PHOTO/ALLY GILLAM: Too Close for Comfort.

Can a group of metalheads make a fantastic pop-punk record? The members of Too Close for Comfort can.

Tyler Pfeifer (vocals), Ryan Gilpin (lead guitar/backup vocals), Evan Dini (drums) and Jimmy โ€œCoopโ€ Cooper (bass) combine blast beats and heavy guitars with bright choruses and sing-along vocals. The band has quickly gained traction after forming in 2022 and releasing debut album We Only Live Here on This Planet for So Long. While the record is primarily pop-punk, there are some heavier elements, which can be attributed to some of the membersโ€™ previous endeavorโ€”a slam-metal band.

โ€œMe, Tyler and Coop were in another band in Reno called Convulsions,โ€ Gilpin said during a recent Zoom interview. โ€œI hit Tyler up one day and said I was working on pop punk, and he liked it, and we started writing some more stuff. We started trying to go for an EP, and then we pushed for an album, and thatโ€™s kind of how we got started. I knew Evan from a different project before, and then we asked him if he wanted to join, and then Coop. Itโ€™s a change in genre. It was a change for me. I had never really written pop-punk before.โ€

Transitioning from heavier music to a brighter and poppier approach caused the band to rethink its songwriting process.

โ€œI always had been in a metalcore band or playing in a deathcore band, so it was always drop-tunings all day and seven-string guitars,โ€ Cooper said. โ€œMe and Tyler were in another pop-punk band, and once I started doing that, thatโ€™s when I started getting into a different realm of the process of writing and being like, โ€˜Well, OK, now we need to write stuff that can support melodies and harmonies.โ€™ โ€ฆ Now what I write has to make sense. It canโ€™t just be a bunch of riffs; youโ€™ve got to make things that sound really good.โ€

Most of the members of Too Close for Comfort said they were fans of the pop-punk genre in the past.

โ€œIf you go all the way back to listening to music growing up, you obviously had a lot of people playing (the videogame) Tony Hawk Pro Skater and stuff like that,โ€ said Cooper. โ€œYou get a lot of bands like Goldfinger in there, and Green Day. I was listening to Blink-182. When you start getting into more heavy music, youโ€™re always on the softer side a little bit at first, so I feel like for us, doing this music is us going back to what influenced us to be making music and being in a band.โ€

We Only Live Here on This Planet for So Long came together quicker than many other musical projects, because the members of Too Close for Comfort encouraged each otherโ€”and stuck to their schedule.

โ€œRyan just grinds out songs, and itโ€™s crazy,โ€ Pfeifer said. โ€œHeโ€™ll grind out a song in a day, and then itโ€™ll take me a week or more to write the vocals and the lyrics. We were just so stoked on it, and thatโ€™s all we were focusing on, so it kind of came out a lot faster than I thought it would.โ€

Added Gilpin: โ€œI almost feel like we pushed each other when we wrote the record. I was writing songs so fast, and he was trying to get the vocals done. Then he would get caught up on the vocals, and Iโ€™d go and write two more songs. When we got the record done, weโ€™re like, โ€˜When do we want to track it?โ€™ Tyler pulled up his calendar, and heโ€™s like, โ€˜We should track it here. โ€ฆ We should shoot for these releases.โ€™โ€

The band has already earned a fanbase, and is setting out on its first tour in January.

โ€œ(This music) is easier to listen to for the general public,โ€ Pfeifer said. โ€œMy dad will listen to it and be like, โ€˜Yeah, thatโ€™s dope,โ€™ but when he listened to my heavy stuff, he was like, โ€˜What are you saying? Whatโ€™s going on here? Why are you yelling?โ€™ We put a lot into the PR and reaching out to a lot of people and trying to push this. โ€ฆ Iโ€™ve been in a lot of projects that just kind of start up and never really take off or go anywhere, so I wanted to have something that I can maybe go on a couple tours with and hopefully make some money off ofโ€”like any musician wants to do.โ€

The response to the groupโ€™s music has shocked the band.

โ€œMy dad will listen to (our new music) and be like, โ€˜Yeah, thatโ€™s dope,โ€™ but when he listened to my heavy stuff, he was like, โ€˜What are you saying? Whatโ€™s going on here? Why are you yelling?โ€™โ€ Too Close for Comfort vocalist Tyler Pfeifer

โ€œWe announced a couple of extra dates on the tour a few days ago, and someone commented on my post and said, โ€˜Iโ€™m going to come to all of your California shows,โ€™ and none of us follow them (on social media),โ€ Gilpin said. โ€œThere are plenty of people who are like, โ€˜Iโ€™ll see you in Chico; Iโ€™ll see you in Vegas,โ€™ and youโ€™re like, โ€˜I have no idea who you are.โ€™ Itโ€™s almost like a surreal feeling that people actually enjoy my music.โ€

Too Close for Comfortโ€™s only local show on their upcoming tour will be on Jan. 11 at the Holland Project.

โ€œWithout a doubt, Holland is definitely all about the bands and the art,โ€ Cooper said. โ€œThey are seriously one of the greatest venues Iโ€™ve ever played at, and they also have, like, the friendliest staff, too. When youโ€™re there, itโ€™s so nice and smooth. Holland does a lot for the community, and itโ€™s a great venue.โ€

Added Pfeifer: โ€œItโ€™s cool too, because itโ€™s not a bar; itโ€™s for art and music and stuff. Itโ€™s geared toward that, and it feels like it. Nothing against bars and VFW halls and stuff; theyโ€™re also fun to play, but Holland is cool, because theyโ€™re really focused on the art aspect of things.โ€

Too Close for Comfort will perform with Split Persona and Cherry Godmother at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 11, at the Holland Project, 140 Vesta St., in Reno. Tickets are $8 in advance, or $10 day of. For more information, call 775-448-6500, or visit hollandreno.org. For more information on Too Close For Comfort, visit instagram.com/toocloseforcomfortnv.

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