DS Photo Gallery & Show Review: Strung Out/Ignite/Mercy Music from Reggie’s in Chicago

Sunday is usually a day for rest, reflection, recovery, reconnaissance and recharging. For most of us “adult-minded” people that may be true, but also a day to clean house, buy groceries, meal prep, take care of laundry, spend time with family, and most importantly NOT think about going back to work on Monday. This particular […]

Sunday is usually a day for rest, reflection, recovery, reconnaissance and recharging. For most of us “adult-minded” people that may be true, but also a day to clean house, buy groceries, meal prep, take care of laundry, spend time with family, and most importantly NOT think about going back to work on Monday.

This particular Sunday, June 9, I decided to throw a curveball into the typical routine and take a trip to Chicago to attend a White Sox game during the afternoon and see the band Strung Out for the very first time live at Reggie’s in the evening. That’s right folks, I pulled a double header of sorts and I can tell you it was absolutely worth it.

Accompanied by opening acts Ignite and Mercy Music, the show at Reggie’s in Chicago was the fourth stop on the tour for Strung Out. As I mentioned this was my first time seeing these punk rock legends rock a stage and I couldn’t be more excited. I also got to meet Meredith Goldberg, our very own Dying Scene Photographer and Contributor and witness her excellent camera wizardry. Meredith provided all of the awesome photos you are about to see.

The level of energy brought by all three bands – Mercy Music, Ignite and Strung Out – had the crowd of mostly thirty to forty-somethings moving the entire evening. A sign of my own age, as I felt sore the following morning. Punk ROCK! Eat your Wheaties and hydrate my friends.


Las Vegas’ pop-punkers Mercy Music started the show in Chicago on June 9. Prior to this show, I did not know much about this band other than they have been gaining traction amongst the scene. After watching their energy-fueled set, I can understand why. The trio bounced around on stage and played some very catchy tunes that garnered praise from the crowd. The singer was very engaging and had most of us clapping along as the band jumped their way through nine songs. I think I may have heard a nod to Weezer via guitar riff during a break between songs. Mercy Music closed their set with the infectious “Suddenly” off of their latest album What You Stand to Lose, available from SBAM Records.


Melodic hardcore outfit Ignite kicked things up a bit at Reggie’s after taking the stage and displaying some heavy guitars and fierce vocals. First impression of this band: loud, heavy, energetic, fun and an excellent live performance. Turns out Ignite has been cranking out fist-pumping and in-your-face punk rock since the early ’90s. Another band I did not know much about, but became an instant fan. To my surprise, Ignite played a hard rocking cover of U2’s “Sunday Bloody Sunday,” and everyone in the crowd sang their hearts out. Singer Eli Santana jumped around the stage and was giving off the vibe that he could also sing for Iron Maiden. Great choice having Ignite open for Strung Out, the bands complement each other well and I wouldn’t be surprised if both influenced their respective music.


Headlining act Strung Out took the stage and started their set with the song “Future Ghosts” off of their brand new album Dead Rebellion. The song was the perfect intro to the show, a barrage of drums that’ll get the blood flowing leading into some ripping guitar riffs. There’s been mixed feelings about the new album among fans, but I can tell you that hearing this song live will guarantee it’s a banger. I was eager to hear some of the new stuff live and it sounded just as good as on record. I became a Strung Out fan in my late 20s thanks to a good friend lending me some of his CDs. The album Suburban Teenage Wasteland Blues was among the many CDs I was given and it only took one listen to cement the album into “all-time classic” status. Hearing the band play “Bring Out Your Dead” and “Firecracker” during the show in Chicago felt surreal. Strung Out played a total of 19 songs at Reggie’s in Chicago (this includes 3 encore songs) and the energy level was the same for every song. Singer Jason Cruz made his performance known moving around the stage and frequently interacting with the fans. It seems as if the band effortlessly mixes elements of heavy metal, melodic punk rock, aggression, and intensity that makes for one hell of a show. Other highlights during the set include the songs “New Gods” and “White Owls” (both from new album Dead Rebellion), “The Animal and the Machine” from the album Transmission Alpha Delta, “Daggers” from the album Songs of Armor and Devotion and “Ashes” from debut album Another Day in Paradise. The band ended the evening with “Matchbook” from arguably their best album Twisted by Design.


It had been nearly 7 years since I last attended a show at Reggie’s. This show was no question one of the best I’ve attended at the venue.

One of my favorite things about going to shows is finding bands that are either new or new to me. While I was somewhat familiar with both Mercy Music and Ignite, seeing them live definitely made me a fan of both bands. If you get the chance to see either band, go for it because you will not be disappointed.

Strung Out announced to the crowd at Reggie’s that they will be playing Riot Fest this year in Chicago. I was not expecting to hear that so it was a very exciting surprise. If there’s any band that should be playing Riot Fest, it has to be Strung Out. They are legends in their own right and have paved the way for a lot of the bands who played Riot Fest over the years.

Strung Out finished an 18-show run in the month of June and just announced a West Coast run of shows starting in September with bands Adolescents and A Wilhelm Scream. Visit the band’s website here for info. Check out all of the photos from the show at Reggie’s in Chicago below via Instagram, taken by Dying Scene’s very talented Meredith Goldberg.




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DS Festival Review: Copenhell Day 2 – Deathbyromy, Mr. Bungle, Limp Bizkit, and many more!

Day 2, let’s go. That is what I told myself when I woke up at 6 am, after four hours of sleep. But screw it, you want to know why? Because it’s LIMP BIZKIT DAY!! For months on our Discord channel, I have been waiting and waiting for this day. I have zero shame if […]

Day 2, let’s go. That is what I told myself when I woke up at 6 am, after four hours of sleep. But screw it, you want to know why? Because it’s LIMP BIZKIT DAY!! For months on our Discord channel, I have been waiting and waiting for this day. I have zero shame if we need to dissect my music taste. I cherish Limp Bizkit and how silly they can be. But it wasn’t just Limp Bizkit that was showing up on the sunny and warm Thursday. Haha, no, no – Mr. Bungle found their way to Copenhagen, Thy Art Is Murder served up on hell of a pit, and The Hives proved they could play the main stage at Copenhell.

But let’s get into it!


DeathByRomy shows No Mercy.

DeathByRomy at Hades
Photo by Peter Kirkeskov Rasmussen

Usually, I’m good at time management; I know how long it takes me from my home in Lyngby to Refshaløen, where Copenhell takes place. However, I am not in control of public transport, so while my busses were delayed, our group chat was going off about how DeathByRomy was about to start. I think it’s an understatement when I say I was annoyed. Having missed a few songs, I arrived at the end of “Hellhound”. Romy Flores has brought a band with her, and wow, this was the perfect way to kick off Thursday. “This song is about crashing my car,” Flores tells us before kicking off the song “Crash.” on record, it’s already an intense song, but hearing it live had the hairs on my neck rise.

“No Mercy” got the energy flowing on stage and in the crowd. DeathByRomy usually is a one-piece, but seeing a band accompany her on stage, bringing a well-rehearsed ping pong between each member, just showed how this was one of the best bookings Copenhell gave us this year. And when it all ended with “Day I Die”, you are left wanting more; that high you are on from the set is a wholly different drug. Next up, I hit Helviti right next to the stage for Thy Art is Murder. [Karina Rae Selvig]


The audience at Thy Art Is Murder has the cure to deal with hangovers.

Thy Art Is Murder at Helviti
Photo by Peter Kirkeskov Rasmussen

Sometimes, I get tired of my friends going to shows in genres I have zero interest in because our group chats are constantly filled with praise or funny stories about what the bands did or said. Now Thy Art Is Murder is one of these bands that I have found to be highlighted constantly, followed by the phrase, “Karina, you need to see them.” And being as curious as I tend to find myself at festivals, I did indeed head over to Helviti with my trusty pal Sebastian to see what the hype with this band was about.
Finding ourselves in the pit, I was not mentally prepared for the hell that was about to be unleashed upon me. Advice: if you are going to see Thy Art Is Murder, do not go into an area where a pit might erupt. Because that’s what we did, and I need to admit, I felt very claustrophobic being pressed up against people, but at the same time… Oh, I wanted to be in the pit, but due to an unlucky episode a few weeks prior, my pit days are over until the dentist says so.


But let’s talk about Thy Art Is Murder; before hitting the stage, “We Like To Party” by Vengaboys was playing from the stage, and as soon as the band took the stage, we needed to prepare to step the hell back. Because as the first riff came out of the speakers, the pit was getting going. The band indeed ate up the energy that was coming from the crowd, but clearly not enough to get the band moving on stage. Maybe I’m too used to punk bands that go flying off the wall at shows; it was a bit of a disappointment. Did I maybe expect a lead singer to jump from speaker to speaker? Yeah, actually. They had the main stage, which proved to be too big for them in the end. Indeed, the audience was the highlight of this show. From a circle pit that was never-ending to people on the ground rowing, you would be amazed by how the audience lifted the band, while the interaction between the band and the audience felt limited. But honestly, I would see them again; it was cool, scary, and overwhelming. [Karina Rae Selvig]


The Baboon Show

Starting my day off with iced coffee and Swedish punk was a brilliant idea. The energy from four piece, The Baboon Show, was radiant. The songs were short, groovy, and filled with conviction. And the band celebrated oddballs that cursed out sexism, racism, and capitalism to joyful crowd surfing and compelled the crowd to join in a “middle fingers in the air-morning gymnastics”. Adding kazoo to the song “You Got a Problem Without Knowing It” really got the party going. As did the Pyro during “Playing with Fire”. The Baboon Show pretty much left everything on stage, confetti on the ground and hundreds of smiling faces ready to continue their day at Copenhell. [Sabina Hvass]


Mr. Bungle was here.

Mr. Bungle at Hades
Photo by Peter Kirkeskov Rasmussen

I actually don’t know how to review Mr. Bungle. My first time seeing Mr. Bungle, and I actually didn’t hate it. Mr. Bungle is an odd band; they are funny and have some titles that make you go “ok…” but overall, you cannot deny that the stage presence that they have is intoxicating. Because what the fuck did I witness.

Starting their set with “Grizzly Adams”, Mike Patton came dressed for the event, from the cool braids to the word “Neck” written on his neck. Nothing could divert my attention from what I had signed up for. I’d say that they sounded good; they played some of their popular songs, which we probably won’t write the titles to, but if you are a Mr. Bungle fan, you know which ones I’m talking about. And they did some covers, actually a lot of covers, to the point where I questioned why. They have such an impressive back catalog; it just got too much. But whatever, they sounded amazing, and judging by the crowd, I wasn’t the only one thinking that! Would I see them again? Fuck yes. [Karina Rae Selvig]


The Hives

The Hives at Helviti
Photo by Peter Kirkeskov Rasmussen

The Hives presented high kicks, high energy, and a friendly, neighborly feud between the Danes and the Swedes on the Helviti stage late this Thursday afternoon. With confidence reaching far back on the concrete floor, The Hives busted the myth that garage rock does not fit a vast Copenhell stage. With a surplus of humor and charm, the band delivered a tight set, with swinging fan favorites like “Walk, Idiot Walk”, “Hate to Say I Told You So,” and finale, “Tick Tick Boom”! [Sabina Hvass]


Tom Morello

Tom Morello at Helviti
Photo by Philip Onyx

Legendary guitarist of Rage Against the Machine, Tom Morello, kicked off on the Helviti stage performing his songs like “Soldier in the Army of Love” and medleys of RATM tracks to scenes of people joyfully crying, jumping, and pleading for revolution. A touching version of Audioslaves “Like A Stone,” was beautifully placed mid-set. With the addition of Måneskin, MC5, and eventually a Bruce Springsteen cover, “The Ghost of Tom Joad”, tension was clearly building. Morello and his band played an improvised track, “Copenhell Rocks,” leading up to the powerful release of energy during “Killing in the Name of”. To close the set, Morello guided an attempt to get the audience registered on the Richter scale as we jumped to John Lennon’s “Power to the People”. I’ll finish as I started: Legendary! [Sabina Hvass]


Now Zulu Are Through With Me


Back in 2019, I fell in love with an EP called “Our Day Will Come”, and that became a part of my hardcore journey. When they released “A New Tomorrow” last year, it came in as my number 21 best album of the year, which, in hindsight, I regret to this day today. However, once I saw that the hardcore/power violence band was making their appearance at Copenhell, it felt like a dream come true.

Once again, we head towards Gehenna, and I find myself a bit on edge since Wednesday’s continual failure to secure proper sound for the artists throughout the day. Zulu took the stage and five right into “For Sista Humphrey”, but not long after, they were forced to stop their performance since they were experiencing some technical difficulties, which wasn’t their fault. As the show went on, they managed to get the crowd going, playing some of their biggest bangers from the album “A New Tomorrow”, and managed to get me dancing and screaming along. While I may have had the time of my life, it was an unfulfilled experience, but you know what? That’s how it is sometimes. But I’m still fangirling over seeing Zulu kicking ass at Copenhell. [Karina Rae Selvig]


Lack

Lack at Gehenna
Photo by Philip Onyx

Wrapping up the day with Danish post-hardcore band Lack – the band that delivered the soundtrack to angsty train rides in my college years. Recently resurfaced from a long hiatus, their new songs were performed with precision, intensity, and emotive strength that I could only have dreamed of. The punchy drums placed some really powerful and dynamic details onto hard riffs that were handed back and forth. Bass, guitar, and vocals ripped through the chilly summer air with lyrics leaning into the accompanying genre-bending music – call it emo, screamo, noise rock, or hardcore – this band is still gallantly spreading out in punk territory with guts and heart spilled and spewed over the crowd. Lack dove into their back catalog with the biting “Hund”, bisexual anthem ” Deserters,” and swinging “5 p.m.” standing out as highlights as I moved further and further toward the stage. As lead singer and guitarist Thomas Burø bravely proclaimed that ‘The future is female” and called out the half-hearted crowd surfing in the front rows, some of my fellow female audience members were also motivated to take a surfer view over the show as it concluded. A beaming performance by this band on the big stage, they always deserved. [Sabina Hvass]


Get The Fuck Up, Limp Bizkit

Limp Bizkit at Helviti
Photo by Peter Kirkeskov Rasmussen

As I mentioned earlier in the post, I have waited for a chance to see Limp Bizkit. As a matter of fact, I know they’ve been to Denmark a few times, but I never really had anyone to go with. But at a festival, everyone is there. This was one of those that I call a mandatory meet-up gig. The one where you expect everyone you know to make an appearance and have the best time with you, even if they don’t like the band that much, or as much as me.

As the song “Sweet Home Alabama” was playing from the speakers, my friends and I were making our way through the sea of people there to see Limp Bizkit in action when we found our other friends and the band came on stage; they dove right into “Full Nelson”. From then on, it was every person for themselves. I had told my friends earlier that I wanted to go to the pit for Limp Bizkit, and those who weren’t feeling it could stay back and chill. So, into the pit I went with two friends, and that’s where I discovered what I liked about the band. See, they actually sound good live. There is no doubt that Fred Durst & Co. still has a lot to offer. In between their songs, they did give us some covers, and that gave us some minutes of downtime before they started playing their hits like “My Way”, “Break Stuff”, and so on. The moment I heard the first notes to “Boiler”, I think my mouth dropped. What a pleasant surprise that came from Helviti, I swear – The delivery, the atmosphere, and every moment felt terrific, actually, throughout their whole show, which flew by in a blink of an eye. They can come back anytime, and it’s fair if you don’t like Limp Bizkit, but don’t be shit and hate on others that do. [Karina Rae Selvig]


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DS Show Review and Gallery: Starcrawler, Niis, The Vaxxines (The Chapel, San Francisco)

We missed Starcrawler at Punk Rock Bowling as they were playing on the 2nd stage while we jammed up against the main stage. So when they showed up in San Francisco two weeks later we just had to be there. Opening up were The Vaxxines with new singer Chelsea Rose of Bite. The Vaxxines (and […]

We missed Starcrawler at Punk Rock Bowling as they were playing on the 2nd stage while we jammed up against the main stage. So when they showed up in San Francisco two weeks later we just had to be there.

Opening up were The Vaxxines with new singer Chelsea Rose of Bite. The Vaxxines (and Chelsea) are old friends and put on their usual tight mix of garage punk.

Niis are woman-fronted hard garage punk from Los Angeles with powerful vocals. In July and August they’ll be touring the West and South, you should see them.

Starcrawler are simply astonishing. Lead singer Arrow de Wilde has such a presence, amazing vocals and is visually incredible. The band behind her is solid and entertaining.

Instagram galleries of all three bands below:

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DS Gallery: Chicago’s own pop punk outfit MEST play hometown show PLUS new album released!

MEST has had a busy year so far touring across Europe before stopping back home to Chicago…and they are not done yet! 115 Bourbon Street is a New Orleans-themed venue packed with multiple stages and on Friday, June 28th hosted MEST and a slew of other bands, including Rematch, NightCap and Highwire. MEST released the […]

MEST has had a busy year so far touring across Europe before stopping back home to Chicago…and they are not done yet!


115 Bourbon Street is a New Orleans-themed venue packed with multiple stages and on Friday, June 28th hosted MEST and a slew of other bands, including Rematch, NightCap and Highwire.


MEST released the new album ‘Youth‘ via SBÄM Records on June 21st. It features guest appearances by Jaret Reddick of Bowling For Soup and Spencer Charnas of Ice Nine Kills.

Of the new LP, founding member and front man Tony Lovato says, “The drives to the studio were about an hour and 20 minutes long. A lot of my inspiration for this record was found on those drives. I would just listen to all the records that I grew up listening to. Which brought back a ton of memories. It would just put me in another state of mind. The majority of “Youth” was written up in the hills of Los Angeles where I recorded a bunch of our early records. I would get random flashbacks seeing spots I hadn’t seen in years. But as much as I love all the memories and stories of the past, I’m not one to think that the best days are over. I’m creating new core memories and living my life now, so that in 20 years I’ll look back fondly. The same as I do now. These songs are a cheers to the past with a here’s to the future.”


MEST released their seventh album, ‘Masquerade,’ in January 2020, just before the COVID-19 pandemic. They toured extensively in 2019 with Reel Big Fish, Less Than Jake, and Millencolin. Looking ahead, MEST plans to release three new LPs, starting with ‘Youth,’ and has secured deals with Avex Records in Japan and SBAM Records in Europe.

When asked to sum up 28 years of MEST, Tony replied, “I don’t know, I mean honestly it feels like we’re just getting started…”


Maintaining their blue-collar work ethic, MEST continues to earn fans through their grassroots approach and looks forward to performing their energetic live shows worldwide. The future looks promising as they prepare to release new music and hit the road again.

MEST will continue to keep the ball rolling with shows in Mexico this month, followed by some West Coast stops in September.

Check out more photos from the 115 Bourbon Street concert below in case you missed it!


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DS Photo Gallery: Conservative Military Image, No Friend of Mine, No Guard, Home Invasion, and Memento Mori from Chicago’s Cobra Lounge

Illinois bands come together and put on a true punk show with a matinee showing at the Cobra Lounge. Bands played their best songs, showed off their best jumps, and some played their last gig. Fans sang and danced hard at this all age show! We need more shows like this. Conservative Military Image is […]

Illinois bands come together and put on a true punk show with a matinee showing at the Cobra Lounge. Bands played their best songs, showed off their best jumps, and some played their last gig. Fans sang and danced hard at this all age show! We need more shows like this.

Conservative Military Image is no stranger to Chicago’s hardcore punk scene. The fans felt their amazing energy and took it to the floor. Find them here.

No Friend of Mine is a straight edge band also from Chicago, they did not disappoint.

Springfield’s own Oi! band No Guard performed a great show. They will have you dancing the floor and doing high kicks. Be sure to follow them.

Home Invasion is a straight edge hardcore band from Chicago. They just released Enemy in May, give it a listen. Give them a follow as well.

Memento Mori played their last show. But keep on eye out for them for other projects they might be working on. Follow them here.

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Dying Scene Gallery: Punk Rock Bowling Day Three – Gogol Bordello, Stiff Little Fingers, Quicksand and more (Las Vegas 5/27/24)

I’m not saying we were hungover, but we made it down to the pool party at the beginning of Day Three and couldn’t bear to leave the shade by the bar, let alone get up front by the bands. After a little fortification we made it to the main festival in time for … Stiff […]

I’m not saying we were hungover, but we made it down to the pool party at the beginning of Day Three and couldn’t bear to leave the shade by the bar, let alone get up front by the bands. After a little fortification we made it to the main festival in time for …

Stiff Little Fingers, original ’70s punks from Belfast who were rocking it in the overly bright sunshine…

Followed by Gogol Bordello who are fantastic live every time we’ve seen them.

From there we moved to the second “party” stage to catch Quicksand, post-hardcore from New York, new to us and and such a fascinating sound.

The headliner for the final day were Madness, but we were not getting back near the main stage, so we only have the photo at the top of this page, though hearing all the old classics was fun, even from a distance. From there we headed to Backstage Bar & Billiards on Fremont Street for a final club show:

Bad Ass are a bunch of young punks from Riverside, CA with an amazing look, and opened up the show

Up next, Die Spitz are an astonishing all-woman punk band from Austin, TX who played the party stage at the main festival earlier in the day. We were completely blown away and will be watching these ladies in future.

And finally, the Subhumans from the UK, good old hardcore and friends of ours, finished up our 2024 Punk Rock Bowling experience.

All the photos are below:

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Dying Scene Gallery: Punk Rock Bowling Day Two – DEVO, Rocket from the Crypt, Subhumans and more! (Las Vegas 5/26/24)

On the Sunday of the festival your correspondent was struggling a little, but kept on going from the pool party, through the main festival, to another club show. Punk Rock Bowling is a marathon and there can be no slacking. Unfortunately we were also plagued by some equipment issues during the day. On our way […]

On the Sunday of the festival your correspondent was struggling a little, but kept on going from the pool party, through the main festival, to another club show. Punk Rock Bowling is a marathon and there can be no slacking. Unfortunately we were also plagued by some equipment issues during the day.

On our way to the pool party on Sunday morning we met the bass player of San Diego’s Doll Riot. Self-proclaimed riot grrls, Doll Riot play some excellent pop-y punk. Unfortunately, after the Doll Riot’s set we encountered the aforementioned equipment issues so do not have photos of the other bands at the pool party.

On to the main festival to catch Destroy Boys on the main stage. New to us, highly enjoyable.

British hardcore punks Subhumans have been going since the ’80s. We’ve known these guys personally for a while, so we’ll refrain from saying how great they are, except they are great, and it was fantastic to see them in front of such a big crowd.

Sticking with the main stage, Rocket from the Crypt were up next and as fun as ever.

Headlining Day Two were DEVO, who seem to get ever better with age.

Billy Bragg was so great on the main stage on Saturday we had to go to his intimate club show on the Citrus Pool Deck after hours where he played a more obscure set than the previous day. Supporting was John Doe of X playing a mostly country set. Perfect way to wind down the day.

All the photos …

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Dying Scene Gallery: Punk Rock Bowling Day One – Descendents, Lagwagon, Billy Bragg and more! (Las Vegas 5/25/24)

There is so much going on at Punk Rock Bowling with two stages at the festival, pool parties, club shows and hangovers, there’s a limit to what one person can capture. So here’s your correspondent’s first day at the 24th Punk Rock Bowling and Music Festival in downtown Las Vegas. We started our day at […]

There is so much going on at Punk Rock Bowling with two stages at the festival, pool parties, club shows and hangovers, there’s a limit to what one person can capture. So here’s your correspondent’s first day at the 24th Punk Rock Bowling and Music Festival in downtown Las Vegas.

We started our day at the Downtown Grand’s Cyprus Pool Deck for the Punk Rock Bowling pool party and caught performances by LA glam punk Bonavega and Mexican art punks Descartes a Kant.

On to the main festival for a great performance by longtime DS favorites Bad Cop Bad Cop.

On the second stage we caught Washington D.C. two-piece Teen Mortgage

…followed by venerable British punks 999 who gave one of the best performances we saw at the entire festival.

After that, it was back to the main stage for California classic ’90s punks Lagwagon.

Another personal highlight was seeing Billy Bragg in person for the first time since a show in London in 1987.

Headlining the first day were legendary Descendents.

On to the evening’s club show. Punk Rock Bowling puts on a plethora of intimate shows after the main festival, many of which sell out in advance We had planned to see Guitar Wolf but failed to make it through. We did catch Las Vegas garage rockers The Shakewells …

… San Diego’s incredible The Schizophonics …

… and Jake Bombora’s project The Lords of Altamont from LA. At that point, we collapsed for a couple of hours sleep before doing it all again the next day.

See below for Instagram galleries of all the bands from Day One, 5/25/24

Now on to Day Two …

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Flexx Bronco - The Turbojugend party at Hennessy's, Las Vegas, 5/24/24

Dying Scene Gallery: Turbojugend Party at Hennessy’s Las Vegas (5/24/24)

Punk Rock Bowling is the 2nd largest meet-up for Turbojugend, the massive and rather strange organization that grew out of a Turbonegra fan club. If you don’t know them, this fascinating article from Kerrang! from 2018 explain quite well how they came about. or the last 11 or 12 years, the Las Vegas chapter has […]

Punk Rock Bowling is the 2nd largest meet-up for Turbojugend, the massive and rather strange organization that grew out of a Turbonegra fan club. If you don’t know them, this fascinating article from Kerrang! from 2018 explain quite well how they came about. or the last 11 or 12 years, the Las Vegas chapter has organized a parallel festival of Turbojuend-related bands at a downtown Las Vegas location.

Your correspondent spoke to the Rev. Dave, founder and organizer of the festival. (pictured with unknown friend) He told me that he gets applications to play from bands all over the world, from many of Turnojugend’s 2300 chapters.

Here we have a sample of the Turbojugend attendees, a fine bunch of individuals.

I photographed a sample of the bands, as PRB weekend is simply crazy and there are too many places to be. Here are San Francisco’s The Creepy Crawlies.

I can’t find this band. Billed on the schedule as ‘Saturday Night Wrist’. If you know them or have any info, please contact the author. They were some excellent, noisy punk.

Fuzz Attack play hard garage punk, and have playing the Bay Area for the last decade.

Flexx Bronco have close ties to the Turbojugend community and play the festival pretty much every year

Twin sisters Béah and Cecilia Romero front Flames of Durga. Their self-titles debut album has been released this year.

We attended the main festival, pool parties and club shows over the next three days, so look for much more content from the official Punk Rock Bowling festivities to come.

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DS Show Review: Bad Religion, Social Distortion and Lovecrimes bring the punk rock history to MGM Boston

I’m going to do that thing again where I insert myself into the story when I do a show review, but I feel like it’s to be expected at this point. Maybe someday I’ll be a “professional” writer, but today is not that day my friends. Some of you may have seen me mention this […]

I’m going to do that thing again where I insert myself into the story when I do a show review, but I feel like it’s to be expected at this point. Maybe someday I’ll be a “professional” writer, but today is not that day my friends. Some of you may have seen me mention this before, or maybe you heard me say it when I chatted with Jay Bentley a couple years ago, but Bad Religion was my very first punk rock show. It was on the Gray Race tour in April 1996, which seems so late by comparison to have seen Bad Religion for the first time, but it was almost 30 years ago, which just speaks to the band’s longevity and level of importance. Anyway, That show, at what was then the Avalon on Boston’s iconic Lansdowne Street, was my baptism into the world of live punk music, and I guess what has followed over the course of the last three decades is in no small part due to that very show. The band – and especially Bentley and frontman Greg Graffin and guitar wizard Brian Baker – will always have a special place in my heart for that reason. And so to have them not only play right across the street from what used to be Avalon (it’s been combined with what used to be Axis and what used to be Mama Kin into the House of Blues, if you’re interested), at the sparkly-new MGM Music Hall, and for that show to be almost exactly twenty-eight years since my first show AND to have the band co-headlining with Social Distortion, another iconic band that I first saw live in the comparatively late year of 1997, was a pretty special, benchmark show.

Lovecrimes were the leadoff hitter on this night’s lineup, taking the stage to a surprisingly large crowd. If you’ve never been to the MGM, it’s a massive (5000-ish capacity) venue shoe-horned into a triangular lot behind the bleachers at Fenway Park. It’s so close to the lyric little bandbox that the backstage of one venue opens directly into the other. As such, it can be a finicky place to see a show, especially one of the punk rock variety, not just because it’s massive but because the Fenway area isn’t the easiest to get to or park in for less than $50, and ESPECIALLY when there is also a home Red Sox game going on, which thankfully was not the case on this night. So at a place that can be fraught with latecomers, it’s noteworthy that a good crowd showed up early to watch the opener. But Lovecrimes isn’t just any opener. They’re fronted by Mike Ness’s son Julian, who we had previously seen slinging the lead guitar for Jade Jackson’s band just prior to Covid becoming a thing. The similarities between father and son are unavoidable, not just in look and name, but in sound. Lovecrimes possess that same early Social D growl and swagger and they have it in spades. If you close your eyes a little bit, it’s almost like stepping into a time machine to 1983. Backed by Trevor Lucca (D.I.) on guitar, Collin Schlesinger on bass and Josh Roossin (The Jacks) on drums, Julian and crew blazed through a nine-song set that more than set the tone for what was to follow.

Bad Religion were in the two-hole for this particular show. And while I’m always partial to a Bad Religion headlining show, having them play a seventy-five-minute co-headlining spot is certainly sufficient and, to be honest, it helped provide a sonic change-of-pace, with the overdriven rock-and-roll thing that Lovecrimes and Social D do serving as proper bookends. Bad Religion tore immediately into “The Defense” from 2002’s Process Of Belief to kick things off. When you’ve been a band for 40+ years and have seventeen studio albums under your belt, and you’re limited to a 75-minute set, it might be expected that the setlist would be comprised mostly of “the hits,” so the choice to kick off such a set with like the eleventh song from the twelfth album – and a song that was definitely not a “single” from that record – was a pretty awesome one in this writer’s opinion. Bad Religion collectively and individually certainly have more than a few miles on their tires but with the pace pushed by more recent addition Jamie Miller on drums, I hesitate to say you’d almost never realize it…but you’d almost never realize it. Brian Baker and Mike Dimkich serve as guitar-wielding bookends on stage left and stage right, respectively, while Bentley and Graffin patrol the center of the stage with almost as much youthful abandon as ever. The crowd certainly responded in kind as more than a few crowd-surfers who were, *ahem* of a certain age made their way over the barricade at the front of the house. Just like the old days! Personal highlights from the 22-song set included “Fuck You,” “Stranger Than Fiction,” “New Dark Ages” and, my first favorite Bad Religion song, “Generator.”

And then, as the clock turned 9:30, it was the legendary Social Distortion’s turn at the plate (I was going to say that batted cleanup but there were only three bands on the bill and the cleanup spot is fourth and so there goes the baseball analogy train derailing on me). To say that this was a show that had a chance of realistically not happening is not an understatement. You don’t get to achieve legend/icon status without having the bulk of your career in the rearview mirror, and with age and longevity come the threat of realistic health scares, and iconic Social D frontman Mike Ness is no stranger, having gone through a rather public cancer scare over the last year. And so it was equal parts cathartic and, perhaps, tongue-in-cheek for the band to kick things off with their 1991 classic “Bad Luck” to open the show. It isn’t reflected in discography liner notes, but the current iteration of Social D, which features Ness backed by longtime wingman Jonny “Two Bags” Wickersham on guitar, Brett Harding on bass and David Hidalgo on drums is the longest-running one in the band’s storied history. That’s clearly evident in the band’s lock-tight live set, which featured classics like “Mommy’s Little Monster” and “1945” and “Ball and Chain” and “Ring of Fire” sprinkled in with newer tracks like “Tonight” and “Over You” over the course of fifteen songs and 80-ish minutes. It was every bit a triumphant performance that was equal parts 1980s nostalgia and modern, revved up guitar rock goodness.

Check out additional photos from the gig below!




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