DS Photo Gallery: Destroy Boys, Gully Boys, Jigsaw Youth & More! (Metro, Chicago, IL 7/22/23)

Destroy Boys just finished their tour opening for Blink-182 and Turnstile and quickly embarked on their own headlining tour soon after, including two dates of “DestroyFest” that featured even more killer bands. Chicago was blessed to be one of those cities (the other being NYC) and Dying Scene was there to get all photos you […]

Destroy Boys just finished their tour opening for Blink-182 and Turnstile and quickly embarked on their own headlining tour soon after, including two dates of “DestroyFest” that featured even more killer bands. Chicago was blessed to be one of those cities (the other being NYC) and Dying Scene was there to get all photos you will need to feel immersed into this night of punk rock.


If you have seen any of my previous photo galleries, you will know that my love for Destroy Boys and Jigsaw Youth is no secret, so every fiber of my being needed to be at this show to see them together again. In case you missed, it check out the photos from Destroy Boys at Riot Fest 2022 and Jigsaw Youth with Pinkshift at the Cobra Lounge.


I was also excited to see a few bands that were not previously on my radar (but definitely are now!)


Photo by Bethünni Schreiner

Based in Minneapolis, Bugsy is self-described as “an indie pop quartet with flowery flourishes and emo highlights.” Unfortunately, we missed the first half of their set to get some photos due to…reasons. But we will catch you all next time!

Photo by Bethünni Schreiner


Destructo Disk is a fun DIY punk band out of Winchester, Virginia. They also run their own independent record label Sockhead Records.


“That nitty gritty city shit” perfectly exemplifies Jigsaw Youth in every possible way. If I ever get to experience a rage room I would definitely be blasting their new EP The War Inside Me in the background.


Gully Boys is a grunge power-pop band from Minneapolis. They released their debut album Not So Brave in 2018 and has shared the stage with the likes of The Hold Steady and Third Eye Blind. Their song “Favorite Son” has been on repeat on my playlist. You can listen to their newest single “Optimist” here.


Destroy Boys is having a busy 2023 – touring the UK and Europe, releasing their singles “Beg For the Torture” and “Shadow (I’m Breaking Down)” via Hopeless Records, and the newly announced The Jaws of Life Tour where they will be joining Piece the Veil, L.S. Dunes and Dayseeker.


Check out the full gallery below!


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Navel Gazing for August 6, 2023

Welcome to Navel Gazing, the Punknews.org commenter community's weekly symposium, therapy session, and back-alley knife-fight. Chime in below with your latest playlists, record store finds, online time wasters, and site feedback.

DS Show Reviews and Gallery: Pegboy preps for the UK, Heavy Seas lends support. Chicago (07.27.2023)

Chicago’s Pegboy returned to the stage for two sold-out nights (July 26th and 27th) as they prepped for shows in the UK, including Rebellion Festival. Heavy Seas provided an opener to the second night. Pegboy sold out the first night of their two-night weekday stand at Chicago’s Liar’s Club in advance of the band’s trip […]

Chicago’s Pegboy returned to the stage for two sold-out nights (July 26th and 27th) as they prepped for shows in the UK, including Rebellion Festival. Heavy Seas provided an opener to the second night.


Pegboy sold out the first night of their two-night weekday stand at Chicago’s Liar’s Club in advance of the band’s trip to play several U.K. shows and festivals, the most famous being Rebellion Festivals. The demand was so fierce, a second night was scheduled for the day before the first announced show. Both sold out in under 24 hours.

Pegboy is a legendary supergroup of sorts but the individual members all hail from much-loved earlier punk bands in this city. Singer & guitar player Larry Damore previously led Bhopal Stiffs, lead guitar player John Haggerty was formerly with Naked Raygun, and his brother, Joe was a member of The Effigies. New bass player Herb Rosen was with Rights of the Accused. Both nights were filled to capacity with family, friends, and fans. I am honored to be counted in the middle category and very much part of the latter one. So a little biased I admit.

However, said bias aside, the second night’s show which I covered was explosive. It was also hot as hell in the sauna that was Liar’s Club. I would guess that every member of that crowd was soaked and glistening with sweat. Between the energy expelled and the temperature no doubt assisted in climbing by the sheer number of bodies packed in there, it was a hot sweaty mess. But a beautiful mess, By the end of the last tune played, a good number of the crowd were rapidly heading to the exit to gasp some fresh air on or near the venue’s well-trod and well-sat-upon stoop.


Speaking of legendary, John Haggerty is wholly deserving of that status bestowed upon him years back. From his days with Naked Raygun to Pegboy, Haggerty appears stoic onstage. However, his blazing guitar playing tells a different tale. Together with his brother, Joe, crushing it behind the kit, one can only imagine the Brothers Haggertys’ garage days when they first began on their respective instruments. A fly on the wall, I’d think more than a few of us would have liked to be just that.


Larry Damore may be a few years older since the band last played but he looked healthier and more energetic. Friends would joke about how many songs in would Damore sit down on the stage, occasionally taking his own pulse. Usually within four if memory serves. But this year, there were just some brief breaks to catch his breath and joke around a bit. Other than that, his performance, and that of his bandmates, remained hard-charging. Damore’s trademark moves of arms raised high and spread out remain. As did his generosity with the microphone. There is little doubt that a good dose of the fans can sing every lyric in that set and some songs not included. This was repeatedly in evidence.

This set contained all the big songs and some of the even bigger ones too. Kicking off the set with the driving “Field of Darkness.” During the powerful “Revolver,” the very best cover of Mission of Burma’s “That’s When I Reach For My Revolver,” Damore, as always, repeatedly made gun-to-the-head gestures to his head and many in the crowd mimicked it as well.

I was hoping, and I know others were too, that the Daryl Wilson of The Bollweevils, would join the band on stage for one of the last performed songs “Hardlight.” Damore and Wilson have dueted vocally on the tune to great effect. Alas, on this night, the Punk Rock Doc was there as friend and fan alone. But between that first song of the evening and the close out, “My Youth,” the band blasted through an incredible set, including “Through My Fingers,” “Superstar,” “Locomotive Lung” (featured in the Will Ferrell comedy “Talladega Nights: The Legend of Ricky Bobby”), and “Dangermare.”

Pegboy also performed another one of my very favorite songs overall, the melancholy “Strong Reaction.”

I walk alone through the sleet and snow and pouring rain to
Get my heart broken, forever ever lost inside of
I walk along to slip and fall on strong reactions
Keep my heart broken, never ever amend myself
That’s alright and that’s okay
.”

It’s possible that I sang along to that. Maybe. The song is among the band’s most popular of all and part of roughly 100 million puns, give or take 11 or 23, used in a manner associated with discussions of the band. It’s also a song familiar to diehard skateboarders from its presence in a DC Skate Company video.

The song speaks of walking alone. A scenario we all have felt at some points in our lives. But on this night there was a collective joy. Joy in watching a great band perform, joy knowing that it was headed to one perform at one of the very best punk festivals in the world and joy watching friends and family and a beloved band continue to tear it up on stage after so many years.


As noted above, the band ended the night with “My Youth.”

And I just can’t convince myself
That it was long еnough
But I just can’t convince myself
That it was long enough
In my youth
.”

As long as the quartet can get up on stage and perform as powerfully as it did on this night, long enough will never come to fruition.

But one last item of note: Rosen, though known for Rights of the Accused as also noted above, and a member of Chicago party band, The Beer Nuts, is also the beloved owner of Liar’s Club. Rosen, Damore and the brothers have been friends for roughly three decades. In fact, there’s a short documentary, “Reverb: A Punk Rock Fish Story” about fly fishermen Larry Damore, Joe Haggerty, and Herb Rosen.

Rosen has the affable and genuine demeanor of a man of the people when he walks through his club. His arms seemingly always open to give and receive hugs. On stage, smiling and laughing, Rosen is a delight. He seems a perfect addition to the band.

Damore told me they are looking forward to the shows in the UK. As for the shows at Liar’s he added,

Thought the shows at Liars went pretty decent but still working stuff out a bit.

Here’s to hoping Pegboy plays some more shows in Chicago and elsewhere in the US once it returns to the States. If the shows they performed at Liar’s in late July were still the band working things out, I cannot wait to see the musicians return in full form. An opinion I have little doubt is widely shared.

But for the moment, safe travels across the Pond, and best wishes to Larry, John, Joe, and Herb and any accompanying crew members. Have a blast, take some, ok, lots of, photos and regale us of the tales of this adventure upon your return. I’m sure we’d all love to be there with you. I know I would.


We recently covered Heavy Seas for its show at Reggie’s Music Joint. As with that last show, this night the band performed a real banger. Heavy Seas is a band that can more than hold its own with Pegboy. It provided a great opener that got fans to the stage.

Jeff Dean, Ron DiCola, and Justin Miller slammed through a set that included, “Waves and Dreams,” “Idle in Life,” “Oscillation,” “Monuments,” “Listen,” and “Stumble.”

Keep an eye and ear out for this intensely good band. You’re sure to dig them. I do.


Check out more photos from the show. Thanks and Cheers!


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V3 Weekend: Somergloom with Marissa Nadler, Dan Hall, ‘Beat Street’

<p>Editor’s Note: Welcome to V3 Weekend, Vanyaland‘s guide to help you sort out your weekend entertainment with curated selections and recommendations across our three pillars of Music, Comedy, and Film/TV. It’s what you should know about, where you need to be, and where you’ll be going, with us riding shotgun along the way. Music: Somergloom in Somerville If there was ever a summer to feel the gloom, it’s this one right here. We’re taking a quick break from looking ahead to autumn by indulging in this […]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://vanyaland.com/2023/08/04/v3-weekend-somergloom-with-marissa-nadler-dan-hall-beat-street/">V3 Weekend: Somergloom with Marissa Nadler, Dan Hall, ‘Beat Street’</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://vanyaland.com">Vanyaland</a>.</p>

Dying Scene Photo Gallery: The Rumble Fest 2023, Cobra Lounge, Chicago, Illinois (07/21-22/2023).

Chicago’s Cobra Lounge hosted The Rumble with all you could expect from Midwest hospitality. This was a Midwest Hardcore Marathon spread out between two days, two parking lots and twenty-one bands. The event was an excellent combination of hardcore, post hardcore, metal, and surprisingly love. The festivals creators celebrated their engagement at the show. The headliners were […]

Chicago’s Cobra Lounge hosted The Rumble with all you could expect from Midwest hospitality. This was a Midwest Hardcore Marathon spread out between two days, two parking lots and twenty-one bands. The event was an excellent combination of hardcore, post hardcore, metal, and surprisingly love. The festivals creators celebrated their engagement at the show. The headliners were Cro-Mags and Killing Time and all of the bands rocked it! The weather teased us with dark clouds and a bit of rain but overall it was a great couple of days at Cobra Lounge.


Cro-Mags were the first headliner closing out the show Friday night and they did not disappoint. Be sure to see the gallery below for more photos. Check them out here next.


Chicago’s own, Conservative Military Image always seem to have crowd band of followers. Be sure to check them here.


Killing Time hailing from New York closed out the show Saturday night and they were the perfect band to end the festival. Find them here next.


The show began with Turquoise, World I HateSpacedMissing LinkCMI, SectorRestraining OrderThe Killer, and Cro-Mags closing the first night. I’ve seen Conservative Military Image (CMI) before, but they brought the energy to the event even though it felt like 100 degrees.

The second day the doors opened at noon and the show started at 12:30 with Dazy LostBig LaughWishKind EyesOzoneDomainBuried DreamsFugitiveRaw BrigadeDead HeatMilitarie GunTake Offense, End It200 Stab Wounds, and Killing Time closed the show with crowds dancing into the night.   

Check out our slideshows below!


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New Review Update: New Reviews for August 4, 2023

Skindred – SmileVarious Artists – Godspeed : A Tribute To Pierre KezdyPsywarfare / VOSH / Savage Mystic – live in PhiladelphiaYou can check out any of our reviews right here. 

Integrity to re-issue 'Seasons in the Size of Days' and 'Closure'

Integrity are going to re-issue their fourth and sixth albums, Seasons in the Size of Days and Closure. The new versions are remixed and remastered by Arthur Rizk and feature new cover art. Those are out via Relapse on September 15. You can hear the digital versions below.

Sheer Mag sign to Third Man, will tour

Sheer Mag have signed to Third Man Records. The band has released a new single called "All line up," that you can hear below. the band will also re-release their catalogue on October 27. The band did not mention if they will release a new album on Third Man, but they did annoucne tour dates, which are also below.

Gender Chores release new song

Gender Chores have released a new song. It is called “Dysphurious” and appears to be a standalone single. The song is out digitally now. Gender Chores released their compilation album Play The Greatest Hits in 2022. Check out the song below.