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DS Exclusive: Interview with Gina Volpe of Lunachicks and BANTAM

The first full-length solo album by Gina Volpe, of the seminal NYC punk band Lunachicks, is scheduled for release on February 23, 2024. Delete The World was produced by Barb Morrison, and will be available on all streaming platforms. The first single off the record – “Drink Me” – and its accompanying video dropped on […]

The first full-length solo album by Gina Volpe, of the seminal NYC punk band Lunachicks, is scheduled for release on February 23, 2024. Delete The World was produced by Barb Morrison, and will be available on all streaming platforms. The first single off the record – “Drink Me” – and its accompanying video dropped on November 3, 2023. A second single, “The Plan,” follows on December 1, 2023. I caught up with Volpe via email to discuss her new music, her legacy, and more.


DS: What inspired you to do this album at this time?

GV: I had always intended to record a full-length album. It just took a little while to find the time and come up with the funds. I started releasing my solo stuff in 2017 with a 5 song EP followed up by several singles over the past couple of years. An LP was a long time coming so I’m pumped that I’m now finally able to release a full body of work.

DS: How is this album different from the music in Lunachicks?

GV: My solo stuff is different in that it’s more diverse stylistically and not as easily categorized into one particular genre. Sometimes it’s pop, sometimes it’s punk, indie, retro, or rock. Sometimes it’s more singer-songwriter. I have the freedom to shape-shift and experiment. I use synthesizers, acoustic guitars, and samples – along with heavy guitars when called for, so I get to color outside the lines and be as messy as I wanna be.


DS: Will there be more to come from BANTAM?

GV: We got together last year and messed around in the studio for the first time in over a decade. We even released a single entitled “Yo-Yo.” I’m not sure what the future holds for us though. We’re kind of spread out across the country now but none of us would be opposed to playing some shows and putting out more new music. We left the door open so anything is possible.


DS: How did your work with Lunachicks inform you as a musician and prepare you for solo and other work?

GV: I received a hands-on education coming up in the ’90s with Lunachicks. We started very young so I was able to cut my teeth on writing, arranging and recording songs (as well as learn my instrument) throughout our career. Plus, just watching all of the amazing bands we got to play with over the years really brought so much insight and inspiration to me.


DS: The trippy and surreal video for “Drink Me” reminds me of some of the technicolor joy of the 1980’s MTV heyday. Was that intentional?

GV: I came across Stanzii‘s work on Instagram and was immediately drawn to it. It’s very much my same artistic sensibility with all of the bright colors, details, and surrealism she uses. I was so mesmerized by it that I sent her a DM not sure if she would get back to me being that I was a complete stranger. To my surprise, she did get back to me and was totally into making a video for the track. I feel like I hit the jackpot by getting to work with her.

DS: How did the idea come about? Did you approach Stanzii with your own ideas about it or did Stanzii come up with the concept wholecloth? How collaborative was it? 

GV: I trusted her to do whatever she wanted. It was important to me that she have the freedom to create in her style and employ the imagery she envisioned for the song. I would put my two cents in here and there but ultimately, I left it up to her to steer the ship. I helped with some of the editing and grunt work – like wiping the greenscreen from the clips and photos but the creative work was all her genius.

DS: Please describe what the video is trying to say, or the ideas being communicated.

GV: The song is about obsession, addiction, and escapism. It relates to the vices we use to check out. Maybe it’s the use of a substance or maybe it’s an addictive relationship with someone who is no good for you but you can’t let go of. I wanted the video to be a trip down the rabbit hole of self-destruction, then coming out through the other side only to go through the whole process all over again. The secondary reference is to Alice In Wonderland. “Drink Me” is labeled on the bottle she drinks in order to make her small enough to go through the door, which is clearly (to me at least) a metaphor for exiting the world and entering into another portal of being.


DS: What is it about NYC, especially at the time Lunachicks was formed, especially the part of NYC from which you hail, that sprouted so many punk legends?

 GV: I think what makes NYC so special is the pure infusion of ideas and cultures from all over the world. There is always so much happening here. So many creatives are drawn to this city and with them comes all of the contributions to music, art, performance, etc. that they make continually laying a foundation for the next wave of artists coming in to build upon. There seems to be an endless supply of inspiration due to the sheer number of artists packed into this one crowded city.


DS: Do you see the same spirit there now with newer musicians?

GV: I do and it’s always cool to see all the different generational influences the up-and-coming bands are drawing from. Sure, it may look different from an older generation’s perspective but really, the kids are alright.

DS: I first met you at Riot Fest 2022 . From what I heard around the park so many people agreed with me that Lunachicks were one of the highlights of the weekend [I agree. Plus, I found the band members to all be so nice and fun].

GV: Love to hear that. We had a blast playing Riot Fest. Although it was really hot if you remember [I do recall that it was an absolute scorcher all weekend long]. Chip. our drummer had heat stroke during the set and puked so stealthily in the middle of a song that none of us noticed what was happening lols.

DS: That must feel pretty damn good to know that decades on you are still making such an impact and garnering new fans.

GV: It really is an amazing feeling. We didn’t realize that we had so many younger fans that became aware of us well after we had stopped playing. So for a lot of the people in the audience it was the first time they had ever seen us live even though they had been listening to us for a decade or so.

DS: What was writing Fallopian Rhapsody like, and do you feel it was a comprehensive history of Lunachicks or is there still much to say? 

GV: Writing that book was such a great experience. It was hard though and it gave me a newfound respect for authors. It’s a long arduous process and a lesson in patience and grit. In the end though I feel like we got it all in, said what we wanted to say with the expert help of co-author Jeanne Fury and overall I’m super proud of it.

DS: How did you see the response to the book?

GV: We were happy with all of the positive responses we got. People really seemed to enjoy the book whether they knew the band or not. A lot of fans wrote in to say that they identified with a certain story, experience, or feeling and that it impacted them, inspired them, or simply gave them a new perspective to try on.

DS: What has it been like to create an identity outside of Lunachicks with the music you do as a solo artist and with other bands? Of course, even with these questions, there are a lot of references to Lunachicks

GV: Well most people know me because of Lunachicks which is fine because I’m super proud of our band and our history but it can be also tough to get away from that label and just be a solo artist without the qualifying “Gina from Lunachicks” tag. I do understand though that people need reference, they want to know “Who is this person?” and I totally get that. But, my solo music doesn’t always translate over to the Lunachicks’ fanbase, some of my fans don’t even know who the Lunachicks are (most do) but in a perfect world I’d just be able to be me -insert terrible Sammy Davis Jr. impression, “I gotta be me…!” sing-along folks!


DS: How is creating music for a film different from creating music for a more traditional record or band?

GV: It’s certainly a different exercise in that you’re not actually songwriting, there’s no lyrics or any kind of verse/chorus song structure necessarily. It’s also a practice in pairing down and being mindful of where and how you place certain textures and sounds so they don’t step on dialog or feel too intrusive in the scene. I lean towards less happening in a score than more. I’m not a fan of music scores that overdo it.

DS: You played most of the instruments for this record? How is that experience different from playing in a full band or having a full band contribute to an album?

GV: I usually record most of the guitar, bass, and synths in my home studio. Then I bring it all into a professional studio with my producer Barb Morrison and their engineer to finish the track. We do vocals, drums and adding all the cool layers and textures. It’s quite the opposite experience of recording live in the studio with a band. This way I have a lot of room to manipulate the track, try different arrangements etc. and change my mind a hundred times about it all–which is not always a good thing!


DS: Are there newer bands, up-and-coming bands, or artists that excite you at this moment? 

GV: I’m obsessing over the UK’s post-punk explosion that’s been happening in the past couple of years. I love Idles, Shame, and Dry Cleaning. I also love Viagra Boys, and FIDLAR, and Turnstile. This year I’ve been listening to Yves Tumor and Nilüfer Yanya.

DS: Can you see any influence you might have had on them?

GV: Hmmm, doubt any of the bands listed above would have known who we were!

DS: You came up as a musician when there were not as many female-fronted, or mostly female-comprised bands. How much of an improvement has there been in the way such bands are accepted? Is there still a struggle to be known less as a female-fronted punk band and just a punk band. Or is that label something you are ok with?

GV: I’m really glad to see so many more women in bands. It really doesn’t seem to be such a novelty anymore. When we played Riot Fest last year there were some women kicking ass both in mixed-gender bands and all-female bands. But as you mentioned that was one of the things that was the most maddening for us, no matter what music we were making we were always categorized by our gender instead of musical genre. “All girl band music” became the genre we were placed in, what the fuck does that mean?!

Sadly (that) element is present today when I listen to Spotify’s algorithm. If you were to put on a Lunachicks radio on Spotify, the algorithm will mainly stick to suggesting only other female-fronted bands, then conversely, if you were to start a Rancid radio station the algorithm won’t be offering any recommendations for bands with female singers therefore reinforcing this gender separation in rock/punk music.

I am proud to celebrate being a woman and if women and girls (and non-binary people) find inspiration in seeing people up onstage rockin’ out that look more like themselves (as I had when I went to see my she-ros play live) then I am all for it. But we need to do away with thinking that there are two different musical genres solely based on gender.

DS: There is still so much toxicity in the punk scene as we have seen with recent disbandings of decades-old groups. Anti-Flag situation, of course, being the most recent example. How have you tried to confront that? Is it something you have still encountered?

GV: Have to admit that I literally just heard about this, I don’t want to comment until I read more about it. But from what I’ve seen over the years things have gotten better – I mean we wouldn’t even be having this conversation back in the ’90s – or even the ’00’s. And I do believe it will continue to get better and that we will evolve. Sometimes that’s hard to see and there will certainly be setbacks and shitty humans messing it all up but I’m an optimist and I do think eventually we’ll get our shit together, may not be alive to see it, but we’ll get there.


Gina Volpe’s new record will be released in February. A documentary film “Pretty Ugly- The Story of The Lunachicks,” directed by Ilya Chaiken, had its world premiere in NYC in November and just finished an initial online run.

Many thanks and cheers to Gina Volpe!

Photo Credits: featured portrait by Barb Morrison; Dying Scene images at Riot Fest 2022 by Meredith Goldberg; and additional stage images by Hillery Teranzi.

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DS Exclusive: Italian punks Weekend Cigarettes premiere music video for “Over the Lies” from new album “The Chosen One”

Weekend Cigarettes are a four-piece melodic punk band hailing from Alessandria, Italy. Their latest album The Chosen One was released earlier this year through Rocketman Records in Italy and Punk Rock Radar here in the states. We’re stoked to premiere the band’s brand new music video for “Over the Lies”, one of many standout tracks […]

Weekend Cigarettes are a four-piece melodic punk band hailing from Alessandria, Italy. Their latest album The Chosen One was released earlier this year through Rocketman Records in Italy and Punk Rock Radar here in the states. We’re stoked to premiere the band’s brand new music video for “Over the Lies”, one of many standout tracks on the album.

Check out the video below and grab a sweet looking red cassette copy of The Chosen One here. CDs and digital download are also available on Bandcamp if that’s more your speed.

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DS Exclusive: Le Big Zero debut new EP, “At Arm’s Length” AND new video for lead single, “Toy”

Happy Friday, comrades! We’ve got a super fun and, I think, different sort of EP that we’re debuting for you on this very page today. It comes from Brooklyn four-piece Le Big Zero. That’s them right down there! Say “hi” gang! If you’re not familiar with Le Big Zero, they’re self-described as “Angular indie rock. […]

Happy Friday, comrades! We’ve got a super fun and, I think, different sort of EP that we’re debuting for you on this very page today. It comes from Brooklyn four-piece Le Big Zero. That’s them right down there! Say “hi” gang!

If you’re not familiar with Le Big Zero, they’re self-described as “Angular indie rock. Post-punk. Pop melodies. Off-kilter timing. Boy-girl harmonies. Dissonance.” although in hindsight, maybe all of that is redundant given that I already mentioned that they’re from Brooklyn. ANYWAY, the foursome are putting out their brand-spankin’-new EP, At Arm’s Length today via Mint 400 Records. Here’s what the band had to say about the record:

Sometimes change is inevitable.  Although our previous album was released in spring 2022, those songs were largely finished before the pandemic hit. When band life was ready to resume, we had a new drummer in Lukas and a new singer/guitarist with Katie. On top of this, we were all processing a new normal. The question became how do we evolve but keep the fabric of the band intact? The songs on At Arm’s Length were developed live in the room while continuing to learn each other’s styles, and by extension what the band now was. We workshopped what clicked and built the album around the ideas that came from those jams.  The result ended up being a bit more driving and more emotionally intense, without losing those flourishes of musicianship, syncopation, and angularity that defined the first two albums. Lyrically, it’s a bit more direct. Almost as if the frustrations that could previously be masked in abstraction were now boiling over. Something like “Heavy Handed” takes a look at how there’s no middle ground anymore, just extreme opinions while “Spin Cycle” is a more introspective exploration about the time we all lost and how to view what a year, a month, or a day means now.

At Arm’s Length is available at all of the usual digital outlets of course, so make sure you pick up your own copy…but you can also listen to it here! Also, keep scrolling to check out the video for “Toy” below!



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DS Exclusive: Listen to British punks The Upshot’s new song “Haven Road”

Hot on the heels of their debut single “Detoxstaycation“, Dying Scene is stoked to bring you the exclusive premiere of British punks The Upshot‘s new track “Haven Road”. Here’s what the band had to say about their song, which you can check out below: “Haven Road is a personal recollection of stories from the house […]

Hot on the heels of their debut single “Detoxstaycation“, Dying Scene is stoked to bring you the exclusive premiere of British punks The Upshot‘s new track “Haven Road”. Here’s what the band had to say about their song, which you can check out below:

“Haven Road is a personal recollection of stories from the house Matt lived in for 3 years. It was where bands formed, bands on tour stayed and where Matt & Marc’s band rehearsed. It was where memories were made and “friends became lovers”. It was where parties bore all manner of stories, some of which are told in this song.”

The Upshot will be releasing their debut EP later this year on Punk Rock Radar (US) and Cat’s Claw Records (UK).

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DS Exclusive: Listen to Floridian punks Spanish Needles’ new song “Mary Steenburgen, Parts One And Two”

St. Petersburg, FL punks Spanish Needles are gearing up for the release of their debut 12″ EP Sifting Through the Wreckage and your best buds at DyingScene.com are excited to bring you a brand new song from the record. It’s called “Mary Steenburgen, Parts One And Two” and you can check it out right now, […]

St. Petersburg, FL punks Spanish Needles are gearing up for the release of their debut 12″ EP Sifting Through the Wreckage and your best buds at DyingScene.com are excited to bring you a brand new song from the record. It’s called “Mary Steenburgen, Parts One And Two” and you can check it out right now, down below. So do it!

If you like what your ears hear, head over to Spanish Needles’ Bandcamp. They’ve got another song for you to check out and you can grab a t-shirt to help raise some money for the vinyl release of Sifting Through the Wreckage.

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DS Exclusive: Listen to German melodic punks Melonball’s new album “Breathe”

Melodic punk fans, listen up! Nuremberg, Germany’s Melonball will be releasing their debut album Breathe tomorrow, March 31st on Thousand Islands and Lockjaw Records. Your friends at Dying Scene are pleased to bring you this exclusive album premiere a day before it lands on all major streaming platforms. This thing’s fast and furious from front […]

Melodic punk fans, listen up! Nuremberg, Germany’s Melonball will be releasing their debut album Breathe tomorrow, March 31st on Thousand Islands and Lockjaw Records. Your friends at Dying Scene are pleased to bring you this exclusive album premiere a day before it lands on all major streaming platforms. This thing’s fast and furious from front to back; try to keep up!

Don’t just take our word for it: listen for yourself below, and peep the dates on Melonball’s impending European / UK tour while you’re down there. After you’re done doing that, grab Breathe on vinyl or CD (or both!). It’s available here (North America), here (UK), and here (Australia).

Catch Melonball on tour:

23/04/01 – “Breathe” Album release show @ Nuremberg, GER
23/04/02 – “Breathe”-Tour w/ Heathcliff, Drunktank @ Saarbrücken, GER
23/04/03 – “Breathe”-Tour w/ Heathcliff, Drunktank @ Antwerp Belgium 
23/04/05 – “Breathe”-Tour w/ Heathcliff @ Brighton, UK
23/04/06 – “Breathe”-Tour w/ Heathcliff @ London, UK
23/04-07-09 – Manchester Punk Fest 23 @ Manchester, UK
23/04/12 – Dankeschatz, Melonball @ Munich, GER
23/04/14 – Melonball, Chris Magerl, The Bloodstrings @ Fürth, GER
23/05/01 – 1st of May Fest @ Regensburg, GER
23/05/15 – showcase @ Nuremberg ClubStereo
23/05/19 – @ Weiden Salute Rock Club
23/05/20 – @ Graz Musichouse
23/06/17 – Balarock Festival @ Bad Laasphe, GER
23/06/30 – Mission Ready Fest @ Giebelstadt, GER
23/08/07 – Der Krater Bebt Festival
23/08/08-11 – Punk Rock Holiday, SLO

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DS Exclusive: Listen to German melodic punks Snackwolf’s new single “Drown” from their upcoming album “Lunch Breakdown”

Listen up, melodic punk appreciators! I’d like to introduce you to your favorite new band. Stuttgart, Germany’s Snackwolf is bad ass and they’ve got a bad ass new record called Lunch Breakdown coming out very soon. Dying Scene is thrilled to bring you this exclusive premiere of their brand new single “Drown” a day before it […]

Listen up, melodic punk appreciators! I’d like to introduce you to your favorite new band. Stuttgart, Germany’s Snackwolf is bad ass and they’ve got a bad ass new record called Lunch Breakdown coming out very soon. Dying Scene is thrilled to bring you this exclusive premiere of their brand new single “Drown” a day before it hits Spotify. Check it out below!

Lunch Breakdown is due out December 1st on 30 Kilo Fever Records (EU), Cat’s Claw Records (UK), and Punk Rock Radar. All three labels have the record on beautiful green & yellow splatter colored vinyl (limited to 250 copies) with awesome artwork by Samuel Lucas. Snackwolf will be playing a hometown album release show on the same date.

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DS Exclusive: Listen to Ohio pop-punks Post Ramone’s awesome new single “Sending SOS” from their upcoming album “Sounds Like This”

Twas the second week of December, when all through the punk rock blogosphere, unpaid writers were finalizing their Best of 2023 lists, then Post Ramone came through like a fucking wrecking ball with their debut album Sounds Like This. A surefire hit with Ramonescore enthusiasts and the general public alike, this record will no doubt […]

Twas the second week of December, when all through the punk rock blogosphere, unpaid writers were finalizing their Best of 2023 lists, then Post Ramone came through like a fucking wrecking ball with their debut album Sounds Like This. A surefire hit with Ramonescore enthusiasts and the general public alike, this record will no doubt be shaking up its fair share of Top 10 lists in the coming weeks.

Now listen, the record isn’t out ’til this Friday on Mom’s Basement Records and Jolly Ronnie Records, buuuuut you know Dying Scene always hooks it up. So today we’re bringing you an early sneak peak with this exclusive premiere of the brand new single “Sending SOS”. Listen to that shit right now or live to regret it for the rest of your miserable lives.

And in case you forgot already, I’ll remind you that Sounds Like This will be released this Friday and you should buy the record! Mom’s Basement will have 100 copies on random color vinyl and Jolly Ronnie will have 100 on Popcorn Bucket Yellow™ colored vinyl. If neither of those options suit your fancy (or you wanna get the full set), hit up the band – a little birdy told me they have 100 copies on red wax.

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DS Exclusive: Listen to SoCal melodic punks Strike Twelve’s new album “Last Band Standing”

SoCal melodic punks Strike Twelve release their new album Last Band Standing tomorrow, June 30th on Thousand Islands Records. You don’t have to wait another second to listen to it, though, because your pals at Dying Scene got the hookup with this exclusive premiere! Listen to Last Band Standing right now, down below, and head over […]

SoCal melodic punks Strike Twelve release their new album Last Band Standing tomorrow, June 30th on Thousand Islands Records. You don’t have to wait another second to listen to it, though, because your pals at Dying Scene got the hookup with this exclusive premiere!

Listen to Last Band Standing right now, down below, and head over to Thousand Islands’ webstore to grab the album on vinyl and/or CD (or both!). Strike Twelve’s got some shows coming up, too – their record release show is tomorrow night at Solaris Beer in Murrieta, CA.

Upcoming Strike Twelve shows:

June 30th at Solaris Beer in Murrieta, CA
August 17 at Oil City Beer Co in Casper, WY w/ System Restore
August 18 at Vultures in Colorado Springs, CO
August 19 at Herman’s Hideaway in Denver, CO w/ Red Stinger

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DS Exclusive: Listen to The Bacarrudas’ debut album “Pool Party” before it comes out this Friday on Mom’s Basement Records

Summer is rapidly approaching and that can only mean one thing: Pool Party! That also happens to be the title of the debut album from Philadelphia’s Bacarrudas, a brand new band fronted by Dirt Bike Annie‘s Adam Rabuck. The album delivers 13 power pop / surf / garage rock / just straight up fun songs […]

Summer is rapidly approaching and that can only mean one thing: Pool Party! That also happens to be the title of the debut album from Philadelphia’s Bacarrudas, a brand new band fronted by Dirt Bike Annie‘s Adam Rabuck. The album delivers 13 power pop / surf / garage rock / just straight up fun songs and it’s due out this Friday on the almighty Mom’s Basement Records.

Of course, you can always rely on your friends at Dying Scene to get you the hookup, and today we’re hooking you up with an early full album stream! That’s right, scroll a lil further down this very page and you’ll be greeted by an embedded music player that grants you, the discerning listener, early access to The Bacarrudas’ debut album Pool Party.

You might notice there’s only 12 songs; that’s because there’s a bonus track! “How do I get this bonus track?” – I’m glad you asked. Get Pool Party on CD (limited to 100 hand numbered copies) from the Mom’s Basement webstore this Friday, May 3rd, and it’ll come with the CD-only bonus track “Bad Baby”. Fuck yeah.

This premiere is brought to you in part by Punk Rock Radar. If you’d like your band’s music video to be premiered by Dying Scene and Punk Rock Radar, go here and follow these instructions. You’ll be on your way to previously unimagined levels of fame and fortune in no time!

BUY THE CD FRIDAY, MAY 3RD AT MOMSBASEMENTRECORDS.BIGCARTEL.COM

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