrote some songs), Johnny (occasional
guitar tournist) Anna, Yunior, Heresia Rec, Charge zine, Max, etc…
2. There is also a german band named
EBOLA. Do you know them? Why have you chosen your name?
DANI:
There’s lot of band named Ebola…I know the German ones and when we play with
Nulla Osta they think we could be them…Anyway this is not a problem for us.
When we chose the name it wasn’t
important for us because we prefer that people could focus on lyrics, messages
and our way of expression. We don’t want that people just collects our ideas
& thoughts taking recordings and put them in their list of groups after the
first listening…I think we would not to be ‘rockstars’ so it isn’t important if
there are other bands with the same name. We want no copyright and this is a
choice totally unmarketable so if we had chosen a name like ‘Fucking Purulental
Deprived Obscenity Of Jesusanal ’ I
think that wouldn’t be so natural like taking the first name we had in mind
(also adding that in Italy there wasn’t active band with the same name in the
punx scene).
3. You’re doing a east Europe tour in
august. How did this get possible? Do you know any bands from there? Where can
you play and with which bands?
DANI:
Choosing not to have Myspace or Facebook it’s more difficult to take gigs, but
we prefer just to use mail and speaking with people who could organize a gig
for us also a lot of months before the tour. If you have to use a media like
internet you can establish a contact more human and less frantic by e-mail.
Anyway our main idea is to play in squats or diy places and also last year we
had a tour in the west Europe with an old camper making 8500 km in 8 days at 80
km/h and taking from Spain to Holland passing in Basque Countries, France and
Belgium. It was very hard, but very stimulant. This year we had a big trouble
with the van and we broke it in the north of Serbia…With the help of great guys
(thanks to Robi and Vuk&Kimi) we were able to do the same 2 gigs in Serbia
and an other one in Romania but we had to skip the gigs in Greece and Bulgaria
(hope to play there in another occasion). I take this opportunity to give a big
wish to die in the Croatian border to the cop who didn't allow us to pass just
watching our faces and he didn't even check our documents…During this tour we
had the chance to know great bands and people and I want to mention
Dishumanity, Livia Sura, Pavlionul 32 and Mitar of New Mortal Gods.
4. Are you politically active?
DANI: I think that your political activities are
during every day of your life. Anyway our group is first of all a group of
friends and because of this we share also moments besides gigs and trips so our
bond remains also in other social situations. Shortly we are against every kind
of oppression and repression. We prefer to play in benefit gigs, taz, squats
and places far from a logical profit. Only in some of our lyrics we talk
directly of social themes just because we don’t want to talk ever of the same
arguments risking to abuse about it (I think that other active groups in the
scene could do it better) and in the other songs you could find by your
own answers about what you have read.
Anyway at the gigs I often speak about social themes (personally I’m more
involved on anti-psychiatric question) alternating obscure rage and irony
because a gig is an occasion to think but also to delight. This could appear
very insane, but (contrarily to what think our society) insanity is a virtue.
5. Brescia is in Lombardia, where the LEGA
is pretty popular. Do you have any problems with them? What can you tell us
about Brescia?
DANI: Certainly they’re the heirs of legalized
xenophobia, but actually their big limit is their ignorance and they didn’t had
a big influence with young people. In Brescia they have a pretty popularity
because people that some years ago had a militancy in political parties of the
left were disappointed by the way that left taken. n this situation Lega
operated in direct contact with people in the street, typical behave of the
parliamentary left which now is more bourgeois and it’s not so interested in
such a thing. For these reasons and for a big basic ignorance of the people
Lega increased their consents in Brescia.. Shortly Lega are a group of racist
old jerks and could just wipe our fucking asses.
Actually we
lives in different parts of Italy (I live in Valcamonica, near the mountains,
Marchi and Crema in Bologna and Manu in Bergamo) but we often find ourselves in
Brescia and I think The bigproblems of Brescia are those of the big cities
where citizens think only of their quiet and are not interesting in problems of
the others. In practice, the indifference reigns supreme on the weaks. If you
add a lot of repression you can easily understand that squats and social
centres are resisting very hardly and a lot of places are cleared. At any rate
sometimes born some squat situation and we obviously support with our means.
Hope you
could be satisfied by our answers. Hugs, Sex and Ultracore.