Shunk release video for "Party Girl"

Shunk have released a video for their song “Party Girl”. The video was produced, edited, and directed by Aaron Nadal. The song was released as a standalone single in August. Shunk released their debut album Shunkland in March. Check out the video below.

The Spuds MacKenzies cover Chappell Roan

Edmonton-based punk rockers The Spuds MacKenzies have released a cover of “Pink Pony Club” by Chappell Roan. The song originally appeared on Chappell Roan's 2023 album The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess. The cover is available digitally now. The Spuds MacKenzies released their EP Pillow Talk in 2024. Check it out below.

Stevo32 of Sum 41 in the studio

Stevo32 of Sum 41 is in the studio. He's laying down some tracks, but simply stated something new is coming "Soon." we'll keep you updated. sum 41 called it a day in 2024 with their Heaven :x: Hell album.

Private Function recording

Private Function posted a few candid videos in their instagram studios. the band is recording new material at Wrangler Studios. Beyond that, details are scant. We'll keep you updated.

NOFX announce two new 10-inch EPs

Nofx will release two new 10-inch EPs. Clay Pigeon and Quarter Album are both out via The Punk Rock Musem ODs on January 16. You can see them below.

Jello Biafra's 1989 Toyota sells for $33,600

Last week, Jello Biafra auctioned off his 1989 Toyota Celica GT convertible. Jello pointed out that the money would not be going to him, but would be going to Alternative Tentacles in order to fund represses of the label's back catalog. in the initial sales pitch video, Jello stated that he did not think the car would sell for more than $8,000, the standard market value of similar era Celica's with lower mileage. well, the car sold for $33,600. Congrats to the lucky buyer! AT recenly reissued Nomeansno, Lard, and Jello Biafra and the Guantanamo School of Medicine.

DS Interview: Spike Slawson talks Gimme Gimmes, Process, and New Christmas Single

Gimme Gimme’s frontman, Spike Slawson, has built a punk rock career defined as much by humor as by heart. His Contributions to punk rock over the years have varied from bands like the Swingin’ Utters and the Filthy Thieving Bastards to other projects, such as Uke Hunt and Los Nuevos Bajos. However, for thirty years, […]

Gimme Gimme’s frontman, Spike Slawson, has built a punk rock career defined as much by humor as by heart. His Contributions to punk rock over the years have varied from bands like the Swingin’ Utters and the Filthy Thieving Bastards to other projects, such as Uke Hunt and Los Nuevos Bajos. However, for thirty years, Spike has led the Gimmes Gimmes through a series of cover albums, each with a distinct theme. While the band has primarily played pop classics from the 1960s and 1970s, they’ve occasionally expanded their sound to include other genres, such as show tunes, R&B, and country.

As time passes, even a band with interchangeable parts can lose some of its original members. The Gimme Gimmes have not been immune to this. Legends of the scene, CJ Ramone, “Swami” John Reis, Andrew “Pinch” Pinching, and Jake Kiley, round out the current lineup of the Gimme Gimmes, but this iteration of the band has mostly been intact for the last five years.

This Christmas, Spike and the Gimme Gimmes have released a cover of Mariah Carey’s Christmas classic, “All I Want For Christmas Is You.” Not satisfied with just a digital release, Fat Wreck Chords has pressed a red flex disc along with a calendar for the new year. Spike was nice enough to talk with Dying Scene about leading the Gimme Gimmes to cover band glory and their new holiday-themed release.


Dying Scene (Forrest Gaddis): When the band first started, was there ever any intention for it to grow as big or as long-lasting as it has?

Spike Slawson: We are as mystified as you. I guess it doesn’t hurt choosing songs that were already huge hits and having the handsomest singer of this or any genre.

From the outside, it feels like the band’s success kind of snowballed. Did it feel that way from inside the band, or was it more deliberate? 

The Gimmes don’t decide so much as default. I admit, I was pleasantly surprised by the initial buzz. Again, picking already popular songs probably contributed to our success, like shooting fish in a barrel. All that was left were the outfits.

When you’re deciding on a cover, what makes a song right for the Gimme Gimmes? What are the deal-breakers?

If it takes longer than 15 minutes for us to get something together, we’re probably on the wrong track. It ain’t rocket science, that’s for fucking sure. I generally try to avoid songs I actually like.

Is there a song you loved when you first started covering it, but eventually fell out of love with after playing it so much? 

Seasons in the Sun.

Is there a cover the band has done that you wish fans appreciated more? 

Sunday Morning Comin’ Down, but I really don’t care who appreciates it. The song speaks for itself.

Do you ever feel like the pool of “perfect” Gimme Gimmes songs is shrinking as time goes on?

You build it, we will vandalize it. Luckily for us, ego, megalomania, and self-regard continue to drive people to write shitty pop songs, just as they inspire us to misappropriate them. We will never want for raw materials, and we will never stop exploiting them for our own enrichment and sick pleasure. 

Are there any true “white whale” songs you’ve wanted to cover but just haven’t been able to crack?

Teenage Rampage, by the Sweet, but it’d probably be redundant. Also, I’m a little past my teens.

Has being in the Gimme Gimmes unintentionally made you more aware or more critical of pop music as you’ve dug deeper beyond the obvious classics? 

I love pop music, but most of it is abysmal these days. I guess it’s always been pretty bad and we only end up remembering the cream of the crop. The Gimmes are living proof, however, that the scum also rises.

Despite the band’s rotating lineup over its existence, the current version of the Gimme Gimmes has been pretty stable for a while. What has that consistency changed or improved for the band?

The current iteration has a unique chemistry that feels brand new, yet recognizably rooted in the band’s original sound and spirit. If you play for an hour and a half with the same group of people night after night, year after year, you can’t help but develop personal and musical bonds, which I think resonate out to the listener.

What do the newer members bring to the Gimmes that wasn’t there before?

Sensibilities that weren’t necessarily formed by ‘90s pop-punk music and culture, for starters. I had certainly begun to feel somewhat jaded, and vibing with players with different styles and techniques really put the petrol back in the tank.

Does that freshen up ideas of what songs or genres are worth covering?

Absolutely, but the science behind the selection remains essentially the same. We’ll know in 15 minutes or less if it’s bullshit, which is good because we start with a LONG list.

What’s it like having a Ramone in the band, both musically and symbolically?

A dream realized. A walking, talking, SLAYing piece of punk rock and roll history, who knows exactly where to put it. There is rich symbolism in the fact that even a Ramone couldn’t escape the fate of eventually wearing sequinned pants and playing Paula Abdul songs in a cover band—in THE cover band, that is.

The Gimme Gimmes have tackled Christmas before, but “All I Want for Christmas” is a standalone holiday single. What made this the right time to revisit a Christmas release? 

Christmas is always right around the corner, and we are always ready. Any time is the right time for Christmas time, as I am constantly saying.


The single is coming out as a limited red flexi disc packaged inside a 2026 calendar. How involved was everyone in deciding on that format?

What is this, a fucking democracy? Take it from me, these cover bands need to be run with an iron fist, or they’ll walk all over you. First, they’re weighing in on “formats”, next thing you know they’re picking their own outfits and making song suggestions. 

You’ve been on the road this winter to celebrate the release. Do holiday shows feel different from regular Gimmes shows, either from the band’s side or the audience’s? 

I hope so. We put a lot of work into our Christmas presentation. We are non-denominational, but OH, so devout. 

Does playing holiday material change the energy or pacing of a set compared to usual shows?

People secretly want to sing cheezy Christmas songs till they’re hoarse, and we give them permission. I guess it’s the same with all our songs, but the Christmas stuff is tied to a specific, yearly celebrative experience. Christmas parties are the wildest anyways.

What is it about Christmas songs that still makes them such a good fit for the Gimme Gimmes?

They’re kinda corny, and honestly, that’s our forté. 

Is there a genre you’d still love to tackle as a full concept record?

I feel like we still haven’t even scratched the surface of the ‘70s AM adult contemporary canon. There’s so much sublime mediocrity there, and we are definitely here for it.


“All I Want For Christmas” is streaming everywhere, but for that last minute gift for the record collector on your Christmas you can purchase the physical copy of the single here.

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Navel Gazing for December 21, 2025

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 Original Content: Chain Reaction 1996-2025

Cover Photo Credit: Rob Wallace After nearly three decades, the legendary Chain Reaction has shut its doors. Located in Anaheim, California, the 250-person venue was once the center of the Orange County independent music scene. The venue became a stop for many of the biggest acts in punk, hardcore, ska, and emo. It also provided […]

Cover Photo Credit: Rob Wallace

After nearly three decades, the legendary Chain Reaction has shut its doors. Located in Anaheim, California, the 250-person venue was once the center of the Orange County independent music scene. The venue became a stop for many of the biggest acts in punk, hardcore, ska, and emo. It also provided a space for kids to form lasting friendships, cultivate a sense of community, and watch some amazing shows at a time when punk rock was still viewed as childish and a nuisance.

Opening in 1996, the legendary venue started as the Public Storage Coffee Lounge, offering an alcohol-free place for teens to hang out and see bands at a time when most venues were 21 and over. Eventually, it changed its name to Chain Reaction but kept its commitment to being a space for all-ages shows catering to its young patrons. It was a welcoming place for all who were finding themselves in genres of music with no clue where to start.

Photo credit: Chain Reaction

As people posted their own eulogies about Chain Reaction to their social media, a good number of them shared flyers from older shows. Those lineups ranged from bands who became titans in punk, ska, hardcore, and emo. Chain Reaction was a stop for bands like the Ataris, Fall Out Boy, Rise Against, and Avenged Sevenfold. You’d only need to look at the band shirts stapled to the venue’s walls to know who had made their way through Chain Reaction.

Photo Credit: Tazy Phillips

There are stories of bands like Yellowcard signing a record deal in the parking lot after playing a set. While bands like Paramore and My Chemical Romance gained some of their earliest supporters and fans from playing shows in the small room. It wasn’t unusual to see stalwarts of the scene play shows with these bigger up-and-coming acts. Bands like Longfellow, Rx Bandits, and Home Grown are just as integral to Chain Reaction’s legacy as the bigger acts.


A good number of live albums were recorded, too. Bands like New Found Glory recorded their Kill It Live album in 2013, where guitarist Chad Gilbert had collapsed on stage after being shocked by the faulty wiring in his microphone. Chain Reaction was where hardcore band Death by Stereo recorded their live album, Death Alive, in 2007. A couple of years before that, Death by Stereo guitarist Paul Miner did the sound for Boston, MA’s Bury Your Dead’s Alive album. Strung Out‘s contribution to Fat Wreck Chords’ Live in a Dive series was also recorded there. Each of these records documents the many different types of bands that came through the venue.


In 2016, the venue put together a festival to celebrate its twentieth anniversary, the appropriately named Chain Fest. While this wouldn’t be held at the venue itself and would take place at the Observatory Grounds up the road a bit in Costa Mesa, the spirit of the venue was still there. Booking a slew of acts from all sorts of genres and eras of the club, like Underoath, MxPx, and Coheed and Cambria, the festival brought together generations of performers and fans alike to celebrate the importance of Chain Reaction.


There were plans for another Chain Fest in 2020, but due to the COVID-19 outbreak, those plans were nixed for obvious health concerns. Given that a venue only survives when it’s putting on shows, we came close to losing one of Orange County’s oldest institutions. Owners Andy Serrao and Kevin O’Connell put much of their own money into saving the venue. However, bands like Terror and Knocked Loose, along with independent brands like Violent Gentlemen and BlackCraft Cult, made limited Chain Reaction merchandise to help keep the lights on with hopes that shows could resume after restrictions had been lifted.

Photo credit: Violent Gentlemen

However, the little venue that was a staple for many inside and outside Orange County announced that it would be shutting down at the end of December. Final shows were announced at the last minute despite rumblings of the club’s shuttering for the month leading up to the announcement. While owners cite the usual reasons for ending Chain Reaction’s tenure in the scene: economic and operational pressures in a post-pandemic environment, there’s still a feeling that this is the owners’ diplomatic way to appease the city of Anaheim.

After Chain Reaction announced its closure on its social media pages, the City of Anaheim piggybacked and made a post on theirs. While many people expressed the same sentiments and mourned another portion of their childhood dying, a decent number of people pushed back due to rumors that the lot Chain Reaction sits on will become affordable housing. Yet, it only takes a drive down Lincoln Avenue to confirm that assumption as fact: the building of housing, that is, not the affordability of it.

On a personal level, Chain Reaction was the first punk rock club I had gone to in my late teens. I ditched a college class with some friends to see the band Audio Karate headline a set. The night out was an attempt to set me up with a friend of a friend. While that relationship didn’t take off, my love for live music did. It put me on a path to lose myself in a genre and a good portion of my hearing in the process.

I saw many bands in that building, from the power-pop sounds of Ozma and Nerf Herder to local punk rock bands like Bullet ‘n’ Octane and Up Syndrome. I don’t know how many times I’ve seen Kris Roe bring The Ataris to Chain Reaction, but I also experienced the greatness that is Peelander Z for the first time, as they performed their set to a crowd of confused kids in such a tiny space. 

As I got older and time became much more finite, my trips became less frequent. John Lennon once sang, “Life is what happens when you’re busy making other plans.” Despite living a stone’s throw away from the venue for the last decade and a half, I just couldn’t make it out. As my kids have gotten older and found their way in music, I have made the pilgrimage twice in the last year: once for my daughter to see Half Past Two in May, and the other time for Homegrown about a month back, a birthday present to myself. Little did I know it would be my last time.

Photo credit: Home Grown

In the last couple of weeks, the venue had set dates for what would be their final shows. A line to purchase tickets for these events reached past the parking lot and almost to the corner of Lincoln and Euclid. I thought about buying a ticket for the show, but felt satisfied knowing my last show there was special for many reasons. The closing of Chain Reaction leaves a few all-ages venues in Orange County. This week, as I attended shows at the Constellation Room and the House of Blues, it gave me the sad realization that there wasn’t a venue like Chain Reaction left in Orange County. If you throw a rock in the surrounding counties, you can find spaces closer to what Chain Reaction cultivated despite the venue’s pioneering ethos as a safe space for kids.

I’ve seen lots of posts online calling Chain Reaction the West Coast’s CBGB’s, but that’s not accurate. While similar in concept, venues like punk bands are unique in their own way. What makes them special is the people that gather there. It’s what makes punk rock great. You can take punk rock and make your own scene. You can grow it, and if you’re lucky, it will be as successful as what Chain Reaction built.

So long, Chain Reaction, and thanks for all the shows.

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