Bucking stoner stereotypes, Fu Manchu have never been ones to be complacent. But then when they formed in 1985 under the name Virulence they were hardcore punks with a big debt to . Five years later they adopted their new moniker and became part of the 90s revolution, and more than 30 years later they’re still delivering the fuzzy punk goods.

Below, founder, guitarist and vocalist Scott Hill dishes the dirt on new double album . When we first started recording, we didn’t really mean to do a double record. But right as we started writing we were coming up with the typical fuzzy, heavy stuff, and then we had a few maybe mellow ones, so it was like: “What can we do different?” When 2020 came along it was supposed to be our thirty-year anniversary.

We had planned to do a ten-inch every four months that year, but ended up doing one a year until last year, then reissued and . I guess revisiting some of that stuff got me in the mind frame of going back to very simple riffs, and might have influenced some of the songs on the new record. .

I got into punk rock and hardcore around Christmas 1980. A friend played me some live Black Flag and it all went from there. At that point all I wanted was hardcore punk – no Sabbath, no , no .

It all went in the closet. We learned as we went, just watching other bands – how they’d play a chord, how they’d set a guitar up. Because this was all pre-internet.

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