Sum 41 on their swansong: ”We’re all, seriously, having the time of our lives right now” (2024)

Dave Baksh opened his email inbox one day to find something that startled him. There was a message with the subject line beginning ‘There’s no easy way to say this…’ He panicked for a moment. Was he being fired? He racked his brain – what could he have done to jeopardise his position in Sum 41?

In actuality, he wasn’t being fired, but nonetheless, his time in Sum 41 was going to end. The band’s frontman and rhythm guitarist Deryck Whibley had decided it was time to shut up shop after just over two decades of adrenaline, tours and riffs. The album they had just made together would be their last.

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“The message he conveyed was beautifully written, and I think due to the friendship and relationship we’ve had over the years, immediately I was like, ‘Whatever you need. This isn’t the end of us being in each other’s lives, this is just the end of one of the chapters,” Dave says. “It was emotional of course, but I love him and I get it. I’d rather he be in a place where he feels like he can live the life that he’s earned.”

The news came to Dave as a surprise, but the seed had been planted in Deryck’s head for some time. Every so often, he’d chew over the possibility of doing something different with his life – a solo record, perhaps, or just anything besides the day job that eaten most of the last two decades of his life. Making it happen, however, seemed impossible when Sum 41 demanded so much of him.

“I’d get home and say, ‘I’m taking a year off, don’t call me, I don’t want to hear anything about Sum 41’,” Whibley reflects. “Then two weeks later, I’d get a call from management and they’d say, ‘We know you didn’t want to hear anything but we had to let you know about this offer, this festival, this and that.’”

Sum 41 on their swansong: ”We’re all, seriously, having the time of our lives right now” (1)

Exit Ramp

By 2018 or so, Deryck realised that the demand for Sum 41 was so inescapable that he would have to end the band to create space for other things. “I would bury that thought and move on and not think about it for three, four months, and then it would creep back in,” he continues. He even thought the pandemic would be the thing that would brush those thoughts under the carpet for good. “It really was a saving grace for me, because I was burning out.”

In his mind, the enforced break would give him a chance to spend time with his new young family, be just Deryck rather than Deryck from Sum 41 for a while, and then he’d be so hungry to get back on stage once again that he’d never contemplate changing anything again. Nope. Two weeks later, the thoughts of leaving were back. Eventually, it was all he could think about.

It was making their new album, Heaven :x: Hell, that gave Deryck the opportune moment to float the possibility of wrapping Sum 41 up. A sprawling double album showcasing the entire spectrum of their sound, with one punk half and one metal half, it felt like the perfect conclusion to their career that was executed on their own terms. Its genesis came out rather unconsciously.

“I didn’t know it was an album until there were 17 songs finished already,” Deryck says – but the band were so pleased with the quality of what came out that cutting it down to a slimmer single album felt too painful. Instead, they just rolled with it. “I’m surprised we’re the first Canadian rock band to ever do it,” adds Dave. “If you look at a lot of Canadian punk rock tours, they do have that dichotomy of melodic and very heavy.”

Sum 41 on their swansong: ”We’re all, seriously, having the time of our lives right now” (2)

Scratch Fever

The album’s first half found Deryck delving back into the scratchy, rough yet quintessentially upbeat sounds of Sum 41’s defining – and best known – earlier albums. Although they’d conveniently fallen back in vogue following the pandemic, they weren’t reaching for the cheap trick of playing into the outstretched hands of nostalgia.

“I started writing these songs before the pop punk resurgence,” he clarifies. Then again, that movement is something he’s not been especially conscious of in recent years. “I’m really bad at paying attention to a lot of that stuff. I sort of live in my own world and I’ll peripherally see things that happen, but I’m not really one to check out new artists and see who’s doing what.”

In fact, Deryck rediscovered punk during the pandemic when he got to hear it through new ears by playing it to his young son. He’d drive around LA with his family to kill time, making the most of the eerily empty roads that in normal times would have thousands of cars sat there idling in snaking traffic jams. When his son cried in the backseat, he found that he could soothe him with the punk bands that soundtracked his childhood – NOFX, Strung Out, Lagwagon, Pennywise, Bad Religion, Social Distortion. It was as if he had punk in his blood.

As such, having gone from not listening to those bands for years to hearing them every day, they inevitably shaped what he ended up writing.

“The other thing that was weird was that I remember saying to my wife that when lockdown started, I had no responsibilities. I didn’t have to be anywhere, nobody was calling, nobody was emailing,” he considers. “I kept saying, ‘I haven’t felt like this since I was 18’. I had this period where I wrote these first records, I had no responsibilities, then we got signed and I had no free time ever again.”

Sum 41 on their swansong: ”We’re all, seriously, having the time of our lives right now” (3)

Athletic Prowess

Consequently, it means that in a way, Sum 41 have come full circle for their final album. Their past sounds became the present again, rubbing shoulders with the heavier sounds that would define their back catalogue as they grew up. When asked what they feel those dual sounds have in common, and how they so naturally coalesce, Deryck points to their energy and aggression. “I don’t see much difference in some of the stuff on [Metallica’s 1981 debut] Kill ‘Em All to some punk stuff that came out at the same time. I’m a pretty calm, quiet, shy person but there’s a part of me that loves aggressive, hard, loud, fast music even though that person doesn’t come out of me externally.”

“As a guitar player, heavy metal is one of the most fun ventures into music because it’s almost like your forearms have to be the forearms of an athlete but the rest of you can be a total piece of sh*t!” Dave agrees.

The desire to recapture that punk spirit also ended up shaping what they did with the guitars. “The tones are sludgy, like a Discharge record!” Dave enthuses. That all was made possible by happenstance when Dave stumbled across some gear he estimates he’d been “in 20 feet of” for his entire career. It turned out to be a profile of the Jessica Kill tone on a Kemper made with a Plexi mod – “It’s versatile enough to play chords and has a great amount of punch and attack to it without eating up too much of the room for the bass.”

Conveniently, it was also the ideal sound for his shiny new Duesenberg signature, whose black and white theme was inspired by his favourite UK football club Newcastle United. “Before I returned to Sum 41, I’d gone to a shop and picked up a Duesenberg that sounded like an old Gretsch that was released in the early 2000s,” he recalls. “It was such a great guitar – I used it for pre-production on [2019 album] Order In Decline and I’d been chasing it ever since. Duesenberg attracted me because they look like hot rods, so I reached out and tried to get in touch with them but nobody would call me back because they’re making guitars for Joe Walsh, Johnny Depp, people that are way out of my league.

“I eventually did an interview in Berlin and the interviewer knew the rep. Chris from Duesenberg came up with the idea for me to design a signature guitar and I was floored because I have never put out a signature guitar that goes to retail with a company because everybody wanted to make a cheaper version that had my name on it. But that doesn’t make sense to me. If I’m buying an Angus Young guitar, I want it to be the guitar that Angus Young plays. So this was the first company that was offering up that type of quality and, and I just had to go with it.”

Deryck, meanwhile, relied on his old faithfuls in the form of a series of classic Gibson Les Pauls. “I got into Les Pauls because of Slash,” he says. “When I started playing guitar, Guns N’ Roses and Nirvana were the biggest bands in the world. I wanted to be a guitar player like Slash at first and a songwriter like Kurt Cobain. I do not play like Slash, but I found my thing was writing rather than shredding. I’ve always looked at our sound as like AC/DC plus, a little more saturated than AC/DC but rooted in those kinds of chords, a little more distorted, sped up a little more.”

The Last Dance

Past the end of Sum 41’s tour, it’s hard to imagine Deryck, or any of his bandmates, putting down their guitars for good. Then again, their own individual futures in music or elsewhere beyond their send-off in January 2025 haven’t quite been decided yet. Their last press cycle as a band, nor their last run of shows, feel quite final yet. “You have to remember, ‘Oh wait, this is the last night for these people,’” says Deryck. “I don’t remember that sometimes till the very end when you say, ‘Alright, we’ll see you next year’, and then I’m like ‘Oh no, we won’t.’”

Nonetheless, everything is finite now. The shows they’re playing across the world from now till the start of next year feel different. Both in their final album and their last run of shows, it’s the approaching end that means they’re doing everything with a renewed lease of life.

“Every single concert has this absolute dedication to what we’re doing and lightheartedness and a fun that, I think really, truly has been missing for the past five to six years,” says Dave. “It’s just such a beautiful thing. We’re all, seriously, having the time of our lives right now.”

Sum 41 on their swansong: ”We’re all, seriously, having the time of our lives right now” (2024)

FAQs

What was Sum 41's biggest hit? ›

The band released its debut album, All Killer No Filler, in 2001. The album achieved mainstream success with its first single, "Fat Lip", which reached number one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart and remains the band's most successful single to date.

Is Sum 41 a one hit wonder? ›

Across its career, the Grammy-nominated Sum 41 has scored two top albums on the Billboard 200 (2004's Chuck and 2007's Underclass Hero), while its biggest hit “Fat Lip” became its only Billboard Hot 100 entry, peaking at No. 66.

What does Sum 41 stand for? ›

Incubus is a mythological Greek “evil spirit” who descended on sleeping women and had intercourse with them. Score! Sum 41. Instead of a dictionary, Sum 41 broke out a calendar to concoct their name: The band's official formation took place on the forty-first day of summer prior to entering the twelfth grade.

What happened to Sum 41 drummer? ›

He decided to leave the band in 2013 and was replaced by Frank Zummo in 2015. Steve is now a realtor in Palm Springs, California.

What was the number one song on Sum 41? ›

Sum 41 have reached No. 1 at US radio with 'Landmines', more than 20 years since they last hit the top spot.

What is the greatest one hit wonder of all time? ›

#ARTISTTITLE
1Los Del RioMacarena [Bayside Boys Mix]
2Soft CellTainted Love
3Dexy's Midnight RunnersCome on Eileen
4Right Said FredI'm Too Sexy
52 more rows

What artists never had a top 40 hit? ›

Bob Marley (with out without the Wailers) Morrissey (with out without the Smiths) Black Sabbath (though front man Ozzy Osbourne did have commercial success as a solo artist, Johnson felt that "Iron Man" was such a standout song, Sabbath should have placed higher with it) The Violent Femmes.

What is the biggest selling one-hit wonder? ›

What is the best-selling one-hit wonder of all time? You might have already guessed it, but the best-selling is the art-pop masterpiece 'Somebody That I Used To Know' by Gotye featuring New Zealander Kimbra.

Is Sum 41 religious? ›

Sum 41 And KISS's Gene Simmons Embrace Christianity.

Is Sum 41 considered emo? ›

Sum 41, the Emo-era band that brought hit tracks like "Fat Lip" and "In Too Deep" to the iPod's of millennials across the globe, are "disbanding" after 27 years together.

What happened to the lead singer of Sum 41? ›

On September 15, 2023, Whibley's wife Ari announced that he was in the hospital with pneumonia and COVID-19, which led to heart failure. He responded sufficiently to treatment and was released. On July 31, 2024, Sum 41 cancelled several tour dates after Whibley had again injured his back.

Why is Sum 41 calling it quits? ›

Deryck Whibley had a nagging feeling for the past five years. He wanted to leave Sum 41 — the band he formed with his buddies from Ajax, Ont., in 1996 — but he didn't want to be ungrateful. "I've always had these thoughts and desires, and wondering, 'Will I ever do something else? Do I have more to offer in life?

Will Sum 41 tour in 2024? ›

The Canadian group featuring Deryck Whibley, Dave Baksh, Jason McCaslin, Tom Thacker and Frank Zummo shared they'll be setting out on the Tour of the Setting Sum for much of 2024, and will play their last show in Toronto on Jan. 30, 2025, on Tuesday.

Is Sum 41 disbanding? ›

Members of the band Sum 41 have announced they're breaking up after 27 years together, saying they are "excited for what the future will bring for each of us."

What is the biggest hit song ever recorded? ›

According to Guinness World Records, Irving Berlin's "White Christmas" (1942) as performed by Bing Crosby is the best-selling single worldwide, with estimated sales of over 50 million copies.

What was number 1 in greatest hits top 500? ›

Bohemian Rhapsody tops the Greatest Hits Radio Top 500 Chart for the fifth year running 05 Nov 2023. Bohemian Rhapsody has once again been named the greatest song of all time by over 6,500 Greatest Hits Radio listeners – the biggest number of votes in the annual countdown ever.

What is the biggest Billboard hit of all time? ›

Top 10 songs of all time (1958–2021)
RankSingleArtist(s)
1."Blinding Lights"The Weeknd
2."The Twist"Chubby Checker
3."Smooth"Santana featuring Rob Thomas
4."Mack the Knife"Bobby Darin
6 more rows

What is the longest number 1 hit? ›

"Old Town Road" holds the record for the longest stretch at No. 1 with 19 weeks. It also became the fastest song in history to be certified diamond.

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