.StrateJacket Gets Insta ‘Start’

Sunnyvale pop-punk band boosted through video games and social media

StrateJacket came together in Sunnyvale just before the pandemic shutdown, but they didn’t let that stop them. The trio—Jackson Roemers, guitar and lead vocals; Fabian Angel, bass and harmony vocals; and Nate Mangold, drums—retreated to their rehearsal space and began developing their sound. The result is Bad Start, their recently released EP.

“Writing in the Covid warehouse was freeing,” Angel said. “We were figuring out who we were as a band. We spent most of our time jamming out to anything that came up. We didn’t have too much pressure on us but, at the same time, we were pressured enough to keep pushing ourselves to exhaustion, in both good and bad ways.”

Everyone in the band contributes to the writing of the songs. “We all have similar influences, so it’s not hard trying to shape something together,” Angel said. As the songs came together, the band drove around the Bay Area, playing impromptu gigs anywhere people could safely gather.

“At the beginning, it felt kind of weird,” Angel said. “We didn’t know where to start. Bands in San Francisco helped us join the music scene. A lot of shows were word-of-mouth. We were just happy to see a couple of people show up. It was honestly a dice-roll on the type of crowd we’d get. It was never really about the turnout, but about the experiences and friendships we made along the way.”

They befriended the Jacks, among other bands. “We tagged them in an Instagram post, covering one of their songs,” Roemers said. “They commented, ‘Look for an email.’ We ended up exchanging emails with Catherine, one of the A&R people at the Edgeout label. Tony Guanci, Edgeout’s owner, came in with his wonderful enthusiasm and had some pretty big plans for us.”

Guanci signed the band to Edgeout and gave them nine months to deliver an album. With the label’s support, the band headed to Vancouver’s Armoury Studios to record with Juno-winning Canadian producer and songwriter Brian Howes (Hinder, Skillet, Boys Like Girls). 

“Brian [Howes] is a wizard,” Angel said. “We sent him demo tracks made through GarageBand and other recording software. Brian saw our vision and helped us out. We performed songs for him live, before tracking anything.

“He helped us see the songs in a new light,” he continued. “He showed us that we could mess around and add little guitar fills, harmonies and anything else our minds could think of, as long as it sounded good. Nothing too crazy—maybe extending a bar out or going to a different chord to create more tension.”

The short, concise tunes on Bad Start deliver a perfect combination of post-punk energy and pop songwriting. The EP opens with the title track, a rocker describing the thoughts going through the band’s head during the lockdown. The bleak lyrics are lifted up by a brisk stop-and-start melody and the trio’s cheerful harmonies on the wordless hook. 

“‘Bad Start’ represented the beginning of our musical journey,” Roemers said. “It was created during the pandemic. It’s one of the first tracks we wrote together.”

A chiming guitar hook introduces “Cut the Chord.” There’s a touch of R&B in the arrangement, as Roemers describes the end of a relationship with relief and a touch of melancholy. “Torch” brings the set to a mellow close. It’s a bluesy, mid-tempo salute to the healing power of love. Roemers’ short, sharp guitar solo and the band’s backing harmonies support his ardent vocal.

The day after recording “Bad Start,” EA Sports, a company that produces sports video games, contacted the band about using the song in the soundtrack of their new game, NHL24. “To this day, I don’t know how they got their hands on the track so quickly,” Roemers said. “It’s a wild feeling to hear a song you wrote in your backyard make its way into a big video game.”

Landing a tune on a video game and getting signed by Edgeout Records shortly after they got together gave the band the kind of push most bands dream of. Roemers said that the band’s use of social media probably played a part in their success.

“For a band like us, social media is half of our identity,” Roemers said. “People perceive our personality by going through our posts on TikTok or Instagram. I think our online presence is important. It can allow people to sit beside us on this rollercoaster we’re on.”

StrateJacket will play Saturday, June 29, at 5:30pm at the Stay Gold Deli, 2635 San Pablo Ave., Oakland. 510.350.8729. Listen to StrateJacket’s music on their website: stratejacketband.com.

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