Dying Scene Album Review: Stand Atlantic’s “f.e.a.r.” is everything I Love About Pop-Punk

I want everyone to take a moment to appreciate the thematic significance of this band, Stand Atlantic, releasing their pandemic album called f.e.a.r. on Hopeless Records, and opening with a track called “doomsday.” “Got a panic room with a view like a tomb with windows that show me bad news” is a poignant lyric that […]

I want everyone to take a moment to appreciate the thematic significance of this band, Stand Atlantic, releasing their pandemic album called f.e.a.r. on Hopeless Records, and opening with a track called “doomsday.” “Got a panic room with a view like a tomb with windows that show me bad news” is a poignant lyric that kicks the album off sharply.

Before I can keep up with an anxiety-inducing amount of stanzas on hopelessness we arrive at “pity party (feat. Royal & the Serpent),” my favorite track from the group. On the album, it’s a swelteringly catchy song that ends in a fun skit, it tickles my blink-182 funny-bone real good-like but I would be remiss not to mention the “pity party (hyperpunk remix)” as it is a blissful noise bath.

Each track punches as hard as it growls. The bass on “dumb (feat. Tom The Mail Man)” slaps so hard I got sent back to 1995 to skydive/rollerblade with The Power Rangers. I could gush more about the production and composition of this amazing album, and I will, but I want to draw attention to Act 1 of this album and the fact that every other track has a feature on it.

I’ve already mentioned the previous two, but the third, “deathwish (feat. nothing, nowhere.)” has an amazing hyperpop feel that fits the featured artist as well as Bonnie Fraser’s immaculately versatile voice. “nails from the back” aches with anxiety and I love a pop-punk band that knows how to write a song that can be for more than just pop-punk fans and this band brings that without fear, or should I say…with…f.e.a.r.? Sorry. Track 9, “bloodclot,” dissolves into twinkly guitars and warm bass that grooves. The vocals fly over everything delivering lines like, “I know that you hate it/Crippling your patience/Am I just a blood clot stuck in your veins? and “Do you think I’m good for you, honestly?” helps stake the plot of the album back into your heart.

Stand Atlantic. Credit: Niles Gibbs

Let’s talk about Act 2 of this album now which I count as everything from Track 7 to the end. This band is great at genre-bending rhythms, soaring vocals that know when to growl for poignancy, and slapping bass that fattens the battleground of sound. When this band drops the heavy production we saw in Act 1 and just lets the band shine with their amazing vocalist I would argue that they rival Paramore at their best.

It’s tacky to mention streaming stats (see Trapt), but I would be remiss not to mention that the back half of this album is sorely lacking in the numbers compared to Act 1. THAT’S NOT A CRITIQUE OF THE SONGS, please, don’t mistake it for that. One of my favorite tracks, “xo”, comes in at barely more than 1% of the plays of their most popular song “deathwish.” I blame the youth and this darn music culture but I’ll shake my fist at clouds another day. This band kicks ass and is everything that I grew up loving about pop-punk while seeming to also include every other nostalgic mile marker for wayward suburbanites.

I can’t tell what flavors I’m enjoying at any given moment like a good salted caramel. Huge arena drums that give way to hardcore breakdowns, trap drums under nu-metal chugs, RIFFS, and again, the skits, the production, the tight instrumentation, everything is right where I want it to be and I can’t stop going back. If you are tempted to only listen to the singles, check “molotov [OK],” the 3rd single is a sonic punch with words that I hope fill you with enough dread and…f.e.a.r. (I’m sorry) that you’ll have to spin the whole album. Especially to get to the fun outtake titled “i wonder what kind of garlic bread they eat at MENSA” that serves as nothing more than a cap on this adventure. Some people aren’t fans of skits, outtakes, and hidden little oddities in albums but I’ll be damned if they don’t make me smile.

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DS Festival Recap: Riot Fest Day Three (The Academy Is…Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Sleater-Kinney, Lunachicks and more)

Day 3 of the Riot Fest took place in Chicago’s Douglass Park on September 18, 2022, with some of the most influential all-women or women led bands dominating the stages. Jawbox, the Washington D.C, iconic band founded in 1989, whose original run lasted until 1997, was welcomed back during its midday set. The bright sun […]

Day 3 of the Riot Fest took place in Chicago’s Douglass Park on September 18, 2022, with some of the most influential all-women or women led bands dominating the stages.


Jawbox, the Washington D.C, iconic band founded in 1989, whose original run lasted until 1997, was welcomed back during its midday set. The bright sun beating down on most of the band members’ faces did not cause a step lost as Jawbox gave the crowd a forceful performance. The set included “Mirrorful,” “Motorist,” ”Cooling Card,” “Static,” “Cutoff,” and “Savory.” The band members J. Robbins, Bill Barbot, Kim Coletta, and Zach Barocas also solidly covered “Lowdown” by Wire, and “Cornflake Girl” by Tori Amos. A hot set made the hot sun more bearable for the Sunday attendees.


Concrete Castles hit the Rebel Stage with the Ferris Wheel and other carnival rides in the sightline of many in the crowd. Vocalist Audra Miller, guitarist Matthew Yost, and drummer Sam Gilman held their fans’ attention with an effervescent set which included “Wish I Missed U,” “Half Awake,” “Sting,” “Just a Friend,” “Lucky,”  and “You Won’t See Me Again.” The Erie, PA band started out as the very popular cover band First to Eleven in 2009 before forming Concrete Castles in 2021. Young though the members may be – all three are in their early 20s they all perform with the maturity of confident musical veterans. That’s what they are, combined with a bright and hopefully long future creating terrific music.


Zola Jesus‘ bewitching performance immediately brought to mind Stevie Nicks of Fleetwood Mac, not just because of her flowing garments. The Merrill WI performer, known offstage as Nika Roza Danilova, has an ethereal stage presence, and her set including “Lost,” “Soak,” “Exhumed,” “The Fall,” “Sewn,” and “Undertow” made for as intriguing a performance as her stage name.


Lunachicks kicked off their set with some seriously iconic music, Bill Conti’s inspiring Oscar-nominated theme from Rocky “Gonna Fly Now.” This was the perfect walk-on song as the band appeared, as they always do, ready to fight (for issues in which they believe. Not physically. Though I’m guessing they can hold their own in that manner as well). Band members Theo Kogan, Gina Volpe, Sidney “Squid” Silver, and Chip English didn’t wear their hearts on their sleeves, they wore them on their jumpsuits, dresses and shirts. “Not Government Property,” “Roe Rage Riot,” and “Our Bodies, Our Choice,” were among the messages displayed prominently during a year in which The Supreme Court of the United States overturned Roe V. Wade. Of course, feminist activism is engrained in the DNA of the band. The NYC band’s 2021 memoir “Fallopian Rhapsody” was met with critical acclaim. Lunachicks exhibited their signature power as they ripped through an extensive set including “Bad Ass Bitch,” “Say What You Mean,” “Jerk of All Trades,” “The Day Squid’s Gerbil Died,” “Luxury Problem,” and “Less Teeth More Tits.” A prodigious set indeed by voices perhaps more relevant than ever. Heroes we deserve? Probably not. Heroes we need? Most definitely.


One of Sleater-Kinney‘s first rehearsal spaces was located on Sleater-Kinney Road in Lacey Washington, nearby to Olympia, where the band was founded. The road from that road has been as long one for the now legendary Sleater-Kinney. Its set at Riot Fest 2022 once again proved why Corin Tucker and Carrie Brownstein continue to be so compelling, both as a band and as individuals. Among other tunes, the band performed “High in the Grass,” “Jumpers,” “All Hands on the Bad One,” “Bury Our Friends,” “Modern Girl,” and “The Center Won’t Hold.” Sleater-Kinney delivered a dynamic performance, one that makes us hope we won’t have to wait long before catching them again. Maybe at Riot Fest 2023?


Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Karen O.’s signature black bowl hairstyle was partially obscured at the start of the band’s set by the topper of an elaborate bright, multi-colored outfit. The first sight of the outfit elicited wows from the crowd and other observers. Her bandmates, Nick Zinner and Brian Chase, clad in clothing nearly matching the night sky, and positioned further away from the spotlight focused on O. were partially obscured themselves. In any case, the Yeah Yeah Yeah’s stood out as a shining example of what a great band can accomplish during a crowded festival weekend. The band performed “Spitting Off The Edge of the World,” and “Burning,” from its new album “Cool it Down.” The well-received album, its first new one since 2013’s “Mosquito,” was released just under two weeks post-Riot Fest, on September 30, 2022. The set also included “Zero,” “Wolf,” “Soft Shock,” “Cheated Hearts,” and “Under the Earth.” It was a fun set to watch and Yeah Yeah Yeahs are enjoyable to shoot photos of as well.


As Riot Fest was born in Chicago, it was fitting that the band with the latest scheduled set start time, by a mere 15 minutes, was from Chicago as well. Nine Inch Nails might have been presented as the Sunday night headliner but The Academy Is… did a pretty good job of drawing many members of the hometown crowd, as well as visitors too, away from Trent Reznor and his bandmates. The band returned to active status seven years after its farewell tour in 2015 and for those fans, seeing them again or for the first time, could not contain their enthusiasm. Band members William Beckett, Adam T. Siska, Mike Carden Andy “The Butcher” Mrotek rewarded their wait with an energetic set, performing “The Phrase That Pays,” “LAX to O’Hare,” “Bulls In Brooklyn,” “Black Mamba,” “We’ve Got a Big Mess on Our Hands,” “Checkmarks,” and “After the Last Midtown Show.” The Academy Is…also paid tribute to Material Issue, the immensely popular Chicago band active from the mid-80’s to the mid-90’s, by covering the latter band’s song, “Very First Lie.” There was a special surprise for fans. Original band members Michael Del Principe and AJ LaTrace joined the others on stage to perform “Attention”  off their debut album, “Almost Here. “


Riot Fest 2022 was an exhausting and hot weekend full of great tunes and good times. As coverage of this year’s event winds down, we’re finding it difficult to take a full break from the event. After all, there’s Riot Fest 2023 in the works.

More photos from the final day of Riot Fest 2022 below!

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DS Photo Gallery: Lucero and L.A. Edwards from The Met in Pawtucket, Rhode Island

Prior to last weekend, it felt like it had been a while since Lucero – my personal favorite band of the last couple of decades – had played in my neck of the woods (let’s call it southeastern New England). In reality, it had been quite literally just a hair shy of one calendar year, […]

Prior to last weekend, it felt like it had been a while since Lucero – my personal favorite band of the last couple of decades – had played in my neck of the woods (let’s call it southeastern New England). In reality, it had been quite literally just a hair shy of one calendar year, but when you’re talking about a band of veritable road warriors like the Memphis-based quintet, one calendar year seems like an eternity. Such is life when still firmly entrenched in a music industry in its third year of pandemic-inspired “new normal” or whatever.

So it was that I found myself in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, on Saturday night as the Lucero / L.A. Edwards tour that’s currently crisscrossing the eastern half of the country finally made its way to the northeast corner for the first time. Now, I know what you’re thinking: “Pawtucket? Really? They don’t even have a baseball team anymore, but they have a cool place to see good shows?” Yes, in fact, they do! It’s called the Met and it’s presently in its third location (the first two were in neighboring Providence. As an aside, shoutout to the old Met Cafe. Well, not the OLD old Met Cafe, but the second one; the one that was next to the old Lupos. Well, not the OLD old Lupos, but the second Lupos, before it moved to where the Strand is now. Yes that’s as confusing as it sounds but if you are from the area, you get it) and it’s a pretty great room, even accounting for the fact that it has a giant support pole right in the middle of stage right (see the picture above).


ANYWAY, this Lucero run finds the band in between album cycles. Touring for their last studio album, When You Found Me, has wrapped, and over the course of the last year, the crew wrote and recorded another new record. Due out in February, the new record is slated to be called Should’ve Learned By Now, it’ll be their second studio album since the start of the pandemic and their twelfth overall (thirteenth if you count The Attic Tapes). If you’ve caught any of the shows on this run, you’re no doubt familiar with probably four or five of the tracks from the new album, as they’ve already woven their way into setlists. That was certainly true on this particular evening, as we were treated to “Buy A Little Time,” “Drunken Moon” with a vocal harmony assist from all three Edwards brothers, “Nothing’s Alright,” and of course lead single and newfound crowd favorite “One Last Fuck You.”


The remainder of the set did a pretty good job of encompassing most stages of the band’s career, which is just about to hit the 25-year mark. The band’s second album, Tennessee, and second-newest album, Among The Ghosts, were equally well represented. “Watch It Burn” from 2005’s Nobody’s Darlings was a welcome surprise, as was “Smoke,” the first track on 2009’s 1372 Overton Park, my own personal favorite Lucero record. The band sounded great; tight to a point, but then again, it’s a Lucero show, so with its requisite amount of chaos embedded in the mix. As Lucero shows go, it was just about as solid as you can get!


As mentioned above, L.A. Edwards are serving as support for the duration of this run. For the uninitiated, LA Edwards is four-piece outfit that finds its frontman and namesake Luke backed on both rhythm section and vocal harmonies by his brothers Jerry and Jay and, on this run, by Landon Pigg on guitar. There’s a real heavy Tom Petty/Jackson Browne/Laurel Canyon vibe to the band’s sound, which probably makes sense given that they have roots that spread from Nashville, Tennessee, to southern California. The newly-released single “The Crow” was a personal favorite – you can check out the lyric video here.

Check out a bunch more pictures of both L.A. Edwards and Lucero below. Tour runs through the end of the month when it wraps up in Bloomington, Illinois. Catch the full rundown here, and if you’re out and about at the rescheduled Boston show this weekend, come say hi!


L.A. Edwards Slideshow

Lucero Slideshow

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Dying Scene Album Review: Friends With The Enemy – “Divide & Conquer”

Hailing from the land down under, Friends With The Enemy is a band of Four Loko-loving Aussies who have been pumping out some of the Southern Hemisphere’s finest melodic punk for over a decade now. Six years have passed since the release of the band’s debut album Declassified, and it seems they’ve made extremely good […]

Hailing from the land down under, Friends With The Enemy is a band of Four Loko-loving Aussies who have been pumping out some of the Southern Hemisphere’s finest melodic punk for over a decade now. Six years have passed since the release of the band’s debut album Declassified, and it seems they’ve made extremely good use of that time. Their new record Divide & Conquer is a marked improvement over all their previous output in every way. The quality of songwriting, playing, and production have all been taken up multiple notches, and the end result is an absolutely killer melodic punk record.

Friends With The Enemy plays a riffy, metallic, brand of melodic punk similar to bands like Strung Out, Belvedere, and Mute. For me, this sound has always necessitated top notch production, and my biggest gripe with the band’s last record Declassified was that it severely lacked in this department. On Divide & Conquer there is no more compromise. This album is head and shoulders above everything this band has done before. The production is on point and the songs finally have a chance to shine. The drums sound punchy as fuck, singer Chelsie Bomb’s voice cuts through the mix, and the vocal doubling, while used quite liberally on some songs, is well executed. Most importantly for me as a guitarist, they nailed the guitar sound on this record.

Anyway, let’s talk about those songs! There are ten of them, and they are really damn good. Starting us off is “Raise the Alarm”, complete with machine gun-like drumming, anthemic choruses, and more whoas than you can shake a stick at. The high point of this album is tracks like “Days Are Numbered” and “Set Me Free”, which lean into the heavier, more metallic side of Friends With The Enemy’s sound, as both guitarists put their fretting hands to the test with an onslaught of relentless chugging riffs. “SML” and “Patricia Anne” are more straightforward melodic punk in the vein of Good Riddance, featuring octave runs that immediately bring to mind the classic “Shadows of Defeat”. And since I’m creatively deficient and can’t find any better way to describe lesser known bands than incessantly name dropping established punk bands, I’ll also concede that “Facebook Value” reminds me a lot of more mid-tempo Pennywise songs like “My God“.

Don’t be misled by my lazy comparisons though, Friends With The Enemy are certainly not just another band imitating the classic “Epi-Fat” sound. Divide & Conquer is one of the more unique punk records I’ve heard this year. It stands on its own as a heavy, melodic, technical, exciting breath of fresh air. And for all the middle aged dudes who have spent the last 20 years listening to Punk In Drublic on repeat while lamenting that punk died in the 90’s, this album is your wake up call.

If you’re not familiar with Friends With The Enemy, right now is a better time than ever to check them out. Divide & Conquer is their best release yet, rivaling the recent output of all the bands I shamelessly name dropped throughout this very review. Give the album a listen below, and go here to find links to all the platforms the digital download is available through.

Super Official Review Score:

Four out of Five Lokos

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DS Photo Gallery: The Gaslight Anthem & Jeff Rosenstock @ The Metropolitan Opera House, Philidelphia (2022-10-07)

I’d had the weekend of October 7 marked off on my calendar since last March when The Gaslight Anthem announced that they would be coming out of their self-imposed hiatus and would be touring both Europe, The UK and most importantly (to me at least), the U.S. That U.S. leg of the tour would be […]

I’d had the weekend of October 7 marked off on my calendar since last March when The Gaslight Anthem announced that they would be coming out of their self-imposed hiatus and would be touring both Europe, The UK and most importantly (to me at least), the U.S. That U.S. leg of the tour would be coming to a conclusion with a Friday show in Philly and the final show of the tour in Gaslight’s backyard at Holmdel, NJ’s PNC Arts Center (for those of you as old as me, FKA The Garden State Arts Center). Needless to say both dates were etched firmly in my plans. That is however, until an NYC date was finally added to the tour a month or so later. I have to admit that when PNC was announced as the NJ venue, I was not happy. The idea of seeing Gaslight (and Rosenstock) in that cavernous and seated outdoor tin shed didn’t do much for me. So once I knew that I would have the opportunity to see them at the beautiful Pier 17 in Manhattan, PNC was dropped from my plans. Philly, however, I was super stoked for. I’d heard great things about The Met and of course the presence of a GA pit made all the difference in the world.

Jeff Rosenstock at The Philly MET

Jeff Rosenstock hit the stage promptly at 8 PM and when I say “hit” I mean he and his band of John DeDominici on bass, Mike Huguenor on guitar, Kevin Higuchi on drums and Dan Potthast on guitar, sax and keys hit it running! Opening up with “SCRAM!” off their most recent album No Dream (most recent if you don’t count the ska reworking of the same album SKA Dream which came out during pandemic times). I will be the first to admit that I am a huge fan of Rosenstock and while I thought there would be some logical crossover between his and TGA’s fanbases, it didn’t always appear to be that way during Jeff’s set. One place where the set was 100% appreciated however was front and center in the pit where a decently sized circle pit was active throughout “Death Rosenstock’s” rapid fire 10 song set.

As an aside, Jeff did mention midway through his set that shortly before he and the band hit the stage, he discovered that he and a whole bunch of his friends had been laid off from their day jobs. Rosenstock was the musical director for The Cartoon Network’s Craig of The Creek which evidently was uncerimoniously canceled. Nonetheless, this soul-crushing news did nothing to damper Jeff’s energized and exhilarating set. Needless to say, good luck to Jeff & the entire Craig Of The Creek staff; hopefully something pops up soon on the employment front for all of them.

Alex Rosamilia

The Gaslight Anthem came on shortly after 9 PM and opened things up with what has become their opener for most of the tour, “Have Mercy” followed by another tour regular in “Old White Lincoln”. It appeared right from the get-go that Brian was in really good spirits, coming off even more chatty than what has become the norm for him. But when I say “chatty” in this instance, I don’t necessarily mean his going off on wild tangents (don’t get me wrong, there was plenty of that throughout the evening) but I mean his literally being very conversational with the crowd, especially those at the rail. His back and forth with the newlywed upfront about their request for some never mentioned song dedicated to his wife who wasn’t there that night but would be in attendance the following evening at PNC was priceless. I wonder if the band added the song to Saturday’s setlist as promised.

Alex Levine

Moving forward were a pair of songs which were not part of the set which I’d seen 2 weeks prior in NYC, “Wooderson” and “Biloxi Parish”. Now seems like as good a time as any to mention that one of the major complaints on the various TGA facebook groups which I pay attention to was the lack of variety in the night-to-night setlists. Well I for one came out of the show at Philly feeling none of that. Without actually comparing song-for-song the setlists to the 2 shows which I attended, I definitely left The Met feeling like I’d seen a very different show from the one I’d seen in New York a couple of weeks prior. Well it turns out that my gut feeling was 100% spot on. In doing the research to put this piece together, I found that the Philly show contained a total of eight songs which I had not heard at Pier 17. Out of an average set consisting of 21 songs or so, to me 8 is a pretty good number to define variety.

Along the way, we did hear Brian go off on a number of tangents, only one which could be defined as being a little too long, but personally I enjoyed his monologues quite a bit, particularly the one where he suggested to a couple of out of town fans who were traveling to NJ after the show to go out the next morning and find someplace where they could get an authentic pork roll breakfast sandwich…”it’s pork roll, not Taylor ham! Don’t be calling it Taylor ham.” Now I know quite a few Jerseyites who would argue with this pork roll vs Taylor ham verbiage but hearing Brian explain to a couple of out-of-town newbies, the culinary delights of NJ was absolutely hilarious.

Benny Horowitz and Ian Perkins

But back to the music, with a mix that encompassed virtually the band’s entire musical catalogue. With songs from ’59 Sound and Handwritten dominating the remainder of the set, we still were treated to a smattering of selections from Get Hurt (“Get Hurt” “Halloween”, and “Stay Vicious”, Sink Or Swim (” We Came To Dance”) as well as American Slang (“The Spirit of Jazz”).

After making sure that the crowd knew that there would be no “lame walking off the stage and coming back for an encore”, the band finished the night off with none other than “59 Sound” to which they brought out Philadelphia’s own Brit Luna from the band Catbite to help on vocals (Catbite just so happens to be one of my favorite new ska bands).

It was a triumphant return to the stage for Brian, the two Alex’s, Benny and Ian. Each and every member of the band seemed to be having fun being back onstage. And sure as hell, they all sounded fantastic. I know Brian had some voice issues earlier in the tour, having to cancel a show in Denver, but his voice sounded fantastic in Philly. Now the only thing that I can hope for is that they don’t take too long to get back out there again, and if there is a delay in touring again in 2023 I hope it’s because they are busy in the studio working on a new album. Welcome back TGA, it’s great having you back.

THE GASLIGHT ANTHEM (2022-10-07)

  • The Gaslight Anthem (2022-10-07)

Jeff Rosenstock (2022-10-07)

  • Jeff Rosenstock (2022-10-07)

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DS Festival Recap: Riot Fest Day Two – Part Two (9/17/22) w/ Sunny Day Real Estate, The Front Bottoms and War on Women

Continuing with our Riot Fest 2022 coverage with a few bands from day two! In case you missed it, click here to see my day one recap. We’re starting off with the hardcore punk band War on Women. This female-fronted band delves heavily into political and feminist issues. Shawna Potter is the very definition of […]

Continuing with our Riot Fest 2022 coverage with a few bands from day two! In case you missed it, click here to see my day one recap.


We’re starting off with the hardcore punk band War on Women. This female-fronted band delves heavily into political and feminist issues. Shawna Potter is the very definition of fierce; definitely see this band live if you get the chance…and, head’s up they will be touring with fellow hardcore punk band Cancer Bats this fall for an East Coast U.S. tour.


Next are The Front Bottoms, an emo/indie rock band from New Jersey. They released their third installment of their popular Grandma EP series titled Theresa on September 2, 2022.


Long-time emo band Sunny Day Real Estate made a stop at Riot Fest for their fourth reunion tour. Their 1994 debut studio album Diary has been considered one of the defining albums of the Midwest emo genre.


Check out the full gallery below and Part One of day two here!


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DS Interview: Dave Masud (Vampirates) on His New Solo Album “False Island”

Dave Masud is a multi-instrumentalist from Reno, Nevada. You may have heard of his amazing band Vampirates before, but this time he’s striking out alone with his solo album False Island. This ripper of an album comes in at just about 12 minutes long. Opening with the chugging freight train of a track, “Meh”, which […]


Dave Masud is a multi-instrumentalist from Reno, Nevada. You may have heard of his amazing band Vampirates before, but this time he’s striking out alone with his solo album False Island.

This ripper of an album comes in at just about 12 minutes long. Opening with the chugging freight train of a track, “Meh”, which perfectly captures the ire that comes with looking upon a punk past filled with self-destruction, “Looking back I can’t believe that I survived this kid.”

I was immediately pulled into the emotion of this album. Dave Masud’s gritty baritone featured in the track “Jenni’s Song” and contrasting screams in “November” make this short 7 song journey feel more full than some albums double the length.

I had to reach out and ask Dave some questions about what went into making this album.


Dying Scene (DS): What was the catalyst behind this solo album?

Dave Masud (DM): I’ve been a multi-instrumentalist since I was a kid and it’s always been a dream of mine to do an album where I play all of the parts. When quarantine came around I had time to teach myself enough home recording basics to finally get this thing going.

DS: Please explain the dramatic switch to harp during the album, I love it.

DM: I got a wild hair to learn the harp last year so I found a teacher and have been taking lessons since. On the album, it represents a transition from a time of major loss and deep grief to starting new chapters and finding (or at least seeking) peace. Since tracking it I’ve grown as a player, but I wanted the song to be a sort of stamp in time.

DS: How did you approach the songwriting for this album?

DM: I wrote the songs during quarantine and while navigating my mom’s rapidly declining health, and my brother’s eventual suicide. I was massively depressed and was drinking more than I ever have in my life. I’d stay up all night learning how to use the recording software and tracking parts until sunrise every day. I took some time off and came back at it sober and wrote the words after my mom and brother passed.

DS: What themes and emotions drove the naming around the tracks and the album itself?

DM: False Island is a play on one of my all-time favorite bands, who also happen to be from Reno, Fall Silent. It also took on meaning given the circumstances in which it was written. Isolated with everyone just out of reach. Some of the song titles are based on the lyrics while some are based on what and when was happening when I wrote them.

DS: How did recording all the instruments and everything at Pus Cavern go for this solo venture?

DM: It was a blast doing everything, but also pretty exhausting. Studio time is pricey and I didn’t have the luxury of taking a break while someone else tracked their parts. Luckily Joe Johnston is an absolute magician and a pleasure to work with. I also got production assistance from Chris Fox and Jesse Williams. 

DS: Is there anything you want to say about this album as people listen?

DM: It’s short and sweet like me. I started writing the next one and maybe it will be taller.


I love any creator going out of their comfort zone to explore their pure creativity without putting any expectations to it. I think Dave Masud put together a collection of songs that provide a solid emotional timestamp that I’m so glad he decided to share with the world.

So, go give the album a spin on his Bandcamp Page and keep an eye out for that next album. And Since we’re claiming Harps as punk instruments now, what other instruments should we include?

  1. Really appreciate it!

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Dying Scene Album Review: OFF! – “Free LSD”

The year is 2010. Legendary hardcore punk frontman Keith Morris has a new band. They’re called OFF! and I just bought their CD First Four EPs from FYE. I get home and pop it in my stereo, and I’m blown away. 20 minutes later, the CD finishes playing. I hit play again. OFF! gave me […]

The year is 2010. Legendary hardcore punk frontman Keith Morris has a new band. They’re called OFF! and I just bought their CD First Four EPs from FYE. I get home and pop it in my stereo, and I’m blown away. 20 minutes later, the CD finishes playing. I hit play again.

OFF! gave me everything I wanted in a punk band. Their songs were short, fast, and loud. Keith’s voice sounded excellent as he screamed and shouted about daaaarkneeeessss and panic attack(!!!)s. His backing band featuring members of Rocket From The Crypt and Red Kross matched his intensity perfectly. And though 15 years had passed since the iconic singer’s last studio recording, First Four EPs delivered his best material since the first three Circle Jerks records.

Fast forward to 2022. OFF! has a new record coming out. It’s called Free LSD, and it’s being marketed as “a heavy punk industrial free jazz soundtrack recording”. I’ll admit, I was a bit thrown off by this blurb from the press release at first. Industrial? Free jazz? What the fuck is all this about?

My fears of OFF! becoming some weird jam band or something ridiculous were quickly calmed when I hit play on the music video for the first single “War Above Los Angeles”. It kicked fucking ass! Sure, it sounded slightly different from the band’s standard fare, but sometimes change is good. And in this case, the change was welcomed. This track, like most of Free LSD, offers a refreshing, more fleshed out take on hardcore from a guy who’s been doing this shit longer than most of us have been alive. The unbridled aggression and intensity is still there, but the production is much more polished and the song structure has a level of depth that the last three records were lacking.

There’s a decent amount of weird, fuzzy, funky experimental shit going on, especially compared to the straight forward nature of the first few OFF! records. But I find this experimentation to be pretty enjoyable and really, at its core, Free LSD is still a hardcore punk record, and a great one at that. There are some incredible songs on here. “Kill to Be Heard” is my favorite. Other standouts include the aforementioned “War Above Los Angeles”, along with “Muddy the Waters”, “Smoking Gun”, and the title track. I could do without the four noisy instrumental interludes, but they’re not overly offensive either.

If you like anything Keith Morris has ever done, there is no doubt in my mind that you’ll appreciate Free LSD. After five decades in the game, this record is arguably some of his most ambitious work to date.

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DS Show Review & Gallery: Me First & The Gimme Gimmes/The Black Tones/Son Rompe Pera (House of Blues – Chicago, IL – 10/1/22)

The foremost punk rock supergroup cover band hit the House of Blues in Chicago, IL on the first day of October 2022. The band brought the humor and fun, performing others’ classics but at break-neck speed. Me First and the Gimme Gimmes has a rotating cast of characters. At this House of Blues Chicago, only […]

The foremost punk rock supergroup cover band hit the House of Blues in Chicago, IL on the first day of October 2022. The band brought the humor and fun, performing others’ classics but at break-neck speed.


Me First and the Gimme Gimmes has a rotating cast of characters. At this House of Blues Chicago, only one of the original members, Spike Slawson, was on stage. Joey Cape of Lagwagon and Fat Mike of NOFX were unable to join Slawson due to both bands being on tour. However, Slawson did have a pretty solid set of bandmates: CJ Ramone on bass, Speedo aka John “The Swami” Reis of Rocket From the Crypt on guitar, Jake Kiley from Strung Out, and Andrew “Pinch” Pinching formerly of The Damned, on drums. The entire band was decked out in white denim and glittery pink shirts, accented by white ties Slawson added a white sports jacket and Elton John style specs, as well his Lounge Lizard persona.


The band zoomed through a pair of John Denver tunes, “Leaving on a Jet Plane” and “Take Me Home Country Roads,” as well as Paul Simon’s “Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard,” Paula Abdul’s “Straight Up,” “ScienceFiction/Double Feature” by Richard O’Brien


The set also featured Dolly Parton’s “Jolene,” Willie Nelson’s “On the Road Again,” “Rocket Man (I Think It’s Going to Be a Long, Long Time)” by Elton John, “Mandy,” by Barry Manilow and Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive.”


Me First and the Gimme Gimmes serves up a reliably good time, no matter what the lineup at any given time. It’s all in good fun, though there was an early oof moment when Slawson joked about John Denver’s skills as a helicopter pilot (Denver died when the home-made aircraft he was flying crashed. The National Transportation Safety Board determined the crash to pilot errors). Aside from that, the band members play with an earnestness rather than a mocking spirit underneath the levity. They seem to be enjoying this insouciant break from their “day jobs.” The crowd was all for it and left asking for more.


The Black Tones, on its first national tour, got the show started in a big way. The duo, comprised of Eva Walker on vocals and guitar, and her twin brother Cedric Walker on drums and vocals, have built a devoted fan base in the state of Washington. The Seattle duo’s hit song, “The Key Of Black (They Want Us Dead)” speaks to police brutality fueled by racism.The name of the Walkers’ first album, Cobain & Cornbread, is a nod to both their hometown of the Emerald City, and their family’s southern roots in Louisiana.

On stage, joined by family as back-up musicians and singers they soared. Eva Walker is both an indefatigable shredder and a dynamic vocalist. Cedric Walker is a thunderous drummer, every bash complementing his sister’s swaggering stage presence. With songs like “Mr. Pink,” “Ghetto Spaceship,” and “Mama, There’s A Spider In My Room,” this band will continue to knock the socks off of those lucky enough to see them in the future.


In the middle slot of the evening were the rising stars in Son Rompe Pera. The band, like The Black Tones, is led by siblings. The three brothers Gama: The two Marimberos/Vocalists, Mongo and Kacho, and percussionist/vocalist Kilos. The family is from Naucalpan de Juárezon the outskirts of Mexico City. They are joined in Son Rompe Pera by Raul Albarrán on bass and Albarrán’s cousin, Richi López on drums. The band has played nearly every size of music venue, and was interviewed by National Public Radio. They were also featured in a video for NPR’s Tiny Desk Sessions, On this Windy City Saturday night, Son Rompe Pera buoyantly showcased its sound which is traditional marimba music and cumbia fused with garage punk and psychobilly. Marimberos Kacho’s and Mongo’s synchronized rapid fire banging of their mallets across their marimbas, whilst furiously dancing, building momentum, caused them to appear breathless as they hit the crescendos. Those moments elicited gasps from the crowd followed by roaring cheers. Son Rompe Pera did not just warm up the crowd for the headliners, Instead, it was introducing to many of the Me First and the Gimme Gimmes fans a piece of the members’ heritages and family traditions. In the process, they were also garnering new fans of their music and of the marimba and cumbia.


See below for more photos from the show!

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DS Show Review & Gallery: Violent Femmes & Las Cafeteras (Thalia Hall, Chicago, IL – 10/4/22)

Violent Femmes took to the stage at Chicago’s Thalia Hall on Tuesday, October 4, 2022, for the first show of a sold-out two-night stand. Four decades past the Violent Femmes’ eponymous debut album, the band demonstrated it still has the ability to thrill audiences.  I had not seen Violent Femmes perform since I was in […]

Violent Femmes took to the stage at Chicago’s Thalia Hall on Tuesday, October 4, 2022, for the first show of a sold-out two-night stand. Four decades past the Violent Femmes’ eponymous debut album, the band demonstrated it still has the ability to thrill audiences.  I had not seen Violent Femmes perform since I was in the photos pit for its Riot Fest 2019 set so this was one of the shows I most looked forward to this month.


Founding Violent Femmes members Gordon Gano and Brian Ritchie flanked percussionist/drummer John Sparrow. Multi-instrumentalist Blaise Garza remained mostly toward the rear of the stage, where one of his instruments, a Contrabass Saxophone, towered over him. I played alto sax for several years so I was especially fascinated by very tall instrument.

The band ran through a substantial number of its best and most popular songs, “Add It Up,” “I’m Nothing,” “Country Death Song,” “Jesus Walking on the Water,” “I Held her in My Arms,” “Waiting for the Bus,” and “Gone Daddy Gone,”


Violent Femmes, from Milwaukee, WI, also included in its set a song about a horrific event in the history of Milwaukee and the USA at large. Playing “Dahmer Is Dead” seemed less a cheeky wink and a nod, and more a straightforward recognition of the Dahmer-mania (beyond normal anthropological fascination) that has taken hold of a disturbing number of American tv viewers (and streaming services programming executives). Granted, the song was written years ago, but still, it was a bit eerie to hear hundreds of fans chanting gleefully along to:

“Dahmer is Dead / Am I supposed to feel outrage? / Am I supposed to feel sorrow? / Jeffery Dahmer has no right tomorrow / Dahmer is Dead / Dahmer is Dead / A broomstick bashed him upside his head”

Songs are given to varying interpretations by those who write them, and by those who listen to them. I find it intriguing, and for the better, that the song does not necessarily provide answers to the questions being asked. That is, alongside its otherwise “just the facts” approach. Again, strictly my interpretation as one who has far more questions than answers.


Personally, I was waiting for two songs in particular, two of the band’s biggest hits.

As a cold war (part 2 – the 1980’s) kid, I wasn’t quite a teenage anarchist but I WAS looking for a revolution. At a time when I was an idealistic political junkie (still one though, sadly, a bit of cynicism has crept in as so often it does as we age), writing letters to US Senators, and participating in protests among other actions, “Children of the Revolution” struck a chord. It still ranks as one of my all time favorite songs and I listen to it at least weekly along with Pegboy’s “Strong Reaction,” Dead Kennedys “California Über Alles,” and Bad Religion’s American Jesus. And of course “Know Your Rights,” among too many other The Clash songs to mention here. Alas, Violent Femmes did not play its phenomenal cover of the T-Rex song on this night. But any related disappointment was short-lived toward the end of the evening.

As soon as the familiar first notes to their smash hit song “Blister In the Sun” started in there was an electrical feeling throughout the venue. Actually that electrical feeling was there all night long but it was ramped up ten-fold.


Gordon Gano’s very unique voice sounded almost all but drowned out at certain points by the fans down on the floor and those fans near my then position in the balcony close to the stage. Or perhaps Gano just gave the lead over to the crowd  How it sounded on the ground level might have been very different. Whichever was the case, it mattered little because in every part of the venue were ecstatic fans by time the starting lyrics kicked in.  

“When I’m out walking / I strut my stuff / And I’m so strung out / I’m high as a kite / I just might stop to check you out…”

One small kick I got during “Blister in the Sun” was watching John Sparrow playing a Weber Grill. Yes, a Weber Grill. The only thing which might top that is watching Sparrow play one with the band’s name and logo scrolled across it as with traditional drum sets.

If you have a chance to stop and check out the Violent Femmes for the very first time or the 20th or more time, I’d suggest you get on that. The show was unlike any other I’ve documented this season. Then again, the Violent Femmes continue to be unlike any other band, during any season.


Las Cafeteras, from East Los Angeles, provided a diverting warmup to the evening. The band blends folk music, Son
Jorocho, and Zapateado dancing. Son Jorocho is a style of folk music from Mexico, in the region near the Gulf of Mexico. Zapateado dancing is similar in some ways to tap dancing. An important aspect of it is the sound of the dance shoes hitting the stage. Las Cafeteras had a small wooden square on which members repeatedly danced. Combined with a set full of lively tunes, it all added up to an enjoyable whirlwind of a set.


See below for more photos from the show


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