“All y’all are family and all y’all are the reason that I get to say I got nominated for a GRAMMY,” beams Jason in the video, clearly as stunned as the rest of us. In the accompanying tweet, he proclaims himself “the odd skater kid from Inglewood who tried to get people to believe soul and punk music together was a good idea,” and while that’s a fascinating success story, it undersells the significance of a song about those exploited in the name of power in America’s history, made by a band that was little more than an idea two years ago, and now being recognised by the establishment.
In March of last year, when FEVER 333 made their first appearance on the cover of K!, Jason insisted, “Change is not easy. Revolution doesn’t pay.” And while events since this interview suggest they may do on some level, back in the midst of his vegan doner, Jason is still inclined to agree with his appraisal.
“Sounds like I had remarkable foresight,” he says with a smile that falls away as he suggests the challenges the world is facing are already even worse less than a year later. “In recent months it’s become even more real, which brings a new sense of anxiety when it comes to moving forward. But those feelings are necessary to motivate us into action. It’s best not to be afraid of the truth.”
While we’re discussing truths, though in March Jason told K! that while letlive. were “Soul Punx”, FEVER 333 “is a movement”, today he wants to make clear that statement is not accurate.
“We’re only here because there’s a movement that precedes us,” he says. “We can try our best to be a mouthpiece, an amplifier, a soundtrack, but we are not the movement.
“When we do a festival or something similar, we don’t even arrive on the same platform as the rest of the festival – not in an arrogant way, but whatever quality we bring to that festival is so separate from everything and everyone else. We’re literally just a board to bounce ideas, feelings, emotions, frustrations and desires off of. We’re speaking with the people, not for them.”
Over the course of its 10 explosive tracks, STRENGTH IN NUMB333RS certainly voices the struggles of those who go unheard, because FEVER 333 aren’t about to be ignored – or let anyone else be, either. They’ve done it too via some of the catchiest, most accessible music Jason has ever produced. Burn It, which the band explosively opened with earlier tonight, featuring the lyric, ‘I’ve got a mouth like Malcolm and hands just like Ali’, is a key example. Jason, who directed its video alongside his friend Djay Brawner, suggests the promo embodies the track’s core message.
“The key thing to notice is the running,” he explains. “I’m running from the police, the police are running from a rebel group, and I’m running towards another rebel group. We’re all just trying to get somewhere, though we all believe different things.
“The image that everyone is talking about is the car on fire. But I don’t think enough people are paying attention to the fact that I’m in the car. That was supposed to represent my willingness to go as far as I can, because I know I’m not kicking the can down the road this time – I’m making the effort to remove what I feel to be large, problematic and damaging elements in my environment.”
These elements include the demonisation of the working class, an issue on both sides of the Atlantic, and which the band seeks to change the perception of with the hulking Animal.
“The way that we’ve been presented to the world is another socially engineered plan to keep us where we are as animals,” he says in reference to lyrics like, ‘Take it all / Leaving nothing for the cannibals’. “We’re treated like we’re not human from the jump. Animal is trying to disrupt this absurdly skewed view.”
For those as yet unfamiliar with such frank pronouncements, the track Inglewood/3 is on hand to provide a crash course on Jason Aalon Butler’s life. It is, to use a phrase from Jason’s titular hometown, “Letting them see [his] receipts” – ie. providing a road map for people to better understand where he’s been, thereby giving greater context to why he is the way he is, and has the beliefs he does. Beginning with his fear of going nowhere.