DS Record Radar Alert: The Remote Controls releasing new album “Too Tough” on Mom’s Basement & Fail Harmonic Records

Indianapolis punks the Remote Controls released their bad ass new album Too Tough digitally last month, and now a physical release is on the way thanks to our friends at Mom’s Basement Records and Fail Harmonic Records. The two labels are joining forces for a vinyl release across three color variants, limited to just 100 […]

Indianapolis punks the Remote Controls released their bad ass new album Too Tough digitally last month, and now a physical release is on the way thanks to our friends at Mom’s Basement Records and Fail Harmonic Records.

The two labels are joining forces for a vinyl release across three color variants, limited to just 100 copies each. We’re stoked to give you the first look at the variants; check ’em out – and listen to this killer fuckin’ record – down below!

Too Tough will be available on vinyl this coming Friday, September 19th at noon eastern on both the Mom’s Basement webstore and Fail Harmonic Records webstore. Set a reminder because these are gonna go fast.

Post a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

TIFF50 Review: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ has awful luck

<p>Editor’s Note: Vanyaland film editor Nick Johnston is back in Canada this week covering the 50th Toronto International Film Festival. And as usual, we wish we were up there with him! Check out our continuing 2025 coverage, get rolling with our official curtain-raiser, and revisit the complete Vanyaland coverage archives from past TIFF editions. Edward Berger’s Ballad of a Small Player can be best compared to the savory “elevated” cotton candy served as an amuse-bouche at high-end restaurants. This tale of a down-and-out gambler and con artist confronting […]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://vanyaland.com/2025/09/13/tiff50-review-ballad-of-a-small-player-has-awful-luck/">TIFF50 Review: ‘Ballad of a Small Player’ has awful luck</a> appeared first on <a href="https://vanyaland.com">Vanyaland</a>.</p>

DS Throwback: Thirty Years of Jawbreaker’s “Dear You”

If Jawbreaker wasn’t on the radar of record execs before 24 Hour Revenge Therapy, they were after it was released. The album has gone on to be a favorite of the bands for fans and critics alike. Yet, whatever status as darlings of the scene the band had was about to be compromised. Before the […]

If Jawbreaker wasn’t on the radar of record execs before 24 Hour Revenge Therapy, they were after it was released. The album has gone on to be a favorite of the bands for fans and critics alike. Yet, whatever status as darlings of the scene the band had was about to be compromised. Before the album’s release, the band would go on to get an opening spot for Nirvana’s US Tour. Nirvana was well past the point of being known as sellouts. It was only a matter of time before big music snatched up Jawbreaker.


Jawbreaker’s success got them into meetings with a lot of big record labels. They eventually signed with DGC Records, who had signed Nirvana a few years earlier, but with that came a bit of a reform from the band in the way their music sounded. The guitar tone is cleaner, and so is Blake’s voice. Mostly gone were his gruff growls, almost as if he had needed a break from them. It’s no secret that Blake had throat surgery before recording 24 Hour Revenge Therapy, resulting in his singing voice going up a couple of octaves. Blake started writing songs to fit his vocals, and Dear You was the result. It’s something you can feel in the opening track, “Save Your Generation.” With lines like, “We’re killing each other by sleeping in,” the song is a plea to the slacker generation and being pessimistic about the world around you.


“I Love You So Much It’s Killing Us Both” is as close to an older Jawbreaker song as we get tempo-wise off Dear You, but it’s filtered through the band’s updated sound. Lyrically, the song follows what a lot of pop-punk songs about relationships cover: a kind of reluctant savior. The first line of the second verse states, “How could I save you when I couldn’t save a dime?” Essentially saying, “I can’t function like an adult, how can I save this relationship?” When I write these retrospectives, I always feel like I skimp out on how the band plays; really, it’s always solid. There’s no exception here. While tensions may have been boiling between Chris Bauermeister and Schwartzenbach, they’ve never felt more musically in tune with each other.


The first single off Dear You was “Fireman.” The song is Blake detailing dreams about an ex dying in a myriad of ways. Blake’s way of using imagery in this song is fantastic. The melodic riff used in the intro and between the verses seems to be a reset, like the narrator is waking up after each of these, and the riff puts him back into another of these dreams. The chorus and bridge seem to be the narrator acknowledging the dissociation and repressed emotions. 


You can’t go into this album without talking about the song “Accident Prone.” This song, along with “Jet Black” and “Basilica,” feel like proto-Jets to Brazil songs. Slower, more meditative, and leaning closer to what would be considered emo than punk rock. The song seemingly is about being at the lowest point in the narrator’s life and the reflections of how they got there. The opening lyrics to each verse bring up an almost fight-or-flight response.

“What’s the furthest place from here?”

“What’s the closest you can come to an almost total wreck?”

”What’s the meanest you can be to the one you claim to love?” 

Blake’s intro to the song on Jawbreaker’s Live 4/30/96 album talks about how the song is about a scary time the band had the previous year. Sometimes it only takes a small nugget of a feeling to get to that place. This isn’t the wordiest song, but it does cut hard, probably more than most songs in general.


It would be easy to dismiss “Bad Scene, Everyone’s Fault” as too poppy for Jawbreaker if it wasn’t such a great song. In an album that can be considered musically moody in some points, its bright guitars do stick out a bit. The song tells the story of running into a friend at a party who had recently been dumped by his girlfriend, but the girlfriend was in the other room with her new boyfriend. There’s also this dissection of what it’s like to be the old(er) guy at a party when you’re kind of over that scene. I’m not sure who chose the singles for this album, but this should have been one of them.


 As a punk rocker and nerd, I always get stuck debating how I should spend my May 4th, celebrating Star Wars or Jawbreaker. I know, ideally, you can do both, but it’s still tough. That being said, “Sluttering (May 4th)” is hands down one of the best songs about the end of a relationship. It doesn’t fall into the immaturity that some songs did during this era, making either a joke or name-calling, but whoever these songs are about did Blake dirty. Each word of the last verse feels like a nail in a coffin, and each snare drum hit hammers them in place. Blake’s repeating of “If you hear this song a hundred times it still won’t be enough,” clings the sentiment to them.


“Boxcar” was rerecorded for Dear You, but it was not put on the record’s original release, one of the few instances where the band successfully avoided one of their already popular songs being included on their album. The recording was eventually put on an album of B-sides and non-album songs called Etc., released in 2002 and on its rerelease in 2004. This version of “Boxcar” matches the band’s reformed guitar tone, but is played nearly identically to its original version, which in a way describes the reunited band. 


Despite initially being hated by fans, Dear You went on to be one of Jawbreaker’s most popular albums. If you’ve followed Blake’s career, it’s nowhere near the left turn that Jets to Brazil would end up being, which is, meant in the best way. On top of using the song title “Bad Scene, Everyone’s Fault” for a tribute record, “I Love You So Much It’s Killing Us Both” was used as a title for a book written by Mariah Stovall, which explores the codependent relationship between two women. The lyric, “What’s The Furthest Place From Here” is the title of a critically acclaimed comic book written by Matthew Rosenberg and drawn by Tyler Boss. “Accident Prone” itself has been covered by the likes of Hayley Williams of Paramore and others, but one of the best renditions of the song is Julien Baker’s piano-driven cover.


I think Jawbreaker would have evolved into what Jets to Brazil became. It’s kind of a shame that the band disintegrated not too long after Dear You was released. Schwarzenbach swore up and down that the band would never get back together, feeling he could not sing the songs anymore and not wanting to do a disservice to the fans, but we all know how that turned out. If you’ve been lucky enough to catch any of the shows since their 2017 reunion, then you know this hasn’t been the case. One of these tours has been specifically to tour Dear You. Fans want another record from the band, but I could see Blake’s hesitancy, given the reception of this album. His last official release was a Forgetters album in 2012. While it’s definitely Blake’s songwriting, it felt like a return to form with Jawbreaker.

Post a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

DS Album Review: Black Guy Fawkes reaches new songwriting heights on “The Misery Suite”

Ian Robinson – the artist better known as Black Guy Fawkes – is back with a brand new record, The Misery Suite. Due out next Friday (September 19th) on Asbestos Records, The Misery Suite marks Robinson’s latest full-length under the Black Guy Fawkes moniker. It’s chock-full of guest appearances by heavy hitting familiar names like […]

Ian Robinson – the artist better known as Black Guy Fawkes – is back with a brand new record, The Misery Suite. Due out next Friday (September 19th) on Asbestos Records, The Misery Suite marks Robinson’s latest full-length under the Black Guy Fawkes moniker. It’s chock-full of guest appearances by heavy hitting familiar names like Angelo Moore and Dave Hause and Linh Le and Kayleigh Goldsworthy and Ian “The Punk Cellist” Legge and many more. Most importantly, however, the album finds Robinson sharpening his claws to finer points than ever before, bringing his songwriting to new heights. 

To hear Robinson tell it in the literature that accompanied early announcements of the album, The Misery Suite draws its name from the room that Robinson used as a space for both “brooding” and for engaging in therapy sessions. Engaging in therapy was a new endeavor for Robinson in early 2023, and it very much informs both the process that crafted the record, and the outcome of the record itself in ways that are hugely beneficial to both the art and the artist.

The Misery Suite begins with the tick-tocking of an analog clock. It’s a fitting introduction to album-opener “Beginning Of The End.” Based on the listener’s headspace, the clock plays as either warning that we’re running out of time, or as the predecessor to an alarm, a pending wake-up call that’s about to jolt you into action. Set over a simple four/four alternating chord pattern, the verses and the first of many anthemic choruses on “Beginning Of The End” have us wondering; has a lifestyle of bad choices and mistakes and missteps and transgressions has doomed us to oblivion? Or, perhaps, is there a point to all of this; a way to pull ourselves out of a tailspin with sights set on a redemptive arc. Therein lies the journey we’re about to embark on over the course of the next nine tracks.

This existential struggle is at the core of the album’s recurring theme. “Cause For Alarm” is full of the type of fear, doubt and insecurity that lead many people to a breaking point, or at least to a decision point. “I think I’m breaking down/Cuz I don’t know fucking how to make this lifestyle work” is the type of reflection that can push one to find help, or to make perhaps a more nefarious jump into the abyss of their choosing. “Fear Of Faith,” featuring the incomparable human dynamo that is Linh Le (Bad Cop Bad Cop), is the first big car-crash of a punk rock song. Set over a shuffling tempo, it finds Robinson – and Le – and really, all of us, asking the difficult questions about where exactly we’re supposed to turn for guidance and hope if there is no sign that traditional measures have worked in the past. “The rosary and all its beads// won’t help me get my wants and needs…there’s no sign that this cross will help me get back all I’ve lost” is a sign that maybe we’re not necessarily in this struggle alone, but that we’re going to have to search a little farther and wider for strength. It’s also chock-full of the kinds of brilliant and layered harmonies that have been one of Bad Cop’s calling cards for a decade now.

“Little Black Storm Clout” is a mid-tempo story of alienation and abandonment with a gigantic sing-along, where we all, sweaty arms linked in basement punk show camaraderie, shout along at the top of our collective lungs, wondering what we’ll have to do to be accepted for who – and how – we are. “Disposable” brings Side A of The Misery Suite to a close in tender, acoustic-driven fashion, and features our first of two back-to-back Punk Cellist appearances. It’s a somber track with an almost hypnotic recurring guitar melody, and it once again laments feeling like a castoff, like an outcast who’s been left behind by friends or family or society or all of the above.

“Water & Wine” starts off Side B with a bit of hope. It’s the first real moment of change; the first real moment that the reflection and negative self-talk we might have engaged in in Side A has a counter-balance. “You’re not alone, you’re just misplaced…don’t forget, you’re unforgettable.” It’s got another big singalong outro, which creates the realization that those moments that we’ve spent together in those sweaty punk rock rooms are the thread, the something bigger that unites us, the collective that can help us realize we’re not alone. “Racial Battle Fatigue” is another car crash of a song with a giant, wailing guitar woven in and out, though it’s also the first track that probably qualifies as traditional “folk punk” in the truest sense of the term. It’s a razor-sharp dart aimed directly at the forces in this country that continue to treat minorities as other, as second-class citizens, and as needing to act or think or perform in a certain type of deferential way in order to be something close to accepted. “Glass Houses” might be the album’s high-water mark. Featuring writing – and soaring vocals – from Lauren Kashan (ex-Sharptooth) it’s a massive, stadium-filling rock track with super tight percussion, a slow, chunky breakdown, and Ian’s blood-curdling wail in the bridge. It makes this semi-reformed ex-nu-metal kid’s heart happy. “This Radio” is more of a traditional pop-inspired rock song, the perfect place to feature guest vocals by the great Dave Hause. Dedicated to “the punks, the freaks, the in-betweens,” it continues the redemptive arc in a manner that is so familiar to many a listener; finding solace in music. Finding inspiration to just keep going, to maybe not be perfect but to at least make progress in a way that buys you some time.

“Spotlight” brings the album to a close in a manner that…well, if “Glass Houses” isn’t the high-water mark it’s only because “Spotlight” is. It starts out solo and acoustic before kicking in a massive, Midwest emo riff-inspired verse. Lyrically, it’s a bit of a tale of the struggle that is therapy. “It’s so hard to hold a spotlight on things that keep you up at night.” The album and the process and the journey are not for the faint of heart. The work is hard and it’s messy but it’s cathartic and ultimately freeing. The kind of narrative that only comes when we’re razor sharp in our focus and not afraid to call out bullshit, even when that bullshit comes from elsewhere in the scene or, as is especially the case on The Misery Suite, from the reflections when we look in the mirror.

Post a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Four Records – Episode 2: Forrest and Karina with DS's Own Anarchopunk!

<p>Welcome to Four Records! This week Forrest talks to Dying Scene editor Cricket Fox.  </p>
<p> </p>
<p>Cricket Fox's Four Records:</p>
<p> </p>
<p>0-10: Toy Dolls – Dig That Groove Baby</p>
<p>Teenage: NOFX – Punk In Drublic</p>
<p>Twenties: Against Me – Reinventing Axl Rose </p>
<p>Recent Record: Propaghandi – Victory Lap</p>
<p> </p>
<p><a href='https://bothlaugh.podbean.com/'>Listen on Podbean</a></p>
<p> </p>
<p><a href='https://shorturl.at/sxfqW'>Listen on YouTube</a></p>
<p> </p>
<p><a href='https://shorturl.at/5u3Nr'>Follow us Instagram</a></p>
<p> </p>
<p>Email: <a href='mailto:fourrecordspodcast@gmail.com'>fourrecordspodcast@gmail.com</a></p>
<p> </p>
<p>Opening song: <a href='https://radskulls.com/'>Rad Skulls</a> – Loud as Shit</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Closing song: Lucas Perea – Underneath Ashes</p>
<p> </p>
<p><a href='https://dyingscene.com'>Dyingscene.com</a> </p>
<p> </p>

Mary and Adelaide: "Collared"

Mary and Adelaide have released a new song. It is called “Collared” and is available digitally now. This is the second single the band has released so far this year, following “Hoodie zipper” in August. Check out the song below.

Dying Scene Photo and Show Notes: Twings, Freezing Cold, anocean, and Empris & The Gems; Ottobar, Baltimore, Maryland (08/24/2025)

On 24 August 2025, the Ottobar hosted a night of post-punk and indie rock music. Hometown artists Twings, anocean, and Empris & The Gems were accompanied by Freezing Cold from New York City who joined the party for a great night. Twings is a darkwave band from Baltimore whose members include Charlie Hughes (vocals), Curt […]

On 24 August 2025, the Ottobar hosted a night of post-punk and indie rock music. Hometown artists Twings, anocean, and Empris & The Gems were accompanied by Freezing Cold from New York City who joined the party for a great night.

Twings is a darkwave band from Baltimore whose members include Charlie Hughes (vocals), Curt Schmelz (bass), and Rob Girardi (guitar). Their sound is reminiscent of the 80’s post-punk that will keep you dancing through the night. Their new album There’s a Dark Sky out now. Follow them here.

Freezing Cold is a New York City-based indie rock post-punk band whose members include Jeff Cunningham (vocals/guitar), Leanne Butkovic (vocals/bass), and Angie Boyland (drums). This was their first show in Baltimore and the last stop on this tour, so it was great to share that experience with them. Listen to their new record, Treasure Pool, that was released on 1 August 2025. Follow them here.

anocean (lowercase) is a dreamy noise pop band right from Baltimore whose members include Anna Conner (vocals/guitar), Kyle Franta (vocals/guitar), Pete Ryan (drums), and Dave Mann (bass). The band offers a beautiful atmospheric sound that you will keep wanting more. Their EP, Climbing Walls, was released 1 November 2024. Follow them here.

Empris & The Gems is an indie rock band from Baltimore who opened the show. Empris (vocals/guitar), also known as Emily Priscilla, performed a solo set without the rest of her band. Their latest release, Three of Swords, was released on 30 May 2025. Be sure to find them here.

Rob J Girardi (guitarist for Twings) with his wife, Veronica Jay Clay hanging out at the show. I met them when their project, RjVj played at Simple Bar in Washington, DC on 18 January 2025. RjVj includes Girardi (guitar) and Clay (vocals/synth) album, Elixir, is scheduled for release on 19 September 2025. Follow them here.

Post a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

V3 Weekend: Supergrass, Moon Over Salem, ‘Twin Peaks: The Return’

<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: Supergrass at House of Blues There’s a real Britpop buzz flowing through Boston right now, with James, Pulp, and Kula Shaker all rolling through town and enabling us to party like […]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://vanyaland.com/2025/09/12/v3-weekend-supergrass-moon-over-salem-twin-peaks-the-return/">V3 Weekend: Supergrass, Moon Over Salem, ‘Twin Peaks: The Return’</a> appeared first on <a href="https://vanyaland.com">Vanyaland</a>.</p>

Dying Scene Radio Presents: Four Records – Episode 2: Dying Scene Editor Anarchopunk

Welcome to Four Records! This week Forrest talks to Dying Scene editor Anarchopunk. Anarchopunk’s Four Records: 0-10: Toy Dolls – “Dig That Groove Baby” Teenage: NOFX – “Punk In Drublic” Twenties: Against Me – “Reinventing Axl Rose”  Recent Record: Propaghandi – “Victory Lap” Listen on Podbean Listen on YouTube Follow us Instagram Email: fourrecordspodcast@gmail.com Opening […]

Welcome to Four Records! This week Forrest talks to Dying Scene editor Anarchopunk.

Anarchopunk’s Four Records:

0-10: Toy Dolls – “Dig That Groove Baby”

Teenage: NOFX – “Punk In Drublic”

Twenties: Against Me – “Reinventing Axl Rose” 

Recent Record: Propaghandi – “Victory Lap”

Listen on Podbean

Listen on YouTube

Follow us Instagram

Email: fourrecordspodcast@gmail.com

Opening song: Rad Skulls – Loud as Shit

Closing song: Lucas Perea – Underneath Ashes

www.dyingscene.com 

Post a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Smashing Pumpkins release new song

Smashing Pumpkins have released a new song. It's called "Chrome Jets," and it coincides with the kick off of their tour of Asia. The track was written during the Aghori Mhori Mei sessions, but was not released. The band is releasing a 12-inch single of the track with "Zoo Station (Live Berlin 6.22.24)" on the flipside. You can hear the new tune below.