Riotous garage-rock band Onion Boys are edging their way towards the status of cult-ish Dublin institution. Famed for their live shows, which feature dynamic performances, during which they often explore their own crowd and invite up temporary members, they’re biding their time in a rise that’s becoming harder to control.

Scruffy and more than slightly manic, the rise of this type of band tends to happen gradually and then, suddenly, all at once. Right now, we feel on the cusp of that “all at once.”

“During lockdown, this guy called Danny Leadpipe and I started making music,” an enigmatic frontman who goes only by the pseudonym Jonny Dublin tells the Gazette. “We’re influenced by similar bands, and he’s a very successful producer. We don’t take ourselves too seriously, and we add the bustle of day-to-day life. We throw in as many references as we can, whatever works.”

“It’s quite all over the gaff sometimes. It’s very fun, but it’s not quite who I am in real life. After the shows, the persona allows me to be a bit of an asshole. I’m usually exhausted and just want to sleep. The guys in the band have so much experience that the bigger venues are fine. I’ll get what I’m given. We’ve played really big shows at places like All Together Now. I just think about it as going up and having fun, and doing what we do.”

“When we go and play other countries, people still seem to find it accessible. We’ve done four shows in Germany, and we were playing festivals after six months together. Playing live is where it’s at for us. You can’t get the same energy from streaming and that kind of thing.”

There are limitations to their rising status, however. “The stages are tiny in Ireland,” Jonny says. “I want to be that frontman that runs around and jumps around and it can be difficult. Sometimes we have nine lads crammed up on stage. I love getting off the stage and getting into the audience for a bit.”

“We live in this content driven world where you have to be constantly feeding the algorithm, being on people’s minds. We don’t really get it, and we talk about that a bit in our lyrics. Don’t get me wrong, I do like getting ourselves out there, but constantly being a new thing is odd. Still, we probably wouldn’t be where we are without it. You can reach so many people with a single post.”

“The EP had to be delayed unfortunately. It’ll be out around the time of the gig in May. We did programmed drumming, and the drummer decided he could do it and he jumped in. It’ll be more of a live version, and it shouldn’t take too much longer.”

“We’re trying to make the EP sound like the live atmosphere, with as many voices as possible. Depending on who is at a gig, sometimes we have three guitarists. Some of the guys will be there sometimes and we’ll talk from the audience and up they’ll get. In Germany we had the bassist switching around, guys moving back and forth. It’s a very fluid thing.”

“We all have our personas, partly because I’d already done some artistic stuff and I wanted to make it a different thing, and take the Mick out of that poser rock stuff. My friends think it’s funny.”

“From now, I’ve got to finish college for a year, then it’ll be all out, and we’ll be recording all the other songs we have. We’re holding a lot until then.”

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