The Back Pacific has unveiled the official music video for their single "Best Day Ever," featured on the band's recently released 11-track album, 'Here Comes Our Wave.' The video is directed by Jason Passaro.
Watch the video here:
Frontman Jim Lindberg, (who is also the lead singer and songwriter of the iconic California skate punk band Pennnywise) says, "The song "Best Day Ever" is my attempt at a postpunk Nietzchean jam about the concept of Amor Fati, the idea that we need to love our fate no matter what it is. Jason's video is meant to reflect that desire to walk through life happily accepting all the carnage and calamity as best we can, or at least pretend to".
The Black Pacific, which previously released a self-titled debut on SideOneDummy Records in 2010, showcases songs solely written and performed by Lindberg, featuring his longtime collaborator and drummer Alan Vega.
Stream the new LP here:
“I’ve been writing songs for Pennywise and various side projects for many years, and I’ve amassed a catalog of hundreds of demos, literally boxes of cassette tapes and CD’s and hard drives from
the last few decades," says Lindberg. "Some of the songs weren’t right for Pennywise, and all of these songs I worked on with Alan from The Black Pacific so it just made sense to put out under
that name. When I pick up an electric guitar this is the music that comes out of me, regardless of what name it comes out under.”
The album kicks off with the hyper-kinetic opening track and lead-off single, “I Think I’m Paranoid.” Lindberg says of the track, “I’ve had this song for a while now and it was about all the
senseless violence, terrorism, government conspiracies and divisiveness that make you want to move to a desert island somewhere, but now I’ve updated it to include hate groups, militias and
global pandemics, so it’s basically just a panic attack with distorted guitars at 120 Beats Per Minute.”
The rest of the album doesn’t let up from there with tracks like “No Fun” about sociopath dictators around the world inflicting chaos and death on innocent civilians, and the relentlessly
pounding “Here We Come” about the encroaching threat of A.I. taking all our jobs and eventually replacing us completely. The lyrics on this album are extremely timely and reflect the millennial
angst that continues to build around the world. He explains, “I’ve always felt the need to purge my frustration with our self-defeating tendency to want to destroy ourselves and the planet in a
never-ending quest for power, dominance and greed, and that message is more urgent than ever so I didn’t want to wait any longer to put these songs out.”
But there are several tracks that are about the resignation that maybe the dreams of acceptance and escape are the only things that helps keep hope alive. “Float Away” is a rare love song from
Lindberg about wanting to build a raft so he and his wife can float away to “Canada or Timbuktu” – and in “I won’t Let You Down” he wistfully tells her “Somehow we’ve made it through it all” and
now they enjoy the sunsets waiting for “the flash of green, shining through the gold.” The closing title track is Lindberg’s ‘love song to a wave.” A lifelong surfer and member by proxy of Taylor
Steele’s Momentum Generation, it’s hard not hear that Lindberg finds his escape from all the carnage in the world by sharing the ocean waves and spending time with his friends and family.
The long-awaited follow-up to their debut album, Here Comes Our Wave, is a powerful and thought-provoking release from The Black Pacific. It reflects a sense of resignation to our flawed world
while remaining hopeful that love and respect for nature can help us navigate even the stormiest seas.