Dying Scene Revisits: Ramones – “Too Tough to Die”

What is there to say about the Ramones that hasn’t already been said? They were – and to this day, still are – one of the most influential punk bands of all time. Their 1976 debut was the spark that lit the fuse of American punk rock, and the two albums that followed stoked the […]

What is there to say about the Ramones that hasn’t already been said? They were – and to this day, still are – one of the most influential punk bands of all time. Their 1976 debut was the spark that lit the fuse of American punk rock, and the two albums that followed stoked the flames.

If you ask someone what their favorite Ramones song is, they’ll probably tell you they love “Blitzkrieg Bop”, or “Rockaway Beach”, or maybe even “Commando”. And there’s nothing wrong with that, but those who thumb their noses at the band’s output after Rocket to Russia are doing themselves a major disservice. From their iconic self-titled debut to their 1995 farewell Adios Amigos, everything the Ramones did in their 22-year career is worth a listen.

The 80’s are an interesting chapter in Ramones history. The decade began with the release of their controversial Phil Spector-produced album End of the Century. This record had some great songs – “Chinese Rock”, “Let’s Go”, and “Rock ‘N’ Roll High School”, to name a few. However, Spector’s over-the-top production just didn’t make sense for the Ramones, and unfortunately, this album fails to tickle my loins.

Pleasant Dreams is a pretty good record, but lacks the raw energy of everything pre-End of the Century. Subterranean Jungle had its moments, but was a mostly unremarkable album by the band’s standards. The neutered drum sound that even Marky Ramone hated is pretty hard on the ears, too. But great songs like “Psycho Therapy”, “Outsider”, and “Somebody Like Me” make it slightly easier to forgive the odd production and the fact that there are three cover songs on this record.


The real turning point for the Ramones was when Richie Ramone took over on drums in 1983. A year later he would make his studio debut on my favorite record: Too Tough to Die. Richie’s powerful style of drumming gave the band a much harder edge that revitalized their sound for a new era of punk. Songs like “Mama’s Boy”, “Wart Hog”, “Danger Zone”, “Human Kind”, and “Endless Vacation” proved the Ramones were, in fact, too tough to die.

For fans of the band’s poppier side, the trio of “Chasing the Night”, “Howling at the Moon”, and “Daytime Dilemma” offers up a healthy dose of bubblegum. The album’s closer “No Go” might be one of the catchiest Joey Ramone ever penned. If this song doesn’t at least make you bob your head, there might be something wrong with you.

Also noteworthy is that Too Tough to Die saw Tommy Ramone and Ed Stasium return to the control room for the first time since 1978’s Road to Ruin. Of the band’s fourteen LPs, this is probably the most well-produced. Gone are the synthesized drums, horn sections and violins; Tommy and Ed trimmed the fat and delivered a great, organic-sounding Ramones record.

Richie’s drum sound is big and the thumping kick of his bass drum makes my floor (otherwise known as my neighbor’s ceiling) shake when I put this record on. Johnny’s guitar sounds tough as fuck, and Joey Ramone turns in an excellent vocal performance, perfectly matching the tone of each song. And of course, Dee Dee shines when he takes the lead on two of the album’s most frenetic tracks “Wart Hog” and “Endless Vacation”. I think this is the closest the Ramones ever got to capturing their “live” sound in a recording studio.

My lone gripe about Too Tough to Die is that its track sequencing leaves a lot to be desired. Why would you start a Ramones record with the three slowest songs on the tracklist? Other people seem to share my opinion, and thankfully, someone made a Spotify playlist called Now Even Tougher to Die, with a re-sequenced tracklist that makes the album flow a lot better. I mean, come on, “Durango 95” just makes sense as the opening track.

So, go on, indulge yourself. That’s right, kick off your shoes… put your feet up. Lean back and enjoy the melodies of Too Tough to Die.

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DS Show Gallery: NOFX, Descendents, Face To Face and more rock the Punk In Drublic Fest, Worcester, MA

Late September in New England is, for all intents and purposes, quite literally perfect. It’s that glorious time of year where the air is crisp and the leaves are starting to turn a wide array of warm colors and the sun is still high enough in the sky to keep you from freezing but not […]

Late September in New England is, for all intents and purposes, quite literally perfect. It’s that glorious time of year where the air is crisp and the leaves are starting to turn a wide array of warm colors and the sun is still high enough in the sky to keep you from freezing but not too high in the sky that you don’t need a light hoodie layered with probably a heavier hoodie and/or maybe a flannel/denim combination when the wind picks up or the shadows get long. And on one such spectacularly picture-perfect Saturday afternoon recently, the rolling hills of central Massachusetts were filled with the dulcet, three-chord sounds of a daylong music and libations festival. Okay, so it was a parking lot in downtown Worcester…but actually now that I think about it, that’s quite honestly just about the ideal locale for a punk rock and beer festival…

That’s right, the liberty-spiked masses descended upon the parking lot behind the Worcester Palladium for the 2022 installment of the Punk In Drublic festival. By yours truly’s count, it was the festival’s third stop in Massachusetts since it kicked off in 2018 (the initial stop was in Brockton of all places, while this marked the second annual stop in The Heart Of The Commonwealth – yes that’s Worcester’s real nickname and no, that’s not intended to be ironic. I know, right?)

ANYWAY, speaking of Worcester, the city’s beloved No Trigger kicked off the festivities in the middle of the afternoon. I think it’s a pretty smart move by the festival’s management (read as: Fat Mike and crew) to open the gates and start the beer testing well before the music starts; it gets a decent sized crowd to turn out at a comparatively early time to begin what will be a long day of rocking and rolling. The Worcester-based sextet No Trigger, fresh off the heels of the release of their dynamite new album Dr. Album (Red Scare Industries), set a pretty high bar for the rest of the bands that were to follow with a dynamic, full throttle, tight-as-a-drum set.


Night Birds were next out of the shoot and kept the energy level at an equally high level. In what came as a bit of a surprise to more than a few of us in the crowd, the band announced that this particular show would serve as their second-to-last show as a band. Effing bummer, because the five-piece lineup (which I’d never seen) played as tight a show as I’d seen their previous four-man editions play. Maybe they found a different level knowing that it was the last show on the books (plans for a final show are as yet unannounced) but it seemed pretty special from where I was standing.


Hitting third in the order on this particular day were TSOL. In my experience, it can be a bit of a coin-flip how a comparatively younger crowd will receive a band of 70s/80s stalwarts, but I have to say I was pleasantly surprised by how the crowd fist-pumped and circle-pitted along as the inimitable Jack Grisham and his band of melody makers (longtime partners Ron Emory on guitar and Mike Roche on bass along with more recent addition Antonio Val Hernandez on drums) tore through a set comprised largely of decades-old punk rock classics. Seriously, check Hernandez’s Instagram – old school Worcester showed up!


Batting cleanup were none other than SoCal punk icons Face To Face. In the interest of full disclosure, Face are the band I’ve seen more than any other, no matter the genre. I’ve seen a half-dozen different versions of the lineup over the years, including about a dozen shows in the current Trever/Scott/Danny/Dennis version. With that in mind, Punk In Drublic was the best I’ve heard them sound in quite a while. No doubt fueled by the thousands of avid punk rock fans in attendance, the band played an hour-long set that did a pretty good job of mixing in ‘the old’ (“I’m Trying,” “No Authority”) and ‘the new’ (“No Way Out But Through,” a surprising “Farewell Song”) all with a vintage, early 90s energy.


The evening’s penultimate spot belonged to none other than Descendents. I’m having a tough time finding the correct words to use to describe the legendary band’s set and honestly, what I keep coming back to is that it made me happy. To call the quartet anything less than iconic is to do them a tremendous disservice, and performances like this one prove exactly why. Not only was the crowd opposite the band (across what had to have been a thirty-foot-deep security/photographer pit that I both greatly appreciated and found to be tremendous overkill) fully engaged in the band’s set, but the stage itself was more full of revelers than at any other point in the festival. The band plowed through more than two dozen songs in an hour-and-change, representing all parts of their four-plus decade career together. (Personal highlight: “I’m The One” into “Bikeage” into “Thank You.” Good grief.)


The grand finale spot of course belonged to none other than NOFX. In many ways, the quartet have been the clown princes of punk rock for three decades, and that’s more than a little by design (are they breaking up next year or aren’t they?). That can lead to some pretty memorable and certainly widely-varied live performances; it is “punk rock” after all. Yet on this night (and I know I’ve said this a lot in this article but that doesn’t make it untrue), the band were as tight as I’ve ever seen them. The setlist of somewhere around thirty songs pulled from all points of their storied career, from “Stickin’ In My Eye” up through “I Love You More Than I Hate Me” and was interspersed with the requisite banter especially from Fat Make and El Hefe, who riffed on everything from the aforementioned breakup rumors to the fact that people allegedly live in Ogunquit, Maine, to the fact that they were actually playing well, all in rapid-fire succession.


It really was an awesome and fun and in many ways picture-perfect day that was well worth the trek out to the fart of Massachusetts, filled with good times and great energy from bands and crowd alike. Check out more pictures below!


NOFX Slideshow


Descendents Slideshow


Face To Face Slideshow


TSOL Slideshow


Night Birds Slideshow


No Trigger Slideshow

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DS Show Review/Photo Gallery: Jesse Malin Performs “Glitter In The Gutter” Live at The Mercury Lounge, NYC (2022-09-15)

Back in 2006, longtime New York City resident Jesse Malin decided he needed a change. The post 9/11 New York had changed so much that the fixture of the Lower East Side punk scene, dating back to his early hardcore band Heart Attack and then his alphabet city punk/garage band, D-Generation, Malin who had been omnipresent […]

Back in 2006, longtime New York City resident Jesse Malin decided he needed a change. The post 9/11 New York had changed so much that the fixture of the Lower East Side punk scene, dating back to his early hardcore band Heart Attack and then his alphabet city punk/garage band, D-Generation, Malin who had been omnipresent in almost everything to do with the East Village music scene knew he needed a change of scenery.  

So off to the land of sunny California he moved and it’s there that he came up with the idea of doing Glitter In The Gutter along with producer Rob (just one more take) Caggiano. The album was released by Adeline Records in early 2007. Critically it was a mixed bag with publications like Rolling Stone who printed that it was a mix of “memorable, megatuneful adrenaline shots” and “generic hard rock”. Unfortunately, the album itself would soon fall out of print and even worse in this age of streaming, couldn’t be found on any of the usual suspected streaming sites. Hence to Jesse and his loyal and adoring fan base, it’s become known as the “lost album”. That is until now with the re-release of Glitter In The Gutter on Steve Van Zandt’s Wicked Cool Records, scheduled for a September 30th release.

Thin Lear (Mercury Lounge)

To celebrate the album finally getting its life back, Malin played an album release show at New York’s Mercury Lounge on September 15th in which he played the entire album from start to finish, something he had only done once before and that was on a lockdown streaming show. The evening started off with a solo set from folk/chamber pop artist Thin Lear. Lear offered up an enjoyable yet mellow set of well-crafted songs and stories to which the still sparse crowd were very receptive to. 

Alfonso Velez (Mercury Lounge)

Following up after Thin Lear was Alfonso Velez who noted that he was much more familiar playing the local clubs and cafes in the West Village and that he enjoyed the crosstown trek over to the East Village. Playing material from his upcoming debut release, he and his guitarist partner put on quite a nice set which the crowd found to be quite the appropriate warmup for Jesse and his band.

Taking the stage shortly after 9:30 PM it didn’t take Malin and his band long before they started ripping into Glitter. The album opener “Don’t Let Them Take You Down (Beautiful Day)” has always been a favorite of mine and not surprisingly they performed it swimmingly. Following the track sequencing from the album, “In The Modern World” was next, followed by “Tomorrow Tonight”. As anyone who has seen Jesse in concert can attest to, he is very good at stage banter and his introduction to the album’s reworked single “Broken Radio ‘22” was certainly no exception. With the story about how the song was originally written in honor of his mother who had passed away rather early in Jesse’s life he already had the crowd hanging on his every word. Then he switched gears in the story to offer up some details on how Bruce Springsteen came to be involved in the project. Of particular note was how Bruce pulled up to his Colts Neck home (which Jesse had already arrived at) on a huge Harley. Jesse also made fun of Rob Caggiano (who happened to be in attendance at Mercury on Thursday). Jesse and his band had come to be used to Rob’s constant request for “let’s do it one more time” but after one run through “Broken Radio” to which Bruce nailed his part, even Jesse was surprised that Rob insisted on another take, and another, and another. He guessed that Rob had busted Bruce’s balls for a total of 8 takes. Malin was mortified, yet thrilled with the end result.

Jesse Malin singing from the floor of Mercury Lounge

The set would continue mirroring the album song for song until Jesse took a detour while he was singing in the crowd. It was here that he started a story how he’d once lived in this very same building WAYYY back in the day long before it hosted the Mercury Lounge. He said his landlord ran a mortuary or a casket warehouse (I’m not sure which) out of the current club’s space. Anyway, Malin spun another great yarn about how he eventually moved out and across the East River over to Williamsburg. At this point he pulled an audible and led the band into “Brooklyn” from his Fine Art of Self Destruction collection.

Returning to the stage Malin went back on script and continued with the Glitter material.  Another special moment took place when he told us how at one point back in the mid 90s, he’d heard a song by this amazing female artist that was totally new to him. He immediately called Joey Ramone to tell him about this woman only to hear Joey tell him, “yeah I know Lucinda, I played with her at one of Vin Scelsa’s “In Their Own Words” shows at the Bottom Line. Fast forward a couple of years and Malin is at The Blue Note jazz club on W 4th St. (for a Charlie Watts’ show) and who’s next to him at the bar but Lucinda Williams. They spent the night talking up all kinds of music and have been friends ever since. Of course this was the intro to his song “Lucinda” which evidently the namesake of the song has never been a huge fan of.  

The rest of the night went pretty much exactly like this, with Jesse sharing stories and then playing the next song on the album. When the material from Glitter was complete, the night was not, as Malin treated us to a few more of his more recent material. 

The horns join in

And to cap things off, for the encore a horn section of Danny Ray on sax, Indofunk Satish on Trumpet and Alix Toucou on trombone joined the band onstage to close things out in classic New Orleans R&B style complete with an evening ending second line through the crowd and out the door to the tune of “Meet Me At The End Of The World”.
All in all, Jesse and his fellow musicians put on one hell of a show. It was such a fitting exclamation point to a truly great album. If you’re lucky enough to already be familiar with Glitter in The Gutter you know what I’m talking about and if you’re not, you’re in for a treat when it hits the shelves once again on September 30th.

  1. Very nice piece! Thanks!
    One correction though. Respectfully, the trombone player is Alix Toucou.

    • Correcting now. Thanks!!

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Dying Scene Photo Gallery: My Chemical Romance / Thursday / Badflower (TD Garden – Boston, MA 9/7/22)

My Chemical Romance made their triumphant return to Boston on Tuesday, September 7th for their first of two shows at TD Garden. This was MCR’s first show in Massachusetts in over 10 years since their dissolve in 2013. Their reunion was met with a sold out show at TD Garden with support from their New […]

My Chemical Romance made their triumphant return to Boston on Tuesday, September 7th for their first of two shows at TD Garden. This was MCR’s first show in Massachusetts in over 10 years since their dissolve in 2013. Their reunion was met with a sold out show at TD Garden with support from their New Jersey pals Thursday as well as Badflower.

My Chemical Romance had the sold out TD Garden in the palm of their hands. Front-person Gerard Way made his highly anticipated entrance donned in a black body suit and jet black eyeliner.

New Jersey’s own Thursday played before MCR and got the audience stoked with plenty of mic swings.

Badflower opened the show at TD with unmatched energy, wasting no time to jump headfirst into the crowd.

Check out the full slideshow of photos from this night in emo history below!

  1. Such incredible shots

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Fest Announcement: Punktoberfest (10/15/22 – Felton Music Hall – Felton, CA)

Dying Scene is pleased to partner with Outerspace Entertainment to bring you the 3rd Annual Punktoberfest taking place on October 15th at the incredible Felton Music Hall in Felton, California! Despite the name, this multi-genre, single day, DIY fest features artists from a few different musical categories but it leans heavily towards pop punk and […]

Dying Scene is pleased to partner with Outerspace Entertainment to bring you the 3rd Annual Punktoberfest taking place on October 15th at the incredible Felton Music Hall in Felton, California!

Despite the name, this multi-genre, single day, DIY fest features artists from a few different musical categories but it leans heavily towards pop punk and emo with acts like The Seafloor Cinema, Bare Knuckle, Goldview and Summon the Hero playing along side some more “punk adjacent” NorCal bands like rockers The Trims. Toss in some well needed hip-hop from solo artists POMI and Lil Lotus (who just released his debut full length via Epitaph Records) and you got yourself a well rounded, fantastically fun fest! Snag your tickets here. See you in the pit, comrades!

*For more updates, follow the Facebook Event Page.

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DS Album Review: The Raging Nathans – “Still Spitting Blood”

Within the last few years, The Raging Nathans has been pushing out work one right after another. They released the full-length album Waste My Heart along with two splits and a single in 2021, a compilation album earlier this year, and now for the cherry on top a full-length album Still Spitting Blood. Do the […]

Within the last few years, The Raging Nathans has been pushing out work one right after another. They released the full-length album Waste My Heart along with two splits and a single in 2021, a compilation album earlier this year, and now for the cherry on top a full-length album Still Spitting Blood. Do the Nathans do anything other than touring and making music these days? Probably not; I bet they are currently working on pumping out other singles and splits to soothe our aching pop-punk withdrawals. This type of consistency has not been missed once and they don’t look like they’re going to stop.

This album has banger after banger from start to finish—this is unadulterated quintessential pop-punk. Carrying over from their last album Waste My Heart, where they have tuned into their more melodic/pop side which has sprinkled into the album Still Spitting Blood with just the right touch. Without question, The Raging Nathan’s haven’t forgotten the punk in this album at all and it pulls you right back into a sweaty night shouting lyrics into a mic pointed at the crowd. Anthems like “Nothing I Can Do,” “Still Spitting Blood,” and “Head in a Hole” fill this album with raging joy.

Diving into “Fucked Olympia” with its soft John Hughes suburban snow banked lyrics coupling to the layers of guitar riffs that propel one another into sweet, sweet harmony. It is an unforgettable mix of what complex talent resides in Raging Nathans. This is kind of sound is what you find influences other bands in the scene to make music. True kings of experimenting with their sound without being so overly offensive that lose the ears of their fans. 

You cannot argue with the sentiments in lyrics found in “The Lime Pit” or “The Answer (Smoke ‘Em)” like a hand from a friend just slapping you on your back with support to continue on in your best fight with the impending doom around you. This album is packed with the nostalgia you needed with that new sound you didn’t know you were looking for from Raging Nathans.

This album’s upbeat tempo paired with its combative guitaring and fantastic vocals– lead and backing, really tributes that this is some of the best work to come from The Raging Nathans. That is not a knock on their past material; they are that band that keeps getting better with every album. It is something in the guitar & lyrics that match the aggressive spirit of Propagandhi with a light twist and that essential pop sound from The Ramones just blended together so perfectly, just making every song of this album consumable from start to finish.  

Two songs are out now and one is yet to be released later this week on the band’s Bandcamp page. “Still Spitting Blood” and “Nothing I can do” are some shining examples of what is yet to be heard on this album. Pre-order the digital album or wait for its release in December of this year.

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Dying Scene Record Radar: New punk vinyl releases & reissues (new NOFX, Bad Religion, The Vandals, Dropkick Murphys & more)

Whaddup, fuckers! Thank you for joining us for this week’s edition of the Dying Scene Record Radar, where we cover all things new in the world of punk rock vinyl. Kick off your shoes and make yourself at home, because it’s time to run through this week’s releases. I hope you’re feeling spendy, because there’s […]

Whaddup, fuckers! Thank you for joining us for this week’s edition of the Dying Scene Record Radar, where we cover all things new in the world of punk rock vinyl. Kick off your shoes and make yourself at home, because it’s time to run through this week’s releases. I hope you’re feeling spendy, because there’s a lot of good stuff that might find its way into your record collection. Let’s get into it!


Bad Religion continues to reissue their back catalog. The latest is a 40th Anniversary reissue of How Could Hell Be Any Worse?. Once again, there are a billion variants, with regional and retailer exclusivity. Links to where you can buy all of these can be found here.


The Vandals have re-pressed their debut LP When In Rome (Do As The Vandals) on pink and black splatter vinyl. Head over to their Bandcamp page to grab it.


Punk Rock Radar and Cat’s Claw Records are releasing a Split LP from two great German pop-punk bands Lookit, Martians! and The Cheap Pops. There are two very creatively named color variants, each limited to 100 copies. If you enjoy 90’s pop-punk even half as much as I do, this shit’s right up your alley. Check out a few tracks below, and pre-order here (US) or here (EU).


Celtic punk veterans The Real McKenzies have announced a new covers album. Songs of the Highlands, Songs of the Sea is due out in November on Fat Wreck Chords. Check out their cover of “Scotland the Brave” below. Pre-order the record here (US), here (CA), here (EU), or heeeeeeere (AUS).


Speaking of Celitc punk, Newbury Comics has a new exclusive pressing of the Dropkick MurphysThe Gang’s All Here. This one’s limited to 500 copies on blue vinyl. Grab it here.


Earache Records has announced a new crowdfunding project called Earache on Demand. Every month they will be announcing a few new releases, each with its own funding goal. If enough people pre-order and the goal is met, the release gets pressed. If the goal is not met, you get your money back. Very cool! My favorite record from their first round is Municipal Waste‘s Hazardous Mutation. This has been out of print since 2005. Head over here to pre-order and help make this reissue a reality.


Next up is the much-anticipated new album from NOFX. It’s the follow-up to Single Album, which was released back in February. This one is called…you guessed it…Double Album! The lead single is “Darby Crashing Your Party” and it’s full of the kind of self-deprecation and wordplay you’ve come to know and love from Fat Mike. The video is below and vinyl pre-orders through Fat Wreck Chords are here.



Last but not least, Big D and the Kids Table have announced a 15th anniversary edition of their 2007 SideOneDummy debut Strictly Rude. The updated edition comes with five previously-unreleased tracks. It’s also a double LP with one record coming in an exclusive color. Oh, and there’s updated artwork and a poster. Pre-orders are available here, and it looks like it’ll ship in December 2022. Tell your mom to add it to your Christmas list!



And that’s all, folks! Another Record Radar in the books. As always, thank you for tuning in. If there’s anything we missed (highly likely), or if you want to let everyone know about a new/upcoming vinyl release you’re excited about, send us a message on Facebook or Instagram, and we’ll look into it. Enjoy your weekend, and don’t blow too much money on spinny discs. See ya next week!

*Wanna catch up on all of our Record Radar posts? Type “Record Radar” in the search bar at the top of the page!

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DS Show Review and Gallery: Apocalypse Hoboken, the Brokedowns and more, Chicago, IL (9/2/22)

Chop Shop in Chicago was the site of a kick-off for September live music. The Windy City’s own Apocalypse Hoboken headlined the bill after having pull out of their show there earlier this summer due to a positive Covid case. Joined by three other Chicago area bands, it was well worth the wait to see […]

Chop Shop in Chicago was the site of a kick-off for September live music. The Windy City’s own Apocalypse Hoboken headlined the bill after having pull out of their show there earlier this summer due to a positive Covid case. Joined by three other Chicago area bands, it was well worth the wait to see Apocalypse Hoboken take the stage once again. 

Chicago’s Apocalypse Hoboken, whose first incarnation began in 1987, played at Chop Shop on September 2, 2022. It’s still playing shows but with a wink to the members’ ages perhaps, an AARP sticker was spotted on one of the amps. Nonetheless, AH shows are still a blast and these recent one was no exception. Wearing a needed eyepatch over his left eye, and a Hawaiian style shirt, Apocalypse Hoboken lead singer Todd Pot bounded onto the stage and wasted no time hitting top speed. However, even before he sang the first note, the band wanted to ensure that crowds members could sing along. Band members handed out folders full of pages with AH song lyrics on them. It was reminiscent of a first day of high school choir practice, or for me, middle school band practice for this former Alto Sax player. Of course, it also alleviated the need for sweaty, exhausted but satisfied fans to grab for an often wrinkled and torn set list post-show. Complementing Pot’s energy were the animated expressions on the face of guitar player Scott Hoffman. Sean Seeling, also on guitar was less animated in his expression but still equally compelling to Hoffman in his playing. Bass player Kurdt Dinse appeared more stoic in comparison but he and drummer Andy Peterson provided a pulsating rhythm section. Apocalypse Hoboken kept fans excited through nearly three dozen songs, including “Jerk Lessons,” “Pop Goes The World,” “Pocketful of Lips,” and “Monchhichi.” 



The Brokedowns, founded in Elgin /Fox Valley region of IL, are usually a quartet but Covid struck again, this time temporarily knocking out guitar player and vocalist Eric Grossman. However, his presence was felt. Actually it was cardboard, in the form of a large cardboard cutout of Grossman, his bandmates brought out on stage with them. Kris Megyery, guitar and vocals, Jon Balun, vocals and bass, and drummer Mustafa Daka tore through a set which included older songs such as “Born On The Bayou Too,” and “Cash for Gold.” It also included the newer tunes, “Cinnamon King,” and “Samurai Sword.”


Canadian Rifle might reference the USA’s neighbors to the north, but they are one of Chicago’s beloved own. With a backdrop sporting their signature visuals of the words “dreams” and “goals” within what is commonly known as the No Symbol, the band slashed through its set. The dynamic performances of Jake Levee, Tim Murphy, Josh Snader, and Dustin Christian, prompted some members of the enthusiastic crowd to jump up and down repeatedly. Perhaps none more exuberantly than Lucas Sikorski of opening band WIG. 


The aforementioned WIG, got things popping with a lively set. Sikorski on bass, and bandmates, Chris Gottlieb, on vocals and guitar, and Clayton Demuth on drums, ensured no weaker spots on this bill. WIG is a Chicago band on the rise and very worth checking out. So please do that stat!


See more photos below!

  • Apocalypse Hoboken

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DS Album Review: Pinoles – Just Wanna

Ramonescore: a campy sub-genre of a sub-genre, paying tribute to a legendary band that helped birth that very sub-genre. Bands who participate in the act of Ramones worship typically play light-hearted, upbeat songs about drinking, girls, and drinking because of girls. Some people appreciate Ramonescore for what it is. Others write it off as vacuous, […]

Ramonescore: a campy sub-genre of a sub-genre, paying tribute to a legendary band that helped birth that very sub-genre. Bands who participate in the act of Ramones worship typically play light-hearted, upbeat songs about drinking, girls, and drinking because of girls. Some people appreciate Ramonescore for what it is. Others write it off as vacuous, repetitive pop-punk, played exclusively by guys with Screeching Weasel tattoos. And while I understand those criticisms, you have to be a real stick in the mud to outright hate this shit. It’s fun!

Sure, if you listen to enough of the stuff, you’ll certainly hear a lot of similar (if not exactly the same) chord progressions. And reading through tracklists, you might get overwhelmed by the amount of things these bands do and don’t wanna do. I view all of these idiosyncrasies as a set of strict parameters that must be adhered to when writing songs. It’s easy to write a shitty Ramonescore style pop-punk song (believe me, I’ve heard my fair share), but quite difficult to write good ones when playing by these “rules”.

With their debut album Just Wanna, the Pinoles pass the test. This record delivers everything an old school pop-punk fan could ask for. Nine tracks in 20 minutes, all simple, catchy, and easy to sing along to even after you’ve thrown back a few. Some of my favorite songs are “Padded Walls”, “You Make Me Sick”, “I Don’t Love You Anymore”, “Santa Cruz”, and the title track. These guys don’t fuck around. Just like the Ramones, they get you in and out quick. I appreciate the efficiency.

Like most Ramonescore bands, these Californians wear their influences proudly on the sleeves of their leather jackets. Their frontman uses a Mosrite guitar to deliver a barrage of downstroked bar chords, à la Johnny Ramone. The little “whoa oh-oh-oh” bit on the album’s title track is lifted straight from Screeching Weasel’s “High School Psychopath”. And there are numerous references to classic songs and records sprinkled throughout the lyrics across this entire album. There is no shame in their game, and that’s perfectly fine by me.

Regardless of whether you enjoy this brand of pop-punk, I highly recommend checking out Just Wanna. It’s a very well produced record with fun, no-nonsense songwriting. Listen to the album below, and head over to the Pinoles’ Bandcamp page to download it.

Official Review Score:
4/5 Converse All Stars

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DS Album Review: Hayley & The Crushers – “Modern Adult Kicks”

It’s summer in 2002 and it’s about to be golden hour while you lay on your bed staring at the ceiling. You are dwelling on some fight you had with your mom. Every friend you have is out having fun or on vacation- unreachable by phone and you’re swearing off each and every one of […]

It’s summer in 2002 and it’s about to be golden hour while you lay on your bed staring at the ceiling. You are dwelling on some fight you had with your mom. Every friend you have is out having fun or on vacation- unreachable by phone and you’re swearing off each and every one of them. Your last ditch effort of hope points to a Walkman and a bike while you ride the familiar streets of some suburban Midwestern town with headphones filled with relief.

Flash forward to 2022 after a pandemic and a half has washed over you and you’re still sitting with the same feeling of being grated by life, but you have time to step into the Crushverse and kick it with Hayley & the Crushers. Modern Adult Kicks is an album that houses singles released from 2021 and some fresh new tunes from the band and most have adult themes paired with power pop fun that are sure to ride with you from your morning coffee to a late-night vinyl dance sesh. By the way, this album comes in a limited edition blue raspberry for those vinyl aficionados.

Modern Adult Kicks starts off strong with the single “Taboo” which offers this hefty guitar riff as Hayley’s dark and devious voice coaxes you melodiously to the stranger side of power pop. You’re gonna follow her and you’re gonna love where it’s headed. In the 2nd verse, the first four lines are delivered such a mood of heavy desperation and need. You hear it in the annunciation of T’s and the beaks in guitar. “Taboo” connects this memory of that feeling while looking out of the window in The Lockdown of 2020. You wanted to go out, but you know it was taboo.

The album goes on to carry The Crushers’ more polished sound for your tender punk heart. The band has described this album as an example of “how to grow up without growing jaded.” Nothing could be more rightly said about it. The death of the ego really prevails in the sound of Hayley’s sharp guitar playing, lyrics, and titles of songs in this album. Songs like “She Drives”, “California Sober”, and “Overexposed” bring out this perfect mixture of sunny pop-tempo painting this scene of punks enjoying life knowing full well everything around them is burning (this is fine). Which is just the kind of macabre sense of fun that most of us who survived the past few years may need right now. Don’t worry for all you tough guys out there the album still houses the familiar punk sound echoing the frustration and need to thrash around that resides in most of us.

In her own words on Sound Digest, Hayley has written a little year in review which gives insight into what this album may mean to her. It is in this touching honesty as she writes about being a musician during the pandemic, getting her shit together, and driving to really refine her career as a musician. All the touring she wanted to do for the band’s last album which was released in 2020 never got to come to fruition. All that hard work and self-reflection came to be in March of 2021 when the band was signed by Josie Cotton to her record label Kitten Robot Records. The band got to work with Paul Roessler remotely as well as in person for Modern Adult Kicks and the album was mastered by Mass Giorgini (Squirtgun). The band is gearing up for a tour that begins September 23rs, 2022 and it is one that you may not want to miss out on.

Modern Adult Kicks is available for purchase

Tour Dates & Locations

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