Color is The Havnauts’ fifth band member

Pop, punk, and oh-so-pink

Pink-powered pop-punk: The Havnauts

Singer Shelbi Bennett of Midnight Pine — an act she describes as “very serious and veiled in metaphor” — and Shady Francos drummer Jenny Merullo share a love of the pop-punk that shaped their respective youths. “I was in born in ’85,” Merullo says, “so the late-’90s, early 2000s emo-pop-punk wave was hugely impactful on me when I was playing drums as a 15-year-old. I grew up in Boston, and I played in bands there. The first real band I was ever in was a ska band, because it was 2001 and that was what we wanted to do. When I first moved to San Diego, I was in this little punk band called French Kiss Koma. The oldest person in the band was in his fifties, and the youngest person was underage.”

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If you caught the duo’s pop-punk band The Havnauts in those early days, you probably saw bassist Zak Kmak rocking outfits that Merullo describes as having a “Jimmy Buffett vibe,” and Bennett sporting “bright makeup that looked like it had been smeared on.” The group was still seeking a visual aesthetic that would unify them; they found it in the color pink. “I like that it’s softer, and I wouldn’t ever describe our music as soft, but it does have tender subject matter,” Bennett says. “That color is almost a fifth band member. The only other color I think we could have chosen besides that is red, but red is too aggressive.” Merullo adds that “It’s really eye-catching onstage, and it’s easy to find pink stuff at a dollar store.”

The San Diego Music Award winners (Best Local Recording for 2018’s Go For It EP) dropped an eight-song album, Real Good Now, on New Year’s Day 2020, promoted via videos produced during the pandemic shutdown. Right now, they’re working on a video for “Bummer Man,” the B-side of their 2021 Iggy Pop cover “Search and Destroy.”

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