Andy Biersack is used to turning the impossible into the possible.
From taking a perhaps unfashionable route into the rock world, and drawing no small amount of criticism from self-appointed gatekeepers, Black Veil Brides now stand on the brink of headlining their biggest-ever UK show. On October 30, Devil’s Night, Andy will be stepping out onstage at London’s OVO Arena Wembley, a dream come true for an artist who has been in love with rock since the tender age of five.
Back then, dad Chris would patiently make his eager son up like KISS frontman Gene Simmons. Andy, who dropped out of high school to front Black Veil Brides, was clearly never going to be someone who blended quietly into a crowd. Rather than safely adopting the jeans-and-hoodie metalcore mannerisms of the times, BVB went the opposite way: hugely coiffured barnets, glam-goth make-up, and songs with names like Rebel Love Song and Fallen Angels.
It was the sort of thing that wasn’t supposed to be popular anymore, but by personifying a new generation’s angst into something that was simultaneously glamorous and meaningful, Andy and Black Veil Brides suddenly found themselves “on the cover of Kerrang! every damn week”, as he now happily reflects. They were there because the rock-loving world, and the UK in particular, had fallen head-over-high-heels in love with them.
“The UK was the first place in the world that really took us seriously, or gave us a chance,” Andy nods from his hotel room in Texas, midway through a particularly long tour. “We were facing a lot of difficulties getting traction in the U.S. – nobody would pay attention to us. When I was 19, we came to the UK to open for Murderdolls and within two weeks of that tour I was on the cover of Kerrang! and seeing headlines like, ‘Is Andy the new god of rock?’ It was an unbelievable experience to go from our home country, where people weren’t really sure about us, to the UK where so many of the artists I idolised came from, and to not only be accepted but be catapulted.”