Refused (band) performing at Ogden Theatre in Denver (photo by Tay Hansen for Soundboard)

DS Feature: Refused Are (Still) Fucking Dead: Refused’s Enduring Legacy & Farewell Tour

Words and photos by Tay Hansen, founder of Soundboard, a music media collective and creative studio based in Denver, CO.

Refused set the Ogden Theatre on fire last week in Denver. It was one of those rare shows that feels both like a funeral and a resurrection. As part of their 2025 farewell tour, the Swedish hardcore legends stormed through a set that spanned decades, tearing through songs with razor-sharp precision and raw emotion. Dennis Lyxzén moved like a man possessed, like someone trying to squeeze every drop of life from this tour.

If this is the end, it’s a damn good one.


But to talk about Refused as just a band that rages on stage would miss the point entirely. Refused were, and still are, a political act. Their music is a manifesto, a call to arms, and a confrontation. With their 1998 landmark album The Shape of Punk to Come, they did more than break up the sound of punk rock—they broke open its ideology, structure, and future.

Formed in Umeå, Sweden, in 1991, Refused quickly carved a name for themselves in the European hardcore scene, fueled by radical politics and an unapologetically Marxist outlook.

When they dropped The Shape of Punk to Come, they were fed up with punk’s stale repetition and co-opted aesthetics. So they made something that didn’t just stand out—it veered hard left, both sonically and ideologically.

Jazz, techno, classical, ambient, metal, hardcore—it’s all there, chopped up and restitched into a Frankenstein of genre. At the time, no one knew what to make of it. Now, it’s regarded as one of the most influential hardcore albums ever recorded.

The Shape of Punk to Come

The irony, of course, is that they broke up almost immediately after releasing it. Their U.S. tour was chaotic—marked by modest turnouts, rising internal tension, and, in what now feels like a perfectly on-brand finale, a final show shut down by police mid-set in a Virginia basement.

“Refused Are Fucking Dead,” the now-legendary breakup letter was less of a press release and more of a middle finger to commodified punk and anyone still clinging to its rotting corpse.

But you can’t kill ideas. And Refused was always an idea more than a band. So, of course, they came back.


Their 2012 reunion was met with both elation and skepticism.

Could a band so radically anti-capitalist return to play Coachella and maintain credibility?

They answered the question the only way they could: with more fire. Freedom (2015) and War Music (2019) didn’t try to recreate Shape…. They just continued the mission—uncompromising, anti-fascist, anti-capitalist, intersectional punk that refused (yes) to go quietly.


Last week’s show proved that nothing about that mission has changed. Lyxzén’s stage presence is unmatched—part frontman, part preacher, part performance artist. He joked about how many times they used the word “revolution” in their songs, but the laughter was knowing. That word still means something in a world drowning in disinformation, corporate corruption, and fascist creep. And in a genre that often sways into apathy, Refused never stopped standing for something.

The band’s influence is everywhere. From post-hardcore to metalcore to politically charged punk, Refused blew open a portal for everyone else to walk through. Bands like Rise Against, Thursday, letlive., Gallows, and even Paramore have cited them as foundational. They proved that punk didn’t have to sound a specific way to mean something.

As Refused closes this final chapter with blistering shows across the U.S. and a 25th-anniversary reissue of The Shape of Punk to Come, it’s hard not to feel like they’ve come full circle.

But this isn’t nostalgia.

This is a reminder that Refused’s vision is still terrifyingly relevant. The co-opted aesthetics Refused once railed against have seeped into everyday life—where radical messaging is repackaged as branding, and rebellion is sold back to us as lifestyle content. Social media platforms reward spectacle over substance, turning even protest into performance. Donald Trump rode memes and outrage into the presidency, and corporations now sponsor Pride floats while lobbying against our rights.

In a time when everything feels corrupted and commodified, Refused’s refusal to play along still resonates. Punk can be intellectual. Anger can be visionary. And music—when it isn’t sanitized or stripped for parts—can still be revolutionary.

Refused didn’t just predict the shape of punk to come; they challenged us to shape it ourselves. And in 2025, surrounded by algorithms, ad campaigns disguised as activism, and an endless feed of capitalist ideas, their music feels less like a time capsule and more like a warning.

Read my full concert reviewincluding more photos of post-hardcore legends Quicksand and local opener Cleaner—now live on the Soundboard site.

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