Netflix syndrome. Most of us undergo from it, even when we’ve by no means heard of it. It’s the phenomenon of spending large quantities of time scrolling by on-line content material, making an attempt to decide on what you need to watch. However somewhat than making a call, you develop into annoyed and overwhelmed, selecting watching one thing you don’t actually need to watch. Or worse, you find yourself not watching something in any respect.
The identical factor could be stated about making music, as Brooklyn-based storage rock band the Factor attests to. The 4 members—Zane Acord (vocals, bass), Jack Bradley (guitar), Michael Carter (guitar), and Lucas Ebeling (drums)—have an ethos they go by: “With restriction comes creativity—outdated turns into new.”
“Once you’re making one thing in our digital age, it’s very easy to have limitless instruments at your fingertips, and you’ll hold working at one thing perpetually,” says Bradley over a video convention name with the remainder of the group. “How they used to document and make songs earlier than the web is that you just had a due date. So we wish to document fairly shortly and have it seize the time the place it’s made, so in a month or in a number of weeks.”
Suppose the Beatles making their first album, Please Please Me—John, Paul, George, and Ringo, collectively in a room, taking part in their devices and singing dwell into microphones, in a single 12-hour session, with only a few overdubs—that’s the mindset of the Factor. No distractions. No time wasted selecting the best digital recording instruments. No exterior songwriters. No frustration over in depth mixing to appease document execs’ tastes. It’s all analog and DIY.
“From the start of the band and making stuff, we’ve achieved every little thing on our personal and simply form of caught our foot within the door to actually open it up,” says Bradley. “When you’ve got these restrictions positioned on you, whether or not it’s exterior or by your self, it permits for lots extra creativity.”

The band’s third album, The Factor (August 6), is the most recent instance of their “with restriction comes creativity” manner of creating music. The tough and tumble suite of 12 songs nods to everybody from the Kinks to the White Stripes, and follows 2023’s debut, Right here’s the Factor, and The Factor Is, which dropped in 2024.
“This one actually represents us, and that’s why we determined to do self-titled, as a result of I believed it was simply robust and funky and actually put our greatest foot ahead,” says Bradley. “The method was actually wonderful as a result of it’s all 4 of us within the room collectively. We mainly wrote all of the songs for essentially the most half within the second.”
These songs embrace “Mr. Ineffective,” a David Bowie-inspired, Byrds-tinged tune about discovering the that means of life, and the swirling, 6-plus minute instrumental jam “Holy Water,” which is one in all Ebeling’s favorites. “It’s fairly loopy that that was achieved,” he says. “Simply probably not any overdubs, besides a bit of little bit of djembe hidden within the one part. I really feel fairly pleased with that instrumental, that we pulled that off.”
Carter likes “Can You Assist Me?,” which is the primary time every member took turns singing a verse. “It’s bought a hooky refrain, like a extremely blatant sing-along, which is form of cool,” he says. “It’s form of bought a pleasant twang to it, which we haven’t actually gotten into that a lot.”
No computer systems had been used throughout the complete three-week course of, which befell—songwriting and recording—of their tour supervisor’s pool home. And it’s all recorded on tape.
“We gave ourselves a rule of as soon as we’ve got the association down, let’s attempt to observe inside three takes, as a result of when you begin redoing it a bunch, you begin to assume and the standard and the efficiency really drops,” says Bradley. “In order that was first take for the vitality, second and third for extra accuracy. Each tune is simply the 4 of us taking part in and with actually minimal overdubs.”
“No clicks or something both on that album,” says Ebeling. “It’s similar to an outdated soul document, simply tremendous uncooked and like a session in a manner.”
Which means when the band performs reveals—greater than 300 globally because the Factor shaped in 2022—each tune sounds virtually precisely the best way it does on the document.
When you’re considering that the band named themselves after the 1982 John Carpenter movie with Kurt Russell, like I used to be, you’d be mistaken.
‘We went by many names and ultimately I believe we simply form of bought drained and simply began calling it the Factor, says Acord. “It simply got here out sooner or later and we had been like, all proper, let’s simply transfer ahead with that, earlier than seeing the John Carpenter film or doing any form of analysis into copyright regulation or something like that.”
After they did watch the film a few years after they shaped, nonetheless, they beloved it.
“Kurt, yeah,” Bradley chimes in.
“We like Kurt Russell,” Acord reinforces.
The band has been touring full-time since 2023, with two U.S. and European excursions, and for the primary time this October, one in Australia. However most of their reveals have been in New York Metropolis, the place town’s wealthy music scene helped form their sound.
“When you’re in and across the metropolis, all of us see so many various reveals and there are such a lot of good bands which can be lively and present proper now,” says Bradley. “All of the venues are tremendous influential as properly. The 2 finest venues are TV Eye in Ridgewood and Our Depraved Woman, which really simply shut down, which is simply actually unhappy. We performed our first present there, and there’s form of a group round sure venues, and it sparks a variety of concepts since you go see some wonderful bands and every little thing’s simply shifting so shortly. It seeps into you a bit of bit.”
“There’s a lot occurring, a lot new stuff occurring at any given second,” Acord says. “We’re simply honored to be within the New York scene and be amongst so many proficient bands which can be tremendous inspirational to us. And, clearly, all of the historical past.”
The Factor’s musical influences attain past New York Metropolis, nonetheless. King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, the Beta Band, and the Brian Jonestown Bloodbath all impacted their music, in addition to the Beatles, the Kinks, and different ’60s bands.
Carter cites these artists and others equivalent to Ty Segall and the Osees as influencing the best way the Factor data. “They document in their very own house setups a variety of the time, and so they document it simply by themselves. In order that contributes to a sure sound as properly…uncooked”

Bradley says that whereas the music by these bands is inspiring, the best way they conduct their careers is simply as a lot so. “When a band or an artist data in the best way that we’re speaking about, like in a extra uncooked, genuine manner as an alternative of polished and packaged collectively by some massive label, that stuff is admittedly inspiring. And those who put out a variety of music, we’re all tremendous impressed by, just like the Black Keys and the White Stripes. And simply to have the ability to put out that many albums and never need to be so outlined by one style is tremendous inspiring.”
The band remembers touring in Spain, in Basque Nation to be actual; the Western Pyrenees space bordering the Bay of Biscay, the place the area’s indigenous folks dwell, have their very own tradition, and their very own language, Euskara.
“We performed in an outdated squatting home,” says Bradley. “It was like this massive firehouse {that a} bunch of squatters had taken over, and we slept there in a single massive mattress. We didn’t discuss to a single individual the entire time as a result of we bodily couldn’t.”
Acord says it was a fairly tense scenario. “We weren’t actually conscious of the tensions between the Basques and the remainder of Spain,” he says. “There have been a few individuals who had been simply not approachable. One man was figuring out at midnight, and I used to be making an attempt to do a vocal train, after which he ended up cooking us dinner, and we weren’t actually allowed to speak to that man.”
“Even the dinner too, we didn’t sit collectively,” Ebeling provides. “They put us on the finish. After which they gave us this butternut squash soup with not a touch of salt in it.”
Then, Acord provides, they performed “Needed Warfare,” a observe off their second album, 31 instances.
“The dude down the corridor didn’t sleep the entire night time; he was simply in his workplace listening to the tune time and again,” Ebeling says. “A bizarre night time.”
I point out that this jogs my memory of the Beatles’ tales of taking part in Hamburg within the band’s early days, pre-suits, Beatle boots, and haircuts, the place they stayed in shitty little one-room ratholes, crammed into one mattress. They wore leather-based jackets and slicked-back hair, sweat-browed and crushed from taking part in a number of units, uncooked and feverishly, in small golf equipment to rowdy, drunken crowds of German males. It’s how the group turned such good performers.
Just like the Beatles in Hamburg, the Factor continues to be establishing their identification. In different phrases, they’re not well-known. They use this to their benefit, which matches again to their minimalistic credo and work ethic. Carter says that the band makes use of this time of their profession to look at how they need to be perceived.
Because the Factor continues to broaden their viewers, although, Bradley prefers to not be known as merely an indie band.
“It’d be good if we leaned away from the entire indie band factor as a result of it simply doesn’t actually resonate with what we’re making an attempt to perform,” he says. “We’re extra of only a rock and roll [band] somewhat than this new wave of indie.”
Irrespective of how they outline themselves, one factor is definite: Each member has equal say on the band’s artistic and enterprise points. “We’re a real band, a four-piece collaborative undertaking,” says Bradley. There are not any frontmen, no Mick and Keith of the Rolling Stones, or Julian Casablancas of the Strokes, or John and Paul of the Beatles. “I believe what makes us actually robust is that it’s a unit.”
Whereas it’s typically stated that rock and roll is useless, to this band, it’s removed from it.
“It’s extra of a spirit,” says Ebeling.
“I believe true rock and roll is one thing that has vitality,” says Bradley. “It’s actually pushed and it’s extra unfastened. It’s not this tightened-up factor the place it’s like every beat is on the measure; that falls into this contemporary indie factor. It’s an alive factor, and you’ll solely actually seize that with a band.”
Lengthy dwell rock and roll! Lengthy dwell the Factor!

