By ALEXIA LOUNDRAS
Caleb Followill is fed up. The sleepy haze that hangs heavy under his bright eyes - the consequence of an all-night bender - lifts to reveal fiery disbelief.
Something has tripped a switch somewhere. "Everybody wants to know about our dad being a preacher. Everybody wants to know about the fact that we're young and we're family and blah, blah, blah. Everybody wants to know about the fact that we look like we stepped out of the 1970s and that we sound like the Strokes mixed with the Allman Brothers," he says, exasperated, spreading out on the west London hotel's leather sofa as far as his over-tight denim flares will allow.
It's fair to say that his is not an average band. Kings of Leon are the Tennessee-based brothers Nathan, 23, Caleb, 21, and Jared, 17, and their 18-year-old cousin Matthew. They smoulder with vintage good looks and have a fine knack for hook-heavy Southern blues-drenched rock'n'roll; their excellent debut album, Youth & Young Manhood, is a dirty, gnarled, searing shot of distilled moonshine.
It's not unusual to find musicians struggling to break out from under their father's shadow, but it's much less common when the father in question happens to be a disgraced Pentecostal minister.
"We're riding on the coat-tails of a story, or that's what it feels like," says Caleb about the whole preacher thing.
"Why would anyone want to buy a record just because someone's dad ministered and they grew up in the South?" adds Jared, perplexed.
"Our dad thinks he's more famous than us," laughs Caleb.
And in a way, he's right, regardless of all the hype that surrounds the four-piece. The fact is that everything about Kings Of Leon is intertwined with their father, Leon.
As the sons of a travelling United Pentecostal evangelist, Caleb, Nathan and Jared grew up on the road, living in cars, with relatives or as pastors' guests. And with the exception of a four-year stint in redneck country in Mumford, Tennessee, they never stayed put for more than a year.
Their extended road trip came to an abrupt end when Leon's alcoholism got the better of him and he was defrocked.
A fondness for booze runs in the family. Only Caleb and the decidedly perky Jared have made it to the interview, as Nathan and Matthew woke up to find their pulsating heads nailed to their pillows after the excesses of the night before.
But this is not the sum of Leon's legacy. Not only did the boys learn their instruments playing in church alongside their mother, a church pianist, but their nomadic upbringing helped to sow the seeds of the band's formation.
"We're really close, but not in a weird way," says Caleb. "It's just that we didn't really have anything else. Our friendships would last a day because we'd have to leave. If I'd had those relationships, I wouldn't have been so close to Nathan, Jared and our cousin." And then there's all that salvation gossip.
"Everyone assumes that as preacher's boys we'd seen loads of holy righteousness, but in fact it meant we were fed tidbits from the pastor, like 'so-and-so was a prostitute'.
"We'd see behind the scenes of a lot of bad stuff. When we write songs we just tell those stories," Caleb says, his deep growl lifting mischievously.
The resulting album is gloriously wicked. A heady concoction of wired Stones rock, rockabilly riffs and dusty toe-tapping melodies steeped in the kind of moral depravity that would have shaken the pulpit of their backwater church and fuelled congregation rumours for months. These are vibrant, illicit tales of murder, seduction and forbidden love, given life by Caleb's grizzled, slurred howl.
After a fire-and-brimstone upbringing, the band have now slipped over to this other side.
"The way we were, man, to the way we are now - it's totally at the other end of the spectrum," says Caleb, shaking his head at their moral decay.
"Our mom has four sisters and all five girls married preachers. There are a lot of preachers out there who hate everything about us. We'll get home and there'll be a letter in the mailbox from one of our uncles telling us what we need to do because 'the time of reckoning is at hand'. Our whole lives, whatever job we had, we work our asses off and we really put everything into it. And that's kind of how it is now - we smoke too much and drink too much, and I'm sure our hair's too long ... "
Ah yes, the hair - shoulder-length, chestnut, teamed up with the perfect d'Artagnan moustache.
"For most people image is important, but the only thing that's important about our image is that people know we don't care about what they think is cool," says Caleb.
"We dress how we always dressed, and now we're in a band people talk about our style," says Jared.
Caleb sniggers at the suggestion that they could ever be mistaken for trendsetters.
But it's the band's don't-give-a-toss attitude, not their dress sense, that really marks them out. Glowing with home-baked pride, the Followills are not swayed by the spoils of lightning success.
"Honestly, you should think of it all as bullshit - the good, the bad - it's bullshit," says Caleb, referring to the media frenzy that's broken out around the band.
"We don't want to be known for being different, we don't want to be known for anything other than our music," Caleb adds determinedly. "I really can't wait till it gets to the point we have enough, um ... "
"Leverage ... " Jared interjects.
Caleb carries on: "Yeah, leverage, where we can make our music and not worry about everything else. Play music for people." He ends, dreamily: "Or even just keep songs to enjoy for ourselves."
"Turn into Brian Wilson," Jared jokes. Caleb looks inspired - something's tripped a switch somewhere. His aquamarine eyes glisten: "Yeah. We can turn into the Band - we can do whatever we like." -
- INDEPENDENT
* Youth & Young Manhood is out now.
Kings of Leon - Unholy rollers
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