The Trainwrecks are (from left) Chris Rodgers on guitar, Mitch Gallagher on drums and Anthony Cox on bass.
The Trainwrecks are (from left) Chris Rodgers on guitar, Mitch Gallagher on drums and Anthony Cox on bass.

The loose but gleeful atmosphere of the Trainwrecks has been in place from day one, and the casual vibes of this punkabilly band are nothing if not refreshing.

โ€œWe have fun in this band, and we take our music seriously,โ€ said drummer Mitch Gallagher. โ€œWe do try to play the best we can, but weโ€™re not afraid to be like, โ€™Gee, we havenโ€™t practiced in two weeks, letโ€™s just get out there and do it.โ€™โ€

Luckily for the audience, the Trainwrecks arenโ€™t afraid to just let โ€™er rip. Itโ€™s been the bandโ€™s MO since it started in 2002, so why change now?

Gallagher has been behind the kit for its two phases: 2002 to 2007, then 2016 to the present day. Heโ€™s joined by current Trainwrecks bassist Anthony Wood (a.k.a. Mr. A), who was with the band when it was formed with Leroy Virgil, who currently leads Hellbound Glory. Thatโ€™s the country-rock band the Trainwrecks will be opening for at Virginia Street Brewhouse.

In the early โ€™00s, The Trainwrecks played with a revolving cast of musiciansโ€”who Gallagher called โ€œa cavalcade of weirdosโ€โ€”before they split in 2007. Flash way forward to 2016, when Virgil briefly reunited with the band. Gallagher and Wood wanted to keep it going after their comeback show, and the drummer had pretty simple reasons to get back on the train: โ€œI missed it, you know. I missed it, and I hadnโ€™t played for 10 years.โ€

Enter guitarist and singer Chris Rodgers, who also currently plays in Dusty Miles and the Cryinโ€™ Shame. Rodgers also led the Cowbelleros for many years, and he and Wood played in the band Punk Rock Frankenstein at one point.

โ€œLuckily we got Chris, and heโ€™s a great singer and guitar player, and weโ€™ve been having fun, right?โ€ Gallagher said, to affirmative nods from the other two Trainwrecks.

โ€œWhen they hit me up about this, I thought it would be cool to do something different,โ€ Rodgers said. โ€œItโ€™s just been fun. I always enjoyed playing with Anthony, and I enjoy singing.โ€

โ€œAnd your songs are cool, too,โ€ Wood added. The band plays a mix of their older material and new songs that Rodgers has brought to the group. They also added some flat-out punk to their soundโ€”and feature a cover or two done in the Trainwrecks style.

โ€œFor me, I grew up listening to rockabilly stuff, country stuff, โ€™50s rock and roll, the stuff I grew up with my folks,โ€ Rodgers said. โ€œThen, as I became a teenager it was all the punk stuff, and thatโ€™s kind of the same for all of us. We all had our punk rock phase. We do obviously love the rockabilly stuff, but we do it with a punk rock attitude.โ€

They all agree that rockabilly is still an enduring style. โ€œPeople recognize it, and the style of it is pretty easily digestible to everybody,โ€ Rodgers said.

โ€œAnd itโ€™s danceable,โ€ Wood said.
โ€œItโ€™s just primal, that beat, man,โ€ Gallagher added. โ€œItโ€™s like a simple kind of music, but it rocks. People hear it and canโ€™t help but want to move. Itโ€™s something you feel.โ€

The bandโ€™s upcoming show in a bigger room will be a condensed version of the Trainwrecksโ€™ experience that audiences usually get, as they usually play three or four sets a night in the clubs.

โ€œWe may actually write a set list this time,โ€ Gallagher said. โ€œOr we can just pick out 13 songs that weโ€™ve never done before,โ€ Rodgers said to laughs all around.

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