Calling Hours - Say Less

Revelation

Press from: Brooklyn VeganFlood MagazineNo EchoPunk NewsThat’s Good Enough For Me

The official story of Calling Hours more accurately begins in 2021, but for vocalist Popeye Vogelsang, the story actually unfolds a few years earlier.

“I was living alone in a one-bedroom apartment in a 1940s building in Los Angeles,” he recalls. “It was a seven-minute walk to Trader Joe’s, an eight-minute walk to my bank, and a nine-minute walk to the post office. I was doing voiceover work full-time. When I had free time, I’d walk to one of the local parks and have a sandwich under a tree. It was like living inside of the Andy Griffith show—like I was living in Mayberry, where every day was a sunny day.”

As an established fixture in Southern California—both personally and creatively as the former frontman for melodic hardcore greats Farside—there was little in his routine to suggest at that point that Popeye’s life was headed for any sort of major change. It felt like an ideal life, in fact, until it didn’t.

“It was very solitary, and I guess I was OK with that—or at least I told myself that I was OK with that—until I met the woman who is now my wife,” he explains. “That absolutely changed everything.”

Among those changes, Popeye uprooted his entire life to move cross-country to the decidedly less metropolitan city of Scranton, Pennsylvania, where he would eventually come to meet the rest of his new band—guitarists Thomas McGrath and Tony Bavaria, bassist Garrett Rothman, and drummer Jim Bedorf—at the tail end of 2021. That’s when The Commercials, a band of local heroes featuring McGrath and Bavaria, invited Popeye to open a New Years Eve reunion show they were planning. That invitation quickly evolved into the duo offering to become the core of a backing band for Popeye to play with that night, and then eventually, into the idea of becoming a new band altogether—bringing in Rothman and Bedorf from Don’t Sleep.

“And stupid me, I raised my hand and said, ‘Well, I’m not doing anything. You wanna send me some demos and maybe we can do something?’” Popeye laughs. “So it just kind of went from there to Garrett texting with Brian McTernan, who worked on the first Don’t Sleep record, and then to Brian cracking the whip and saying, ‘Book a studio and let’s start demoing songs now.’”

For McTernan, a celebrated producer with a nearly thirty-year history of shaping some of the biggest hardcore records of all time—including albums for Hot Water MusicTurnstileCirca Survive, and Thrice—advancing Calling Hours from the idea stage to the recording stage was personal: “Popeye is one of his favorite singers of all time,” Rothman explains. “He told me he named one of his cats after Popeye.”

The outcome of that collaboration is Say Less, a seven-song record for Revelation Records that revisits the band members’ melodic post-punk sensibilities while working in a decidedly contemporary direction. It’s also a deep dive into the feelings of displacement and discomfort that punctuated Popeye’s move—a meditation on the intersection of sense of place and sense of self.

“There’s a sadness to his lyrics, but it’s super relatable,” Rothman says. “‘Cardboard and Aluminum’ is basically about when it feels like your life is falling apart, like it’s being held together by duct tape.”

“At some point reality sets in and I think you tend to get a little more introspective in a different way,” Popeye adds. “I very much understood that if I moved out here, my voiceover career would very possibly take a huge nose dive, and it did. I was barely making any money. The honeymoon was over, and that was pretty much my life. So I wrote about that.”

When he sings, “Trade in my sunscreen for a different dream,” in “Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?” there’s a clear sense that Popeye’s move to Pennsylvania is part of a dream still unfolding. And while the Calling Hours story is still very much being written, the singer credits that displacement with the courage to make a dedicated return to his musical life so many years after Farside’s quiet ending.

“Ultimately, I always come back to the fact that I have a much better life now than I did in 2018,” he says, with certainty. “It’s enhanced, it’s upgraded, it’s messier, and it’s more complicated. But it’s better because this life can actually lead to some very great things.”

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