Here's to the Fatigue Press To MECO

Cover Here's to the Fatigue

Album info

Album-Release:
2018

HRA-Release:
30.03.2018

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1 Intro 00:41
  • 2 Familiar Ground 03:39
  • 3 Here's to the Fatigue 04:00
  • 4 If All Your Parts Don't Make a Whole 02:57
  • 5 Skip the Crawl 03:47
  • 6 A Place in it All 04:20
  • 7 Howl 03:34
  • 8 A Quick Fix 03:35
  • 9 Itchy Fingers 04:32
  • 10 The Things That We Don't Talk About 04:00
  • 11 White Knuckling 05:26
  • Total Runtime 40:31

Info for Here's to the Fatigue

The second full length album from Crawley based alt-rockers Press To MECO. Drummer/vocalist Lewis Williams explains the concept of the song and video: “Familiar Ground talks about questioning the desire to reignite a past relationship even though you are remembering a completely idealised version of it. The video plays upon the themes of the chorus lyrics and shows a couple trying to make a toxic relationship work and inevitably failing… and it all falling apart…(literally).”

“Everyone feels emotions.” Sometimes the simplest phrases are the most powerful. Certainly, it’s the choice of words Crawley trio Press to MECO arrive at when discussing their second album, Here’s To The Fatigue.

“It’s easy to get annoyed and frustrated at life sometimes, or the state of the world in general,” says drummer and lyricist Lewis Williams. “But we want to write about these things from a human, emotional point of view, because those feelings are universal – everyone can relate to them.”

Written in Lewis’ garage throughout 2015-16, with the band often trying to jam an idea down to its very core elements, on Here’s To The Fatigue PTM are continuing to build using giant choruses, shiny, layered vocals and simple, yet fiendishly cunning guitar melodies as on their 2015 Good Intent debut, taking in influences as wide and varied as Fall Out Boy, Arcane Roots, SiKth and Muse. Press to MECO have grown on this new album, not by taking huge, mile-long strides into the unknown, but by getting “much, much better at what we can do,” according to Luke. But it’s in what’s behind the music that adds the real spark.

Lewis recalls working on the lyrics during a time when he describes himself as feeling “sort of lost. I’d reached a point, as many people do, where you’re looking around at your life and wondering what’s next. There’s loads of really crazy things going on in the world right now as well. With all of that mixed together, it all fed into the lyrics.”

Often working on a laptop in his garden, the lyrics that make up songs like Familiar Ground, the rousing If All Your Parts Don’t Make A whole and the impatient Itchy Fingers sit at odds with their upbeat, happy-sounding music. Nowhere moreso than on the riffy, anthemic The Things That We Don’t Talk About, the song all three members of the band pick as a favourite from the record.

“There’s loads of really important, big things that people just don’t talk about,” explains Lewis. “Like, death is the biggest thing that will ever happen to you, it’s all around us, but it’s a thing nobody ever really wants to talk or think about. It’s exploring that idea, that so many big things go unsaid.”

This isn’t to say Press to MECO are mired in misery. Quite the opposite. In fact, that’s the point behind the whole thing, write large in the album’s title: ‘Oh well, let’s keep going.’ “That’s exactly it!” grins Luke. “It’s almost like saying, ‘Well, life can be hard sometimes, the world can be a tough place, but we’re still here – cheers!’”

“We like to mess with people a bit like that,” adds Lewis. “You’re listening to this really melodic, happy sounding music, and then a line will just jump out at you and you’ll go, ‘Oh…’ It gives the whole thing an entirely new perspective.”

Also giving Press to MECO new perspective is working with American producer Machine on the new album in Austin, Texas. Known for his work with an array of bands from Fall Out Boy and Four Year Strong to the heavier sounds of Lamb Of God and Miss May I, the band plumped for him because, “He can make a band sound like themselves.”

“He really listens and tries to make your record sound like its own, individual thing,” says Luke. “It’s not like he goes, ‘Oh, here’s a heavy bit,’ and does the same thing he’d do for Lamb Of God. He really works with you to bring out the personality of you and the songs.”

Having announced their signing with Marshall Records in January, Here’s To The Fatigue looks set to continue the upward trajectory Press to MECO are already set on, having toured heavily with the likes of Sikth, Arcane Roots and Funeral For A Friend over the last few years. And though struggling to put a definitive tag on what they do (“Pop-punk-post-hardcore-rock?” suggests Luke with a laugh, before simply settling on “Rock”), Here’s To The Fatigue’s intelligent mix of sounds and depth of universal emotions could well see the band becoming one of the hottest British artists of 2018. Here’s to that…

"A powerful amalgamation of angular riffs and pop sensibilities." (Rocksound)

"Gargantuan grooves, djenty time signatures and pulse-pounding attention to technical detail…" (Upset)

"Billy Talent, Pulled Apart By Horses and Lower Than Atlantis roughly run through the progressive grinder." (Ourzone)

Press To MECO




Press to Meco
are a young three piece alternative rock outfit from Crawley. Formed in 2008 the group have now returned with new material and an intense and innovative sound. Anthemic lyrics, three part harmonies, powerful guitar hooks and possibly the most highly charged bass and drums rhythm section you’re ever likely to hear define the unique sound of Press to Meco. The band deliver a ‘must see’ powerful live stage show: three outstanding musicians, full-on energy, and thought-provoking lyrics in songs that will genuinely move you.



Booklet for Here's to the Fatigue

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