Legendary L.A. groovy punks Redd Kross are back for reals with a new album, Researching the Blues (Merge), and soldiering on with their insistence that punk is indeed groovy. They were never strictly “punk” according to the norms of the early-’80s California scene they grew up in; nor did they always sport the “Brady Bunch extras” look they cultivated later in that decade, when the founding brothers starred in the goofy cult classic Spirit of ’76 and went off about Charles Manson, Cher, shag carpeting, and whatnot. But brothers and founding members Jeff and Steve McDonald have consistently crafted oddly catchy tunes via an undying love for Cheap Trick and all loopy things L.A. And judging by their new record, they’re still as good as distilling those influences into songs as ever.

 The band has had the same lineup for six-plus years, and when we caught lead singer/guitarist Jeff McDonald on the phone, they had recently returned from a two-week tour in Australia. Since the Brothers McDonald pop up in the occasional film and TV show, when Jeff started by saying he’d just returned home from Universal Studios I figured he was lining up a new role…

Who are some of your favorite girl groups?

You know, it’s weird, right now girl groups have made a huge resurgence via the Kpop scene, you know the Korean pop scene? A lot of the Kpop stuff is bad and I don’t really like it. But the good stuff is always done by girls. Right now I am obsessed with this group called 2NE1 [ed: 21, get it?]. I just discovered them through a Korean pop TV station in L.A. here, with subtitles. So what they do with Kpop is they have these entertainment production houses. So you’re signed when you’re a teenager, and then you’re a trainee for awhile—you get in physical shape, you dance like 20 hours a day, you learn how to deal with the press, and you record and record until you’re ready to make your debut. It’s kind of a cross between like the Phil Spector/Motown model and the Olympics gymnastic team. But 2NE1 have this reality show, and it’s really fascinating seeing people come up through that system. The guy that ends up producing and writing most of the songs is from the U.S. actually, he’s Korean-American. And these records are amazing! 2NE1 has recorded a couple songs in English. A lot are in Korean with English in the choruses; and a lot of the English is really bad broken English. But a lot of the YG Entertainment groups—the one that 2NE1 and Big Bang are in—everything is pristine as far as that. 2NE1 are the new Ronettes as far as I’m concerned.

Note: Omitted parts not related to 2NE1!

Source: Village Voice

Comments on: "Interview: Redd Kross’s Jeff McDonald On Why 2NE1 Are The New Ronettes" (7)

  1. QW's avatar

    kpop+ us debut= unbelievable
    Asian people Hwaiting!!!!2ne1 Hwaiting!!!!

  2. ckjack_bla's avatar
    ckjack_bla said:

    “I just discovered them through a Korean pop TV station in L.A. here, with subtitles.”

    The power of 2NE1TV!!! 😀

  3. shine's avatar

    “Right now I am obsessed with this group called 2NE1″….
    Yeah we are all obsessed with these group!

    …and actually found out about the group “The Ronettes” now, a group in the 60’s hehehe…

  4. Ely's avatar

    He said BAD BROKEN ENGLISH? Hhhh he havent heard other kpop bands with horrible english songs. Kkkkk i guess? Eventho he said kpop stuff is bad, he still likes it tho! 2ne1 jjang! Kpop is taking over the world! Just wow

    • shinjos's avatar

      what he meant is a lot (other groups) have a bad broken english BUT with yg ent. artists such as 2ne1 and bigbang are pristine or good . i think hes like comparing them to other groups.

  5. cheska's avatar

    2ne1 popularityt is really getting worldwide.congrats girls!just continue what uve started.were so proud of u.

  6. sinderella's avatar
    sinderella said:

    Wow he sure knows a lot about 2ne1. even their reality show, he knows it and watch it.. This proves 2ne1’s popularity and potential.

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