Dying Scene Show Gallery: Black Eyes and Bed Maker, Comet Ping Pong, Washington, DC (10/12/2024).

On 12 October, Comet Ping Pong hosted a sold out show with headliner band Black Eyes with supporting band Bed Maker in Washington, DC. Dying Scene was there to capture the two DC bands play until midnight with the same energy that they started off with. This was a killer show. Post-punk band, Black Eyes […]

On 12 October, Comet Ping Pong hosted a sold out show with headliner band Black Eyes with supporting band Bed Maker in Washington, DC. Dying Scene was there to capture the two DC bands play until midnight with the same energy that they started off with. This was a killer show.

Post-punk band, Black Eyes came together to perform in front of a packed venue with the original line up from 2001-2004: Dan Caldas (drums/bass/vox), Daniel McCormick (guitar/vox), Hugh MacElroy (bass/keyboard/vox), Jacob Long (bass/guitar/vox), and Mike Kanin (drums/vox). They played a great set from start to finish.

On 25 October, Black Eyes announced new shows coming soon. Stay tuned here.

Another DC’s punk band, Bed Maker was the opening band and they gave it their all. I have seen these guys multiple times in DC and really love the energy they evoke no matter what size the stage is. Band consists of Amanda MacKaye (vox), Jeff Barsky (guitar), Arthur Noll (bass), and Vin Novara (drums).

Yes, MacKaye is the co-founder of Sammich Records and sister to Ian MacKaye (Fugazi and co-owner of Dischord Records) and Alec MacKaye (Untouchables and the Faith).

Go see them here.

Check out the photo gallery below.

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DS Photo Gallery: Big D and the Kids Table, Thumper, The Kilograms and Folly celebrate Halloween at Boston’s Big Night Live

It was a bit of an early Turn-Back-The-Clock night at Boston’s Big Night Live last Saturday as long-running ska punk favorites Big D and the Kids Table resurrected their epic Halloween show tradition at Boston’s Big Night Live. Joining them for the festivities were a couple of regionally iconic bands – Thumper and Folly – […]

It was a bit of an early Turn-Back-The-Clock night at Boston’s Big Night Live last Saturday as long-running ska punk favorites Big D and the Kids Table resurrected their epic Halloween show tradition at Boston’s Big Night Live. Joining them for the festivities were a couple of regionally iconic bands – Thumper and Folly – and a relatively new supergroup (The Kilograms), a sort of Voltron made up of some longtime scene heavyweights – Sammy Kay, Joe Gittleman, Michael McDermott and J Duckworth. Despite being a four-band bill (seriously…a four-band bill? In this economy?) the 5:00pm doors, speedy changeovers and hard 9:30 curfew meant this was a perfect show for “The Olds” such as myself.

Hailing from the wilds of northern New Jersey, hardcore/ska crossover band Folly kicked off the evening’s festivities in blistering fashion. Accompanied by a nearly seizure-inducing endless strobe-lit stage show (that did wonders for a rank amateur photographer such as myself), the five-piece blazed through a half-hour set that set the stage for what was to come. The band got back together a couple years ago, nearly a quarter-century after their original run began, and while they might be older and wiser, they haven’t lost much of a step in their ferocity.

Next up was The Kilograms. Now I would be lying if I said this wasn’t the set that I was most interested in catching. While the collective number of shows that the band’s members have played in their previous endeavors numbers well into the thousands, this event marked not only the fifteenth show in the band’s history together but their first-ever show in Boston, which is obviously the place where Joe Gittleman earned his status as a genre-defining scene pioneer. I’ve been hip to the project – which came together fairly organically and almost entirely existed in the virtual world of Al Gore’s Internet before finally playing a show together back in May – since essentially the beginning, so it was great to finally see them together in the same room. Outfitted as the Gallagher brother’s New Jersey nephew, Kay takes center stage, although he and Gittleman and Duckworth take turns sharing vocal duties, at least when the latter isn’t spinning like a top at stage right. McDermott, who I hadn’t seen play in the almost dozen years since he left the Souls, kept the beat as steady as ever, letting the three-headed monster out front bob and weave and create their blend of rocksteady ska. Special shoutout to Craig Gorsline on the keys, providing layers of texture and filling out the rocksteady live sound. Extra special shoutout for the reworked version of the classic “Lean on Sheena” which Gittleman wrote and performed with Avoid One Thing and McDermott brought to the Souls, yet when they combine, it’s for a new, fresh version that only vaguely resembles the versions you’re used to hearing. Stay tuned for more from The ‘Grams soon, but for now you can listen on bandcamp.

Thumper was up next, and I’ll admit that I was almost as stoked to see Thumper as I was to see the Kilograms. I fell in love with Thumper in the mid-1990s, during the peak of what I guess we’re still calling ska’s third wave. They weren’t your average ska-core band, with a two-tone-meets-thrash-metal-infused sound and sense of humor and intelligence that were all their own. The last time I’d seen Thumper was coincidentally with Big D and the Kids Table at Tune Inn (R.I.P.) in New Haven, CT, on Valentine’s Day 1998. I don’t know if I knew at the time it would be my last Thumper show for many years – the band broke up later that year and I never made it to the scattered reunion shows they’ve done – so it was a welcome treat to see them dust off the cobwebs and jump on this bill. “Burn Baby Burn” and “Holy Roller” and “Backstabber” still go as hard as ever (especially the latter, which featured Folly returning to the stage for a big group throwdown).

And finally the witching hour – in this case around 8:00pm – was upon us, and it was Big D and the Kids Table’s turn to entertain the masses. Not only were the band celebrating Halloween as per usual, but they were also celebrating the 25 years of their 1999 Asian Man Records full-length debut Good Luck. It may be a bit of recency bias to say this, but though I’ve lost track of how many different live incarnations of Big D I’ve seen since 1997, this one – centered as always around the energetic bordering on theatrical David McWane – might be the tightest. The band blistered through Good Luck in what seemed like record time, perhaps due to the hard curfew. With a lot of my ska-core listening days behind me, I guess I’d forgotten how fun that record was, as it’s been overshadowed by Strictly Rude and Fluent In Stroll in recent times. If you’re like me, you can relish in those old days by watching the Good Luck tour documentary that finally found its way to YouTube after a quarter-century. Those memories seem like both just yesterday and like two lifetimes ago.

Check out more shots from each band’s sets below!

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DS Show Review and Galleries: Johnny Marr and James at Riviera Theatre. Chicago (10.17.2024)

Manchester, England was represented big time in the Uptown neighborhood of Chicago. The Riviera Theatre hosted The Smith’s co-founder Johnny Marr and his co-headliner James. It was a great show, made a bit greater because the venue is within walking distance of my home. Johnny Marr co-founded The Smiths with Morrissey in 1982 in Manchester, […]

Manchester, England was represented big time in the Uptown neighborhood of Chicago. The Riviera Theatre hosted The Smith’s co-founder Johnny Marr and his co-headliner James. It was a great show, made a bit greater because the venue is within walking distance of my home.


Johnny Marr co-founded The Smiths with Morrissey in 1982 in Manchester, England. The two were songwriting partners, and though the band was active for five years, it left behind a massive legacy.

Marr will also leave a formidable legacy as a solo artist. This was apparent by his performance at “The Riv” on a mild Thursday evening. He spent much of the time at the edge of the stage and sprinkled in some light bantering with fans.

His searing guitar playing, with extended solos, was intense but not ostentatious. It was non-verbal poetry.

The set list was pretty well-balanced between The Smiths tunes and Marr’s solo work. Amongst the latter: Marr performed, “Panic,” with a bit disdainful glee as he sang the lyrics “hang the dj,” repeatedly. With a mischievous grin Marr informed the audience, “We don’t do freedom rock in England, we do the opposite,” before launching into a spirited version of “This Charming Man.” “Please Please Please Let Me Get What I Want,” was gently pleading and poignant.

Marr kicked off the show with a lively rendition of “Armotopia” and was mesmerizing with “Spirit, Power, and Soul.” There was also a cheeky version of Electronic’s “Getting Away with It.” Electronic is one of Marr’s bands, with the other members being Bernard Sumner from New Order and The Pet Shop Boys’ Neil Tennant. The tune is a sly, though unsubtle, roasting of Morrissey’s perceived melancholy posturing.

I’ve been walking in the rain just to get wet on purpose
I’ve been forcing myself not to forget just to feel worse
I’ve been getting away with it all my life
(Getting away)

Marr ended the evening with a two-song encore. The first was an exuberant cover of Iggy Pop’s “The Passenger.” He was joined by James’ frontman Tim Booth, with Booth handling lead vocals.

Finally, “There Is A Light That Never Goes Out’ was also a duet of sorts. Or rather a call and response as Marr sang the eponymous lyrics and turned the microphone so the very enthusiastic crowd could sing the same words.

But the very first words of that tune perfectly fit the mood,

Take me out tonight
Where there’s music and there’s people

It was a great night for both.


Marr’s fellow Mancunians in James were transcendent. Singer Tim Booth, clad in a loose white shirt with flowing blue pants, was alternatively in perpetual motion during some songs, sinuously dancing about the stage, or in meditative stillness during others. Often both modes during the same song. Booth utterly captivated those in attendance while leading his incredibly talented bandmates through an amazing set which included “Out to Get You,” “Stay,” and “Mobile God.”

This set includes the heart-rending “Moving On.” Booth recalled to the audience how being able to be with his mother as she passed away was a beautiful experience. It’s a subject he’s touched on numerous times in interviews, describing death as a sort of rebirth. The song, along with its official music video, is in equal measure, full of sorrow and peaceful catharsis:

I’m on my way
Soon be moving on my way
Leave a little light on
Leave a little light on
.”

Booth’s performance reached greater heights during “Getting Away With It (All Messed Up).” Quite literally, as he scaled the wall at stage right, climbing into the first opera box to momentarily sing and dance with fans seated there. He then moved up onto the second and third opera boxes, doing the same before finishing up on the balcony. It was a little nerve-wracking to see the singer standing partially on the edges of these areas. Indeed, Booth could be seen testing the railing, checking for possible looseness, of the first opera box before committing to the move. Thankfully, sometimes, with the help of fans who often but not always held his hand during these moments, he made it down back to the stage safely.

And though the tune’s name is similar to that of the aforementioned Electronic song, it is quite different.

We’re getting away with it
All messed up
Getting away with it
All messed up
That’s the living
.”

James finished out its set with a rousing rendition of its biggest international hit “Laid.” The infectious beat, the wonderous falsetto, and the sometimes relatable lyrics (if not literally, but in spirit) all combine to make it so good. The song’s narrator acknowledges a toxic relationship, and his inability to leave is confirmed in its closing moments.

You’re driving me crazy
When are you coming home?

The song was a massive hit when first released in 1993. It later became known to a certain demographic as the theme song to the American Pie movie franchise.

And in 2024, it was again sent out into the public conscience for new fans to be created. SPOILER ALERT (but it has been out for many months so come on…) In one of the final scenes in the season 3 finale of the critically acclaimed and award-winning Chicago set television show, The Bear, the song is blasted during a party in which the characters dance together joyously. Yes, I did mean to use the word joyously when describing a scene from The Bear.

The comments from the official video posting on Youtube are further testimony to the the power of movies, shows, and social media to bring beloved songs to whole new generations. Or remind those of us who immediately loved it why we still do and always will.


Without a doubt, this was one of my very favorite shows to cover for Dying Scene in 2024. I hope to see both sets of musicians back in Chicago sooner than later. Ideally sharing the bill again. I hope everyone gets that opportunity.

Cheers!

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DS Show Review & Photo Gallery: Torture w/ Payasa, Prevention, and Primitive Rage (Chicago IL)

Torture brought the pain to Schubas Tavern in Chicago IL, with a loaded cast of Hardcore bands, Payasa, Prevention, and Primitive Rage. For those who haven’t heard, Torture are an up and coming slam band that hit the Hardcore seen hard after getting a last minute call to show up at Sound and Fury earlier […]

Torture brought the pain to Schubas Tavern in Chicago IL, with a loaded cast of Hardcore bands, Payasa, Prevention, and Primitive Rage.

For those who haven’t heard, Torture are an up and coming slam band that hit the Hardcore seen hard after getting a last minute call to show up at Sound and Fury earlier this summer. What began as the brainchild/solo project of the drummer and vocalist known as K.K. found its way around online forums and Reddit after the release of the fourth album 4-“Enduring Freedom”. Torture brings a strong anti-war message that can be heard throughout each song with drums that resemble helicopters and machine guns, and mean, chuggy guitar riffs that turn the cruelties of war into an attack on the crowd. They have a truly unique sound characterized by rapidly changing time signatures and K.K.’s vocals, which have no words. It all comes together as an extremely thought-provoking and outwardly violent experience.


When the project gained steam K.K. brought on his best friends to take up the other parts in the band. All the band members are from the Chicagoland area so playing at Schubas was somewhat of a homecoming. They have been notorious for drawing energetic crowds with violent mosh pits and the crowd here did not disappoint. A constant assault of heavy breakdowns had limbs and bodies, flailing and trash cans and beers getting tossed around the small, dark venue.


Playing before Torture was another band from the Chicagoland area, Payasa. Payasa absolutely rips. After listening to their first two EPs they became an instant favorite of mine and after getting the opportunity to see them live I’ll make sure I’m in the crowd for every show they play in Chicago. Lead singer Brittany Lane’s vocals are just awesome. They range from high and shrill screams to low and guttural and just all around angry in the best way possible. It provides an excellent balance to the sound the band is going for. She mixes all that range into delivering highly relatable lyrics that focus heavily on anxiety and depression. Their sound is rounded out by slow, creepy guitar riffs and big, heavy breakdowns that makes their live experience so satisfying.


Prevention Showed up repping Springfield IL, Straight Edge hard. Prevention are fresh off of their recent split EP with Anklebiter. Vocalist Drew Kodrich has a voice that reminds me Bryan Garris of Knocked Loose which gives Prevention a sound that you don’t hear too often in Hardcore. The band asks a lot of questions of society and our place within it. Their song “Don’t You Want To Be Free?” , I envision, asks that question of us as society blindly falls into line with overreaching capitalistic greed and the constantly growing surveillance state.


Primitive Rage, a Springfield Missouri-based power violence band, got things going. As the first opener they brought the energy, paced by a gorgeous, poppy, tight-wound snare and ferocious, biting vocals that does the band’s name justice. The vocals come through shrill and biting with a touch of desperation. They have gone on record that they want their music to “scary and insane” and they nail that perfectly with their own hybrid of metalcore and death metal.



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DS Photo Gallery: Bikini Kill and Sweeping Promises at Baltimore Soundstage in Baltimore, Maryland

On 11 September, Bikini Kill performed the first of two SOLD OUT shows at the Baltimore Soundstage in Baltimore, Maryland, joined by Sweeping Promises, which was the perfect supporting band. These shows marked the end of Bikini Kill’s North American 2024 tour – rumored to be their final.   Bikini Kill performed to a full house with the […]

On 11 September, Bikini Kill performed the first of two SOLD OUT shows at the Baltimore Soundstage in Baltimore, Maryland, joined by Sweeping Promises, which was the perfect supporting band. These shows marked the end of Bikini Kill’s North American 2024 tour – rumored to be their final.  

Bikini Kill performed to a full house with the original Riot Grrrls, Kathleen Hanna, Tobi Vail, and Kathi Wilcox were joined by guitarist Sara Landeau (The Julie Ruin), who has accompanied their last two tours. Fans spanning seven decades or so stood shoulder to shoulder, roaring out the lyrics to Bikini Kill’s empowering feminist anthems. The band ripped through their set with the guttural energy of their origins in the 90’s Pacific Northwest punk scene, and the tight sound of seasoned musicians (Tobi and Kathleen switched places on lead vocals and drums a few times – a fun role change of two legends). I stood in awe watching fans from 7 to 80 years old reveling as Bikini Kill sang “Suck My Left One” and it was GREAT!

Towards the end of the night, the band hinted that this might be their last tour, which, if true, would mark the end of an iconic era in the punk music scene. Bikini Kill changed the standard punk scenery in the early 90’s by calling out dangerous misogynist behavior from the stage, famously insisting on “girls to the front”. Three decades later, the band is still holding people accountable for bad behavior from the stage while motivating their audiences to make meaningful change in their communities.

Bikini Kill has paved the way for a ton of girl bands and feminism in general, and while I hope this tour is not actually going to be their last, the honor to photograph it was tremendous. 

How BK is influencing a new generation of fans – here are some amazing quotes from my teenage nephew and his friends who attended the Portland, Oregon (Forest Grove) show:

“I thought they were so energetic and entertaining to watch. I liked how they worked with the crowd a lot and their personalities which was fun to see in person”. – Pin A. 14

“It was THE BEST show I’ve ever seen”. – Anikka 17

“I love that the band spoke up about important issues. Kathleen asked all the trans people to scream as loud as they could, and I’m trans, so that was really cool. Everybody there was weird, which was great. You don’t have to worry about being looked down on for the way you’re dressed. I got compliments on my battle vest, and saw lots of other cool ones that inspired me. It changed my life. It was the best show I’ve ever been to”. – Moxxie B (15)

Sweeping Promises (SP) is a post punk band from Lawrence, Kansas that includes Lira Mondal (bassist/vocals), Caufield Schnug (guitarist), and Spenser Gralla (drummer). SP was a surprise to many who didn’t know what to expect with a distinct new wave sound that is compared to bands like Viagra Boys, B52’s, Devo, and more.

The band started the night with an amazing energy that was felt through the venue, especially when Mondal introduced her beautiful grungy harmonies, Schnug (tall and lanky) is mesmerizing to watch as he played the guitar, and Gralla killed on drums. While standing the midst of the crowd, I heard a lady next to me say, “I didn’t know I’d love them this much” as she danced with her friends the entire set. I think they’ve became instant fans. Be sure to catch them here.

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DS Gallery: Grime punk? Hip-hop? Grunge? You get a taste of it all with Bob Vylan and Jigsaw Youth at Chicago’s Subterranean!

Chicago got a truly unforgettable night of grime punk and grunge with the high-intensity raw power from both Bob Vylan and Jigsaw Youth at the Subterranean on October 1st. You know Dying Scene would not miss the Humble as the Sun tour! Joining Bob Vylan on their North American tour is my favorite nitty gritty […]

Chicago got a truly unforgettable night of grime punk and grunge with the high-intensity raw power from both Bob Vylan and Jigsaw Youth at the Subterranean on October 1st. You know Dying Scene would not miss the Humble as the Sun tour!


Joining Bob Vylan on their North American tour is my favorite nitty gritty city band, Jigsaw Youth.

Jigsaw Youth is non-stop working their asses off; since we last covered them at their show with Des Rocs at The Bottom Lounge on April 26th, the sludgy-grunge non-apologetic band from Staten Island, NY has released two more singles: “Waiting” and “Secret“.

They also played major festivals Louder Than Life in Louisville, Kentucky and Aftershock in Sacramento, California all while embarking on Bob Vylan’s Humble as the Sun North American tour. 


Jigsaw Youth’s gritty guitar riffs echoes of excitement, complete with angsty vocals; top that off with encouraging fans to form circle pits and you have the perfect storm of chaotic energy.

What is up next for Jigsaw Youth? East Coasters are in luck: on November 3rd they are playing with an absolutely sick line up at Gold Sounds in Brooklyn, New York with Skarhead and NEWCOMER plus a nearly sold-out show (if not sold out already!) in Philadelphia on December 14th at Creep Records. You can also get your vacation on at ShipRocked January 19-25th, 2025 and cruise with some killer bands.  

Meanwhile, I will be here waiting, wishing and hoping for a well-deserved Jigsaw Youth headlining tour and album. 😉 



The grime punk/hip hop hell-raising duo from London Bob Vylan took the stage next. Compromised of Bobby Vylan and Bobbie Vylan, they released Humble as the Sun on April 5th, 2024. They both put on an exciting, in your face performance every time I have seen them (check out our gallery of them from Riot Fest 2022 here!) and they cannot be missed. Their unique blend of genres creates a sense of urgency and action, but also comradery and tranquility. 


Bobby Vylan makes a connection with his audience at every show, engaging with fans and fearlessly crowd surfing, leaving everyone thrilled to be a part of the experience. His passionate energy while echoing social and political issues is nothing short of inspiring. The duo’s performances always knock it out of the park! 

The duo also played Louder Than Life and Aftershock this year in addition to several European music festivals. The Humble as the Sun tour continues to the UK right now, so if you are across the pond do not miss your chance to see them! 



Check out the rest of the gallery below!


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DS Bonus Coverage: More Highlights & Happenings at Chicago’s Riot Fest 2024

As summer fades and the smell of fall fills the air, music fans from across the globe brace themselves for one of the most exciting and eccentric music festivals of the year: Riot Fest.  The iconic festival boasts some of the best punk and alternative artists, including the classics we grew up on and new […]

As summer fades and the smell of fall fills the air, music fans from across the globe brace themselves for one of the most exciting and eccentric music festivals of the year: Riot Fest.  The iconic festival boasts some of the best punk and alternative artists, including the classics we grew up on and new bands for fans to discover. Join us as Dying Scene revisits Riot Fest 2024; the bands, the fans, and the all new RiotLand! 


Day One

Despite the sweltering heat, fans turned up for day one to get the party started. Headliners included Sum 41, Fall Out Boy, The Offspring, New Found Glory, Cypress Hill, Public Enemy, The Marley Brothers and NOFX. With so many amazing bands it is hard to figure out where to go first but we headed to the NOFX Stage to see Get Dead.  


The San Francisco punk band formed in 2007 and joined forces with Fat Mike and his label, Fat Wreck Chords


We wound up at the Radical Stage afterwards for several bands; the layout at this year’s Riot Fest looked a little bit different from years past, now complete with all large stages and two sets of stages side by side. Super convenient! Thanks to that I was able to catch some of Jhariah’s set before Canadian post-punk band Home Front


Home Front’s performance was explosive, complete with an impressive amount of jump kicks, especially for this Chicago heat. They debuted their first studio album Games of Power on March 3rd, 2023. It is best described as a beautiful blend of post-punk synthwave and oi!  


Bay Area punks Spiritual Cramp followed Home Front on the stage with an equal amount of chaotic attitude and on-stage antics. The gritty yet delightfully polished swagger of frontman Michael Bingham easily won over the crowd. Spiritual Cramp also released their self-titled debut studio album in 2023 via Blue Grape Music


Post-hardcore band Drug Church took the stage next with overwhelming support from their fans who crowd surfed and sang along to every song. Their newest album PRUDE is set to be released on October 4th, 2024 via Pure Noise Records. You will also still have a chance to catch Drug Church on “The Prude Tour” this fall that features support from Modern Color, Soul Blind, and Pony. 



Day Two

The second day of Riot Fest was just as hot as the first! We started at the Radical Stage for Heart Attack Man, the Ohio-based pop punk band. In 2023, the band released their third full length album Freak of Nature.


Over at the AAA Stage I was fortunate enough to catch the end of Sir Chloe’s set, an indie rock band from Vermont. Another fan raced to the railings at the end hoping to get a drumstick as she was a drummer herself. We both managed to get drummer Palmer Foote’s attention who promptly threw us both a stick! The Hives then promptly started at the neighboring Cabaret Metro Stage. 

Finally, Health started, a band so many people have told me I just HAVE to see. The LA experimental-industrial rock band certainly is a vibe. Think cyberpunk meets nihilism meets sexy meets dark transcendentalism…yeah, hard to describe, but you can certainly groove to it at your next goth dark wave club night. 


After checking out the highly anticipated St. Vincent and L.S. Dunes (who are no strangers to Riot Fest, check out our previous coverage here), nostalgia brought me to the infamous Taking Back Sunday so I could sing along to all the emo songs that got me through high school. Adam Lazzara still has all the moves with microphone tricks galore.  


Day Three

In complete opposition to the previous days, the third and final day of Riot Fest was rainy and cloudy. It certainly set the mood for the bands of the day which tended to be more metal and hardcore, including the reunion of Slayer. 

GEL was everything you would expect from a hardcore band with a knockout performance. With the rain comes mud, and with mud of course there will be circle pits in it (and some mud wrestling). Their newest EP Persona was released on August 16th, 2024. 


A unique mash-up came to Riot Fest that could not be missed: Laura Jane Grace with ska greats Catbite performing a set of Operation Ivy.


Other noteworthy acts of the day included the metal greats: Mastodon, GWAR, Lamb of God and horror shock rock king Rob Zombie who always put on the best theatrical performance. 



RiotLand

New to Riot Fest this year is RiotLand, filled with old favorites like the Logan Arcade, wedding chapel and skate ramp but also the return of the Hellzapoppin Circus Sideshow Revue. RiotLand was great to walk around while waiting for your next favorite band to play or just for some good old-fashioned people-watching. You can pop inside the store replica of the convenience store in the movie “Clerks” for some quick essentials, stop at the Riot Fest Historical Society made in collaboration with the Punk Rock Museum (those familiar with the Fireside Bowl will recognize the exterior!), and even watch some NWA wrestling.



Most importantly the RiotLand experience would not be complete if you did not take a picture with the giant butter sculpture of John Stamos…because why the hell not?  


Riot Fest 2024 may be over but there is still an abundance of Riot Fest Presents shows coming up in the Chicago and Milwaukee area. However, it is never too early to start your Riot Fest 2025 predictions and dream line ups! 

Keep an eye on Dying Scene for more in-depth coverage of all three days of the festival! 

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DS Show Review & Galleries: Riot Fest 2024 Day 3 featuring Laura Jane Grace & Catbite perform Operation Ivy; The Vandals; and Pennywise. Chicago (09.22.2024)

Rain had been predicted for several days in the week before the start of Riot Fest 2024. The first two days of the festival were sweltering but dry. Sunday morning, however, was greeted by heavy clouds and a torrential downpour. This meant gates had a delayed opening, and some of Douglass Park was taped off. […]

Rain had been predicted for several days in the week before the start of Riot Fest 2024. The first two days of the festival were sweltering but dry. Sunday morning, however, was greeted by heavy clouds and a torrential downpour. This meant gates had a delayed opening, and some of Douglass Park was taped off. As a result, we at Dying Scene had a lighter day. But sets from Laura Jane Grace & Catbite performing Operation Ivy, The Vandals; and Pennywise more than made up for the muddy grounds and having to carry a bunch of plastic bags in case camera gear needed covering. Read all about it and check out the galleries linked from Instagram below.


Laura Jane Grace & Catbite performing a full set of Operation Ivy tunes? Umm, hell yeah. I know I’m not alone in that thinking after seeing the Riot Fest 2024 lineup. The fabulous Philadelphia ska outfit Catbite joined the dynamic Laura Jane Grace as the rain began to ease up, and the result was jaw-dropping. “What’s up Riot Fest?” asked Laura Jane Grace. Grace followed it up with this pledge:

We’re going to do as many of these songs as we can.”

Rolling from one tune to another they did get to perform quite a few. Highlights of the exuberant set included not only the classic “Take Warning,” but also “Bombshell,” “Unity,“ and “Missionary.”  It ended with the defiant “Officer.”

Together, Laura Jane Grace & Catbite might not be on their “way to save the world.” However, they brought a lot of unity to the festival grounds, renamed four years ago in honor of legendary abolitionists Frederick And Anna Murray Douglass. There is something pretty poetic and pretty punk rock in that. Check out more pics!


Orange County, CA icons, The Vandals attacked the stage in a most impish manner. For those uninitiated, most band members decked out in more subdued tones. Not guitarist Warren Fitzgerald, in his vivid yellows and oranges. Wearing bright colors is part of his modus operandi.

Per usual, the ever-limber Fitzgerald was a photographer magnet. Twisting himself into poses that seemed painful to even look at, he provoked a fist bump and this exchange with lead singer Dave Quakenbush:

DQ: “That was rad Warren dude, you still got it.”

WF: “I got hurt…almost hurt so many times.

DQ: “And then you pulled it off, you looked cool.”

“WF: I’m not hurt yet.”

DQ: “You looked really good doing it too.”

WF: Thank you.”

Quakenbush, Fitzgerald, bass player Joe Escalante, and drummer Josh Freese played a rollicking set which included “Café 405,” ”Cowboy,” “It’s A Fact,” “N.I.M.B.Y.,” and “Anarchy Burger (Hold The Government.)”

As hoodie weather sets in, with the holiday season in the not-too-distant future, I look forward to blasting some “Oi To The World” on the regular. Lots more pics here.


Pennywise, my final set of the weekend, was an interesting experience. It seems appropriate that it was the penultimate band at the NOFX World Stage before NOFX played Riot Fest for the final time. For at least most of the photography allotted time, there were only two shooters in the photo pit. Perhaps due to Rob Zombie having a competing set, The other photographer informed me he was shooting for himself. With four cameras on his person, he jokingly acknowledged reminding people of the Dennis Hopper character in Apocolypse Now. A much nattier version, though. I also wondered which of the two of us, Pennywise singer Jim Lindberg would borrow a camera to take a photo of the crowd. It’s something I have seen him do in the past, but this afternoon, it was all about the music.

While the photo pit might have been a bit barren, the crowd was not. Whether the RF attendees were there for NOFX or Pennywise, or most likely both, did not matter. The Hermosa Beach, CA legends delivered a fusillade of songs starting with the recalcitrant “Fight Till You Die.”

Lindberg then looked to the sky, observing that “The clouds have parted for Pennywise, thank you very much Jesus.”

Pennywise also performed robustious versions of “Date with Destiny, and “Fuck Authority.” Fletcher Dragge prefaced that latter tune with a speech he described as the same one he’s been giving “for the last fucking 20 years.” But this has a special timeliness to it as he spoke to the crowd,

“Election year motherfuckers, who you voting for?”

Dragge was apparently pleased with the crowd’s response, continuing with, “A lot of boos, that’s good, that means you hate everybody right? That’s a good place.”

After adding that “they’re all motherfuckers, both sides are fucked,” and assuring everyone that “We’re all in this together,” the band launched into a ferocious version of the aforementioned “Fuck Authority.” It was a powerful battle cry and a much-welcome one to many of those on the lawn and surrounding the band on stage.

Pennywise also had a bit of fun covering just under a minute of NOFX’s “Bob.” The band ended with “Bro Hymn,” joined up front by all the friends, family, and fans watching the sides and rear areas of the stage. It was an exceptionally festive moment.

I know I’m amped up for the next chance to shoot this band. You wanna borrow my camera, Jim? Check out a bunch more pics of the PW set here!


You can again peruse Days 1 and Day 2 if the mood hits.

Once again, covering Riot Fest was abundantly fun, though extremely exhausting. And by the end of the festival I cannot wait to tear off the wristbands that tickled my skin all weekend long (I save them as mementos). When everything is complete I can finally breathe a sigh of relief. DONE!

Is it next year yet?

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DS Show Review: Attention Fest Day 2 Feat. Go Betty Go, Codename: Rocky, Goodwin Club and more! (Hangar 24 – Irvine, CA)

Wiretap Records celebrated their ten-year anniversary with Attention Fest: a free, all-ages, two-day concert on September 21 and 22nd at Hangar 24 Brewery in Irvine, CA. I was unable to make the first day, but was able to make day two. The first band, the Nervous Kids, came out swinging. They have a 1990’s pop […]

Wiretap Records celebrated their ten-year anniversary with Attention Fest: a free, all-ages, two-day concert on September 21 and 22nd at Hangar 24 Brewery in Irvine, CA. I was unable to make the first day, but was able to make day two.

The first band, the Nervous Kids, came out swinging. They have a 1990’s pop punk sound and have done their homework with bands from that era. The band played tracks off of their self-titled EP. Songs like “Mediocre at Best” and “Anyone But You” went over well with the small crowd. I had a lot of fun hearing them, and it’s a shame they were given a short time to play and put on early because they put on a great set. Definitely keep them on your radar.

The crowd had doubled in size by the time Orange County’s Taken Days had started. Their set was very energetic and melodic. A lot of the bands that played had some fun riffs, this band especially. They were able to throw in a decent cover of the Killers’ “Mr. Brightside,” which sounded very full despite coming from a three-piece.

A late addition to the bill was Art Barrios of Audio Karate. He played an acoustic set mostly consisting of songs from Audio Karate’s 2002 album, Space Camp. It was a nice little trip back. I always forget how good those songs are until they randomly pop up every few years. Closing the set with The Zombies’ “This Will Be Our Year” was a nice little surprise. If it’s been some time since you’ve seen them, now is a good time to revisit them.

Odd Robot came out on stage dressed in skeleton onesies to organ music and a pre-recorded voice intro by Vincent Price. They launched into a cover of Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs’ song, “Woolly Bully.” It was a complete left turn. Their synth-driven pop punk was a great addition to this show. They had a lively set which included songs “Break in Period,” “California Emptiness,” and bookended their time on stage with another cover, Chapelle Roan’s “Hot To Go.” Comparisons could be made to Alkaline Trio, but there is much more humor in their set and they take themselves way less seriously. The crowd showed a lot of love, and Odd Robot sent it back, saying things like, “We’re still Odd Robot and you’re still fun.”

The biggest surprise of the day for me was Wicked Bears, from Salt Lake City, UT. This three-piece took all of those 1990’s punk rock and Lookout Records albums to heart and have written fun songs. They reminded me a lot of Squirtgun, playing songs about the future, their car being broken into, and the nickel arcade. Songs like “Lucky” and “Hypothetically” kept the show moving. Wiretap Records did a great job of setting the line-up. In a show packed to the gills with bands, fatigue could have set in at any point. This was my first time seeing Wicked Bears, and I will definitely be on the lookout for them next time they come through town.

Ska band, The Goodwin Club, led by vocalist Tami Demaree, came out with a lot of energy and a bin full of confetti shooters. They probably had the most energetic set of the day. The crowd was dancing and having fun but were temporarily slowed down when the venue asked them to stop with the confetti shooters. This didn’t stop Tami from throwing them out to the crowd to shoot off before the confetti shooters were finally confiscated. The band got the crowd back by doing a cover of Taylor Swift’s “Shake It Off” and closing with the title track from their latest EP, “Join the Club.” Fans of 1990’s ska should give them a look if they missed them the first time around.

By the time Codename: Rocky came out, the crowd was at the biggest it was going to get. They played second to last. Like most of the sets for the show, song choices leaned closer to songs of their Wiretap Records releases. Foundation songs “Killing the Chemist” and “Little Devil” went over well with the crowd. Codename: Rocky slowed it down a bit with a cover of the Cure’s “Just Like Heaven,” which was an interesting take, but not bad by any means.

Closing out the night was Los Angeles band Go Betty Go. Their set was the perfect cap to the night. The band’s line-up looked a little different with Adam Bones filling in for founding member Betty Cisneros, who has been out for medical reasons. Nicolette Vilar led them through a fantastic set. Also on hand was Emily Valentine, who sang with the band while Nicolette went to art school. She sings on two of the songs, “City Lights” and “Am I To Blame,” on Go Betty Go’s new EP, “Black and Blue.” They sounded really good with both singers trading lines and harmonizing together.

You really have to hand it to the bands on the back half of this show. By the time they hit the stage, some people had already been there for about four to six hours on a school night, not including anyone who may have been there the previous day for Attention Fest’s first day. It was my first time hearing most of the bands, while with others, it was a great revisit. Congrats on ten years, Wiretap Records, and here’s to many more.

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DS Show Review & Galleries: Riot Fest 2024 Day 2 featuring The Hives, The Dead Milkmen, Sincere Engineer, Descendents; and D.O.A. Chicago (09.21.2024)

Riot Fest Day 1 was hot, and Riot Fest Day 2 was even hotter. A virtual scorcher, weather-wise and musically, DS hit the photo-pits for The Hives, The Dead Milkmen, Sincere Engineer, Descendents, and D.O.A. as they tore up the stages in Chicago’s Douglass Park. You can see additional day 2 band galleries on Instagram […]

Riot Fest Day 1 was hot, and Riot Fest Day 2 was even hotter. A virtual scorcher, weather-wise and musically, DS hit the photo-pits for The Hives, The Dead Milkmen, Sincere Engineer, Descendents, and D.O.A. as they tore up the stages in Chicago’s Douglass Park. You can see additional day 2 band galleries on Instagram via hyperlinks in the corresponding paragraphs below.


One of the most eagerly anticipated sets on the second day of this year’s Riot Fest was from The Hives. The matching and sharp-dressed Swedish punks exceeded all expectations with a ferocious performance from the first note played. With various band members sporadically taking their places on the giant speakers in front of the stage and with the lead singer “Howling” Pelle Almqvist moving to sing at the barricades and above the fans, the photo pit got a bit chaotic. It was so chaotic (please note, though not out of control) that we shooters were instructed to exit just seconds into the third song. One fellow photographer joked after that if you could not get a good photo within the first minute of that set, you shouldn’t be shooting Riot Fest. Indeed, The Hives set was the epitome of the performances upon which we concert photographers thrive.

Included in the raucous set were the songs “Bogus Operandi, “”Rigor Mortis Radio,” “Walk Idiot Walk,” and “Hate To Say I Told You So.” “Countdown to the Shutdown” was the last song played by The Hives but it wasn’t the last song heard. While lots of bands have walk-on music, The Hives also has a walk-off songs. In this case, Carly Simon’s “Nobody Does It Better,” which, f.y.i., is the theme song to the 1977 James Bond film, “The Spy Who Loved Me.” Band members bowed and waved as the iconic American singer-songwriter’s voice wafted gently from the speakers. More than a few witnessing The Hives’ Riot Fest performance might argue that nobody did it better, at least not on this day.


The Dead Milkmen took the stage a few minutes ahead of time, catching us shooters and those letting us into the photo pit a bit off guard. It was all good, though, as we were given a bit more time to make up for it. The Philly outfit brought its legendary tongue firmly in cheek. The exuberant set included some of the band’s best songs, including “Serrated Edge,” “Punk Rock Girl,” “Bitchin’ Camaro,” and “Big Lizard.”

The Dead Milkmen also performed “Grandpa’s Not a Racist (He Just Voted for One),” off the band’s 2023 album Quaker City Quiet Pills. The lyrics to the song and the fact it was released just last year, make it hard not to think of a certain segment of the voting population in this election year, and of a certain 2024 Presidential Candidate.

They’re coming for his Jesus
They re coming for his gun
They’re coming for his Jesus
There coming for his gun
They’re coming for his Jesus
They’re coming for his gun
Grandpa’s not a racist – he just voted for one

Grandpa’s screaming something about white genocide
as he crawls under the bed looking for someplace to hide
He talks a lot of bullshit when he’s hittin’ the rum
But we know Grandpa’s not a racist – he just voted for one.

Last night we found Grandpa wandering the streets
Whistling Dixie and wearing a white sheet
Letting everybody know He won’t be replaced by the Jews 
and we said
“Oh, Grandpa, who could ever replace you”

Do you know a racist Grandpa?
You see one every day
He wonders why the N-word is something he’s not allowed to say
and while he’s the worst person under the sun
We all know Grandpa’s not a racist – he just voted for one.”

The Dead Milkmen set was the one I knew I would not miss at this year’s Riot Fest. I enjoyed interviewing Joe Jack Talcum and covering and documenting the band’s delightful set at House of Vans several years back. I hope to document as many more The Dead Milkmen shows as possible because I’m kind of a punk rock girl who has had the pleasure of riding in my friends’ Bitching Camaro on numerous occasions.


Sincere Engineer is most often described as a stage moniker for singer/rhythm guitar player Deanna Belos in her sole work. But it has also been described as a band, including by Belos herself on occasion. Whatever its most accurate characterization, if there indeed is one, Sincere Engineer has been a Dying Scene favorite pretty much since its debut album, Rhombithian.

Of course, one of the big reasons is Belos’ smartly charming and self-deprecating songwriting. She is unafraid to wear her often aching and/or longing heart on the short sleeves of her black Carhartt t-shirts nor is she wary of letting you know this is the case. The first song the band played “Anemia” perfectly illustrates this

I’m a walking open wound
Don’t make any sudden moves
I’m a walking open wound
It’s a pleasure to meet you

Aware of this, it is unsurprising the group’s walk-on music is the classic instrumental version of the Johnny Mandel theme from M*A*S*H*, also known by its official song name “Suicide Is Painless.”

However, the joy she and her bandmates, Kyle Geib on lead guitar, Nick Arvanitis on bass, and drummer/back-up vocals Adam Beck display whilst expressing sometimes heavy emotions is infectious.

Also included in the roaring set “Dragged Across The Finish Line,” “Corn Dog Sonnet No. 7,” “Old Coat Pocket,” and “Overbite,” among others.

Sincere Engineer is currently on the road in the western part of the United States, supporting New Found Glory’s Catalyst 20 Years Later Tour. To say this is a dream come true for Belos’ might be a bit of an understatement. Speaking to her from said road, Belos’ described to me what it has been like.

“It’s such a blast being out on tour with New Found Glory! They’re so nice, and the shows have been incredible! They were my first favorite band, so it’s been awesome to get to know them and see them every night!


Riot Fest’s regular rotations include numerous members of the “Punk Rock Docs Club” including Bad Religion’s Dr. Greg Griffin, PhD; Dr. Daryl Wilson, MD of The Bollweevils; Dr. Dexter Holland, PhD of The Offspring, and of course, The Descendents‘ Dr. Milo Auckerman, PhD. The latter two were on stage in Douglass Park this year. Dying Scene was able to hit one of those sets.

After taking the stage Guitarist Stephen Egerton gestured to its side area to give a shoutout to skateboarding legend Steve Caballero, whose own band, Urethane, also played Riot Fest 2024. The Descendents launched into its performance. The frenetic and extensive set included “The Only One,” “Silly Girl,” “Clean Sheets,” “Look Good On Paper,” “I’m The One,” and “Suburban Home.”

If the Descendents were offered an annual residency at Riot Fest, few would likely complain.


D.O.A. is still alive and killing it. The only member of the band from start to present, singer Joey “Joey Shithead” Keithley, told the audience that the band has been around for 47 years and added, “I’m in the middle of my third life sentence but don’t worry I can do the fucking stretch. I’m ok, I can do it.”

The band made a strong case for never retiring with its powerful set. Two of the highlights were blistering performances of “Smash The State,” and “The Enemy.”

D.O.A. was recently on the bill for NOFX’s final show. They have a couple of Pacific Northwest shows scheduled in November 2024, providing direct support for Duff McKagen. Check them out if you can!


As noted above, all of the DS Riot Fest galleries can also be viewed on the Dying Scene Instagram account.

Stay tuned for Day 3 coverage coming soon! Cheers!

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