DS Show Review & Gallery: The Used – New York City

The Used have decided to celebrate their 25th anniversary as a band in the most creative way possible. Rating than doing a single “career defining set” the band have announced a full tour in which they play three nights per city. The kicker? Each night is a different album play. Night 1 being their genre […]

The Used have decided to celebrate their 25th anniversary as a band in the most creative way possible. Rating than doing a single “career defining set” the band have announced a full tour in which they play three nights per city. The kicker? Each night is a different album play. Night 1 being their genre defining classic, Self Titled. Night 2 is their fan favorite, In Love and Death. And night 3 is their experimental yet just as seminal record, Lies for Liars. This takes the typical anniversary tour and flips it completely on its head. Fans can pick and see which record is their favorite, or hardcore fans can see all 3!

On Saturday April 19th, the band played their self titled album in the heart of New York City. It was astounding. From the blistering opening track, “Maybe Memories” to the iconic, “Taste of Ink”, the band played so many fan favorites. Even deep cuts that fans don’t get the chance to see the light of day like “Bulimic” or “Say Days Ago”, were a treat to see live.

What must be mentioned is the astounding stage design for every night. The band re-creates the album cover on each night. With the doll mask behind them for night 1, the heart/noose on night two, and the box-zombie from Lies for Liars, the set is stunning. Anyone who has grown up with this band, has deeply personal connections to this album art. Seeing it played out live in front of them, really helped reinforce just how influential this band was and is. 

Sound wise, they’re better than ever. Bert McCracken’s voice is pristine and really able to hit those high notes we hear in studio. On slower tracks like “Blue and Yellow” and “Greener with the Scenery” you can really hear his passion and vocal strength. Jeph Howard’s bass lines are iconic as ever. On the final track of the album (and night) “Choke Me”, Jeph ripped some of the heaviest bass lines we’ve heard this year. Joey Bradford is always a standout and this night was no exception. Dan Whitesides also delivered a stellar performance on tracks like “Buried Me Alive” and the aforementioned “Maybe Memories”. This band are the sum of their parts.

I was lucky enough to attend all three shows; 2 in New Jersey and 1 in New York City. The East Coast has always been rock predominate. Growing up New England then moving to the Tri-State Area, I can confidently say I’ve never seen a real mosh pit until I moved to New Jersey. The crowd was euphoric for the entire night. The energy was dialed in to 100.

Irving Plaza was the perfect venue for this self-titled show. It was small and intimate. The Used have played arenas and amphitheaters, so seeing them in this club-sized venue was truly special. It made the mosh pits go even crazier, and the slow moments even more impactful. During “A Box Full Of Sharp Objects” the entire floor of Irving Plaza became one massive push-pit. It was insane.

Overall, this was everything we expected and more. The Used have displayed they are a generational talent. Whether you have been following them for the last 25 years, or this is your first taste of ink, welcome to the family.

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Krust Toons on Dying Scene #4

You can read more Krust Toons here and here.

You can read more Krust Toons here and here.

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DS Exclusive: SoCal punks Heartwells premiere music video for “Backstabbers” from upcoming “Ollie” EP

Southern California’s Heartwells have a new EP called Ollie coming this summer on Hey!Fever Records, and we’re stoked to bring you the exclusive music video premiere for the bad ass lead single “Backstabbers”. Check that shit out below and pre-order the record on beautiful Dreamsicle Splatter colored vinyl right here. This premiere is brought to […]

Southern California’s Heartwells have a new EP called Ollie coming this summer on Hey!Fever Records, and we’re stoked to bring you the exclusive music video premiere for the bad ass lead single “Backstabbers”. Check that shit out below and pre-order the record on beautiful Dreamsicle Splatter colored vinyl right here.

This premiere is brought to you in part by Punk Rock Radar. If you’d like your band’s music video, song, album or whatever 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.

PRE-ORDER NOW

Upcoming Shows:
April 24- Grand Rapids, MI @ Mulligan’s Pub (with Empired)
April 25- Chicago, IL @ Liars Club (with Empired)
April 26- Dayton, OH @ Blind Bobs (with Empired, Nightbeast)

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DS Interview – Chad Price talks Chad Price Peace Coalition, Songwriting, and Thirty Years of ALL’s Pummel

Throughout the years Chad Price has made his way through a number of music genres. Most associate Chad’s name as the third singer of ALL, the band formed after Milo left the Descendents in 1987. Most people are unaware that Chad has never stopped making music since ALL’s activity has become scant over the last […]

Throughout the years Chad Price has made his way through a number of music genres. Most associate Chad’s name as the third singer of ALL, the band formed after Milo left the Descendents in 1987. Most people are unaware that Chad has never stopped making music since ALL’s activity has become scant over the last twenty or so years . While he still gets the call from Bill Stevenson to play a show here and there, it’s the in-between where he has released music with his bands. From the alt-country sounds of Drag the River with Jon Snodgrass to the much more aggressive A Vulture Wake, or just him hitting the road with guitar, Chad Price’s discography without ALL is just as exciting. Which brings us to his new band, Chad Price Peace Coalition and their new album, A Perfect Pearl, released on Double Helix Records

It had been a couple of years since Drag the River played, and with some internal issues happening with A Vulture Wake, Chad decided to tour the country with just himself and a guitar. As he played these new songs, he was writing other parts for them in his head. Citing bands like Jethro Tull and Yes as inspiration, he actively thought about how to bring these songs to life, imagining how they should sound with a full band backing him. Chad wanted more than just a basic three-chord structure. He wanted songs where people were actually playing parts that cohesively worked together. From the sound of it, in his own words and the music itself, he may have found the best way to do it.

(Edited for clarity)

Dying Scene (Forrest Gaddis): The record is called A Perfect Pearl; how many songs are on it all together?

Chad Price: The record’s called A Perfect Pearl. There’s ten songs on it total. Our first single was called “A.M.” The album’s physical release is April 18th. The labels wanted to wait until May for streaming. If you’re a vinyl collector and into that kind of shit, or if you just want to hear the record so bad that you can’t wait for a month.


I like that they’re doing that though. They’re making you go out and look for it rather than just giving it to you. I would have loved being able to stream it as a kid, but as I’ve gotten older I appreciate it much more.

It’s the joy of the hunt, the thrill of the chase. Yeah a lot of times that is the most motivating.

Is your band composed of members of an ALL cover band?

Well, I’ll tell you. They were doing an ALL and Descendents tribute show in Portland, Oregon. That’s where my whole band lives. I live in fucking Indiana, and it’s a real pain in the ass, but they played at a club in Portland where a friend of mine books. He called me. He’s like, “I have these dudes that are doing this tribute show. What if I just fly you out here and give you a couple hundred bucks, put you up, and you could sing with them?” I saw a little video of them playing. I wanted to make sure that they knew what they were doing. They’re very good. We practiced the night before we played the show. They’re great players. That is how I met them. They have their own band. It’s a band called Liquid Light, but they also do a lot of different tribute bands and shit. Which I find very, very funny. People like to play music. I can’t fault somebody for just wanting to fucking play music and make money playing songs that they like. 

I like that.

They’re just music nerds. They went to school for music and they just like to play, I can’t really recall talking to them that much about this. ALL and Descendents were probably a newer find for them in the last few years. They were just like, who the fuck is this band? Fucking punkers playing crazy shit on guitars.

Since they were familiar with your work, was it easier for them to work with your sound and voice?

Pretty much. When we recorded a lot of these songs, I had just sent them basically acoustic demos. No drums, no bass, no nothing. Two of them, Anthony and Corey, basically play everything. I play guitar and sing. Those two dudes covered drums, lead guitar, keys, and whatever other shit we found in the studio. They were already fans of all my shit. They knew what my voice was capable of and what we could do. I just kind of feel like I found the right guys for the moment , and they just kind of helped create a lot of these songs.

Were there any points where they fell into similarities to with A Vulture Wake or Drag the River? Was there any time they kind of sounded too similar to one of the other bands?

Not really. Although these guys love ALL and A Vulture Wake. They keep sending me kind of ways to make ALL and A Vulture Wake songs sound like Chad Price Peace Coalition songs. It’s hard to hear those songs in a different way, especially for me, because I sang and fucking played them every goddamn day on tour. Also, for a fan they might be used to hearing it real fast and with a fucking killer guitar part, and that’s not what this is at all. So, they’re trying to sneak some of that shit into it. I gave them A Vulture Wake song to learn for when the record gets released and we’re really touring a lot. So, we’ll see what comes of that. Even after playing these songs and then practicing A Vulture Wake song in the mix of these other ones, I don’t know if this is going to work. It might not. I do want to be able to play any kind of music in a set without it sounding weird. 

Is there a genre you feel more comfortable with than others?

Not really. I mean, I’m comfortable kind of doing most things. This is probably more comfortable to me than like ALL or A Vulture Wake. For one, ALL is work. It’s fucking hard work and if you’re not seeing that shit every day, it’s basically use it or lose it. And when you lose it, it’s hard to get back. Bill will just call me out of the blue and be like, you want to do Punk Rock Bowling? Then it’s fucking work to get back into that shape.  With A Vulture Wake, the singing isn’t as difficult because that is shit I wrote specifically for my range and my voice. The guitar playing becomes an issue because I play guitar and sing in A Vulture Wake. I’m not really that kind of guitar player. I’m not like a fucking rock and roll guitar player. Chad Price Peace Coalition is more up my alley because it’s stuff I know how to do. I’m just slowly kind of learning more shit. Not really music theory. I’m starting to like shit that’s a lot more complex. It just hits my brain in a different way and it makes me think and it makes me feel shit that other stuff doesn’t give me.

Is there a genre you haven’t explored that you want to?

No, I’ve done punk. I’ve done metal. I’ve done country, folk, rock. I don’t know what else there would be for me. This is the kind of music I like.

You have another single dropping on Friday (4/4/25)?

It’s called “Rose.” I believe before the May 30th digital release, there’ll be four singles out. So people will get a pretty good taste of what the record is going to be like.


Then you’re touring the Pacific Northwest.

Yeah. Right now, I’m kind of booking through the year. I live far from those guys and everything is either flying or driving a fucking van across country. We’re basically doing five to ten shows a month through September right now. That’s as far as I’m looking out. We’re going to be trying to hit the whole U.S. in pieces.

April 11th was the 30th anniversary of ALL’s Pummel. What do you remember about recording it? 

I mean, that was a long time ago. I don’t remember a whole lot. When I first joined the band, with the first album (1993’s Breaking Things), it was record and go on tour immediately. I didn’t even know what the fuck was going on. I was just stoked. Otherwise I’d be in Kansas City, just doing nothing with my life. Pop-punk was making waves. You had Green Day and shit already making a name. So A&R guys were just out looking for pop-punk bands. So this guy, Brian, I don’t remember his name from Interscope. So, he was actually courting us like you hear about. Labels actually wining and dining and shit. That actually happened and it was cool. He flew out to Fort Collins, Colorado. We flew out to L.A., he took us out to bars, all that shit. It was great. The record itself, the band was in a pretty dark time.

Listening to it as an adult. I’m like, this is fucking dark for that camp, in general.

It’s very dark. Kind of remembering where everyone in the band’s lives were at that point, the band has had some tough times. It’s gone through some shit. One thing I remember is that all the songs on the record are tuned in E flat because of my voice. 

Were they hoping for more of a poppier album from you guys? And you guys just bring them “Black Sky” and “Stalker?”

Yeah, they were definitely hoping for that. We put the record out. Our A&R guy, we found out, was a drug guy. He just disappeared. Nobody knew who it was. We never talked to him anymore. Interscope didn’t know where he went. He just fucking took off. After that, there was nobody at Interscope that knew or cared who we were.

It kind of makes sense. You always hear there were disagreements on how to market you guys, but it’s because nobody knew how to market to you. 

Yeah, usually these big labels, they might pick up a band. A lot of times the band will just have a hit song. Obviously labels like when a band picks up steam on their own and they don’t have to put money into it, What was the first song on it?

The single? I think it was “Million Bucks.”

OK, yeah, I guess people kind of like that.

They were looking for something more like that. Maybe the only song like that is “Miranda.”

Oh, yeah, I guess that’s on there, too. I mean, those are the poppier songs. The record obviously was not going to take off on its own. The label is like, well, we don’t even have a guy here working with you. Who the fuck are you anyway?

I guess the Descendents/ALL were not as big because they hadn’t done Everything Sucks yet. They hadn’t had their comeback yet. Nobody realized what they had.

Right, yeah. I like a lot of the songs on it. I mean, that’s one of the records that when fans say that’s their favorite record. I’m always surprised. It’s like you’ve got to be fucking kidding me.

There’s some great songs on that record. I like “Long Distance” a lot. One of the only TV performances I’ve ever seen of you guys was Conan O’Brien where you guys played a “Million Bucks.” Did you guys go and perform anywhere else on TV?

We did Conan O’Brien and we did some live shit on MTV. You go in with a handful of people to make it feel more like a live show. Then they just film you basically playing in the room and we did some interviews with those guys.

Did it sour you on the industry?

Not for me, I was still young. What did I know about the music business anyway? Certainly for those guys. Certainly for Bill. Yeah, it had to have been crushing.

I can imagine he was probably sketchy about it going in after all the SST shit, I’m sure he was like, if it can happen over here, it’s going to suck 10 times more over here.

Absolutely, on the plus side, they paid us money to get out of our contract and Bill built The Blasting Room.

Had you guys been recording in Colorado at that point already?

No, no. I think we recorded that album at Ardent down in Memphis. We hadn’t recorded it in Colorado until we started building the studio.

Are there any other shows you’re doing outside of the tour?

One cool thing we’re doing in July. I don’t know if you’ve heard of this. It’s called Buddies Fest. It’s in Tillsonburg, Ontario. Oh, it’s like two hours south of Toronto. Basically, just right over the border of Detroit there’s a little town. Jon Snodgrass has played this venue a few times. So he decided to put on a show there. Oh, okay.

I think I saw Drag The River and ALL playing, too.

Chad Price Peace Coalition’s playing. Snodgrass and his band are playing. There are other bands like Dillinger Four, Flatliners. There’s a lot. It’s Friday through Sunday. There’s probably thirty bands playing or something. And that’s going to be very cool. I’ll just get to do a lot of shit three days in a row without driving anywhere. Other than that, it’s just playing shows in different places for a while. 

Info about the album’s physical and streaming release dates here.

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DS Album Review: The Riptides – “Burn After Listening”

It very well may be the end of the world, but don’t fret – The Riptides are here! Not to save the day, but to provide you with a soundtrack while watching it burn. The Ottawa punk veterans’ new album Burn After Listening sticks to their signature blend of old school pop-punk mixed with hardcore […]

It very well may be the end of the world, but don’t fret – The Riptides are here! Not to save the day, but to provide you with a soundtrack while watching it burn. The Ottawa punk veterans’ new album Burn After Listening sticks to their signature blend of old school pop-punk mixed with hardcore interludes, but throws in a few enjoyable curveballs along the way.

“End of the World” is the biggest of those curveballs, and is also one of the Riptides most ambitious songs to date, from both a thematic and production standpoint. I was already really excited to be getting a new Riptides record after all these years since the release of Canadian Graffiti, and this song – the lead single – turned that excitement up a notch when its music video dropped. “Smile” plays on the same lyrical themes as “End of the World” but with a much more outright pessimistic approach and much less pop sensibility. Welcome to the countdown to the end!

There are of course a ton of other standout tracks on Burn After Listening. ‘We Came to Destroy” is an excellent choice for the opening track and is very Lillingtons-ish; speaking of that, Kody Templeman (from the Lillingtons! And Teenage Bottlerocket! And SACK!) plays guitar on this record and you can tell just by hearing the lead guitar parts. Also by the way, TBR drummer Darren Chewka is manning the throne – very cool!

If I had to pick a favorite track on here I’d probably go with “My Heart’s Tattooed on My Sleeve”. This is a true masterclass in what the Riptides do best: no bullshit sugary pop-punk with an earworm chorus. A close second would be “Anti-Social”, an instantly relatable anthem for the introvert. Please shut up and get the fuck away from me!

The back end of Burn After Listening rolls through a handful of bouncy pop-punk tunes in “Lie to Me”, “Get Over You” (super fun song with Lone Wolf‘s Merel Schaap making a guest appearance), and “The One Thing”. This three course meal of aural comfort food is followed by a minute-30 hardcore track “Bottom Feeder” which has an entertaining backstory (in the vein of Riptides classics like “Wimpy Goes to Washington”, “Eyes Wide Shut” and “I Wanna Riot”). The album signs off with “Fade to Black” delivering a final shot of Ramonescore excellence and showing off the Riptides’ unique ability to make the most doom and gloom “summer anthem” imaginable; in a good way, of course!

Burn After Listening is a worthy entry in the Riptides’ growing catalog alongside Canadian Graffiti, Tales From Planet Earth, Hang Out, and Drop Out – and of course the Buy It You Scum 7″! This record implements some more ambitious production ideas than its predecessors (I almost forgot to mention this was recorded at the Blasting Room!) without straying from the rock solid path the Riptides have paved for themselves in their nearly 30 year(!!!) career.

It doesn’t matter if you’re a longtime diehard Riptides fan or a new listener who happens to like bands such as… Screeching Weasel, The Queers, Teenage Bottlerocket, or perhaps the almighty Dwarves! There’s something everyone can – and most certainly will! – enjoy on this record.

BURN AFTER LISTENING! OUT NOW ON PIRATES PRESS! BUY THE RECORD!

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DS Interviews: Alliteration on the Hudson Valley scene and their upcoming LP.

Alliteration has been rocking in the Hudson Valley for ten years, and are clebrating their ten year anniversary at the end of April. Specializing in melodic hardcore, their songs orbit a variety of subjects– death, love, hate, depression. With one album under their belt and another coming out, it’s safe to say they represent one […]

Alliteration has been rocking in the Hudson Valley for ten years, and are clebrating their ten year anniversary at the end of April. Specializing in melodic hardcore, their songs orbit a variety of subjects– death, love, hate, depression. With one album under their belt and another coming out, it’s safe to say they represent one of the most important aspects of a community: the elders.

Located squarely in the Hudson Valley, Poughkeepsie serves as a central nexus for the hardcore scene. The scene was dead for a few years, rotting in the quagmire of COVID and high cost of living. Bars sprung up and quickly took over the place of the Chance Theater, the main venue for hardcore and punk shows in the area. They began hosting shows of all kinds, giving life to a local scene that was thought to have died off from COVID. At the same time, we saw a revival of the music scene in neighboring New Paltz, a twenty-minute ride across the eponymous Hudson River and through the mountains. What was once a college town has seen an explosion of basement venues, letting the underground scene evolve and contort with the background of the college kids and sleepy tourists.

The space I held the interview was a bar called Reasons and Ruckus. I met with them in the dining area, the sounds of the kitchen staff echoing with the chatter of bar patrons and the clink of glass in the other room. We could feel the cold wind coming in from the glass door behind us, the freezing night air of a late New York winter raising goosebumps on the back of my arms.

Dying Scene: Could y’all give your names and instruments, for the record and for me?

My name’s Ryan Kealty, I play bass.

Xavier, I play guitar.

And I am Mike, I play drums.

DS: Have you guys been to any of the basement shows around here?

Kealty: Not recently. We’d like to, but we’ve been to a couple before the start of the year.

DS: Have you been in the New Paltz scene at all?

Kealty: Snugs.

Mike: Snugs is great.

Xavier: Snugs is great, but I played there three times in a row and I just had to take a break. It’s just…

DS: Grimy?

Xaviar: Trough bathroom.

DS: So very different from the scene in Poughkeepsie.

Kealty: Yeah, it’s grimy.

DS: Very different experience compared to mine, where I’ve only been to the basement shows with the shitty moshers. The last show of yours I went to I got a bruised rib in the pit, and then I went to a house show and it’s just like, “what the fuck is going on?”

Kealty: Look, I don’t want to hate–

Xavier: It’s good that they’re there!

Kealty: –but like, I grew up around here with the metalcore shit, and going from that to the New Paltz scene where people are kind of pushpitting the entire time. I will say, if I am going to see some indie shit, I don’t need someone throwing elbows the entire time. It’s good that they’re there.

DS: Please be careful with the elbows, he’s trying to shoegaze.

Kealty: Exactly.

Mike: Pushpits are perfectly fine! And like, look, when I was 23 I tore my ACL in a mosh pit, but, y’know, pushpits are fine. We’re not trying to do like, blood for the blood gods here, maybe sometimes as a treat.

Kealty: I like pushpits, but I’m getting older. I can be in a pushpit and not feel it the next morning.

DS: So how old are you guys?

Xavier: I’m 28.

Kealty: Yup, me and Xavier are both 28.

Mike: Turning thirty next month. I’ll be fuckin thirty.

DS: So you guys have been in the scene a while. Do you guys remember what the scene was like when you first started?

Kealty: I remember what it was like in 2015.

DS: Expand.

Mike: The Chance and the Loft used to be the place where every band went, where every band went, where everyone went on Fridays and Saturdays, and like, eventually it stopped being a local scene, but after a while it stopped being a local scene and they only had touring bands show up. And that’s really disappointing! Because I remember being fifteen, sixteen and going there on any given Friday, saying “somebody I went to high school with is playing here tonight.”

Xavier: Now, to add on to that, it was kind of slow at first because, wasn’t it Jeff Benning–

Mike: Oh, Jeff Benning.

Kealty: Jeff Benning. (wheezing laughter.)

Xavier: He fucked over a guy, whatever.

DS: There’s always a guy.

Xavier: Yeah, that was kind of a shift–hey how’s it goin’ man?

Kealty: You can’t see but my parents just showed up.

(Everyone at the table laughs and chatters for a moment, Kealty’s parents walk away.)

Kealty: I don’t know why but I just shook my dad’s hand. I just felt awkward from the interview. (Laughs. )

Mike: That’s unhinged.

Xavier: Anyways, so, anyways, the scene started shifting to like, touring bands. There were some local bands but they were all being forced to sell tickets way harder because, Jeff Benning fuck you, and then My Place Pizza came in in like, 2012, 2013?

Mike: Oh my god, My Place Pizza.

Kealty: Yeah, My Place Pizza was this pizza shop literally across the street from where we are now. It is no more.

Mike: Yup, it got bought out and killed by COVID.

Kealty: Yeah, and My Place started to kick in, they’d get touring bands three or four days a week, mix in a bunch of local bands. I can’t speak to the Loft as much, but My Place had touring bands four or five days a week.

Xavier: And the best part was the owner, six-seven, really nice guy, he didn’t really charge for shows? Pretty often he’d let us book shows for free. Like I’d tell touring bands “hey, I’m gonna give you twenty bucks for gas, it’s a free show.”

Kealty: That’s the other thing too, there used to be a lot of free shows. Granted, it’s rough now, so I get it, but there used to be a lot of them.

Mike: And everyone wants a cut at every step.

Kealty: And that’s not inherently bad! Everybody deserves a cut at every step, everyone deserves to be paid for their labor, but with DIY margins there’s only so much money to go around, and when people want that cut it can make what little there is to go around a lot less.

DS: That leads me to ask, every basement show I’ve been to has been packed, so what are the margins?

Xavier: That really depends on the house. Some houses are cool and say “okay, we’ll only take a small anmount and leave the rest to the bands,” and sometimes we’ll walk away with one, two hundred, just from doors.

Kealty: On our weekender tour with Stand And Wave, we got three hundred just from doors.

Xavier: Yeah, and some houses would be packed, they’d have speakeasies, then they’d look at us and say “Here, forty dollars” and we’d say we’ll never play here again. And at that point you’re profiting off of underground musicians and not paying back into them.

Kealty: I know that if you’re running you’re little underground speakeasy, you should get paid for it, but if you’re making money off of bands, especially if they’d travelling–

Xavier: Alliteration does not endorse illegal bars!

Kealty: Nope! But if you have a bar and you’re using bands to make money then you shouldn’t be exploiting them.

Xaviar: I feel like that’s happened a couple times, where we get fucked and then we tell eveyone “Yeah, we’re never playing here again.”

Kealty: Not to say we hate house shows, but there’s an ethical way to do it.

Mike: Of course. With every endeavor you do, pay yourself. I think that’s very important now, and that sucks to say, never do it for free, find a way to pay yourself, especially now. It’s hard out there. Especially for musicians. Cymbals are like, three or four hundred dollars.

Xavier: Then stop beating them so fuckin hard.

DS: Don’t stop doing that!

Kealty: I remember when we first started Mike had Xavier write “hit harder” on the drumheads. And we’re musicians, we need to make a living, so the fees are really expensive. We were hemorrhaging money the first few months for the love of the game, but now we can pay for all of our studio time and pay our fees, but we all still need to pay rent now.

DS: And you guys have a new album coming out, right, did you want to talk about that?

Kealty: Yeah, it’s a full LP. We’re not quite sure how we’re doing release strategy.

Xavier: Yeah we just got finished tracking it so we haven’t decided yet.

Kealty: Definitely, we have ten original tracks, and a cover and we rerecorded two older songs.

Mike: Which two songs is a mystery, it’s a surprise.

DS: On a record or on digital?

Xavier: We’re gonna try to get it on vinyl.

Kealty: Now that we have the money to spend and not hurt ourselves, especially since we all pay rent, we’re gonna try and get it printed on vinyl. And if we have enough money, maybe Reject but that’s a 20% chance. I would like to get that album printed.

Mike: How many years has it been [since Reject came out]?

Kealty: I think four years.

Xavier: Five?

Kealty: Three and a half since it came out in October.

DS: That leads me to asking what your inspirations are. I’d peg you for like, Agent Orange and Against Me!, early crustpunk shit. too

Kealty: I think you’re giving me a lot more credit than I deserve, I’m not really “versed in the lore.”

DS: Then how about just an album that you think of.

Xavier: Okay, this is what I say every time: Microwave, Pup, the first Microwave album, Much Love, the second Pup album, The Dream is Over, and My Ticket Home, “Stranger Only.”

Mike: That’s the second time that’s come up today.

Kealty: Yeah, those are our collective inspirations, along with Say Anything —

(Groans around the table.)

Mike: Oh my god, yes.

Xavier: No, no, not me, not anymore.

Mike: When you were writing, yes.

Kealty: With your vocal delivery, I can still tell.

Xavier: Yeah, I can’t beat it out of me, it’s cringe as fuck.

Mike: Max Bemis, trash human, but he made good music.

Xavier: Did he though? There was a song he wrote that went “I kill, kill, kill little girls.”

Mike: Yeah but he wasn’t advocating for it.

Xavier: But he still said it!

Mike: But it’s funny!

Kealty: Moving on, for me, when I’m writing, I think my personal inspirations outside of our collective ones would be like, I would say, Defeater, I’m a big fan, I would say Trade Wind, which is an Indie side project with the guys from Stick to Your Guns and Stray From the Path. Defeater, Tradewinds, Every Time I Die, and, fuck it, Microwave. And Movements, not my favorite but they have great songwriting. And Balance and Composure.

Xavier: We’re listing what we like?

Kealty: Yeah, like stuff that inspires you.

Xavier: I listen to Billy Woods the rapper, straight boom bap, New York, you know what the fuck it is. (Mike laughs in the background) I’m actually not joking.

Kealty: You were so psyched to see him last month, that was a long time coming.

Xavier: It was awesome! Billy Woods put out an album with his producer Kenny Segal, that shit was gas. Only show I’ve taken videos at in like five years cuz I loved the songs. And like, I don’t know, I listen to a lot of random stuff. Some days it could be funk, some days it could be jazz. Grant Greenlock, West Montgomery, Dorodio, fuckin, what are they called, anime intro music.

Mike: Anime intro music, yeah. First season anime intros, that’s gotta be a genre.

Kealty: That’s gotta be a genre.

DS: That’s called OVA.

Xavier: I listen to a lot of weird underground rap, like Earl Sweatshirt, he’s more mainstream now but in general stuff like that. For punk albums, I like Deafeter, Balance And Composure. I wanna say I listen to a lot of Freethrow cause I can’t listen to Say Anything anymore, cause they’re cringe.

Mike: Honestly, I saw them for their 20 year anniversary, with Israel Boyd, and like– I had fun, but I’m disappointed by it.

Xavier: Gauge The Way is also sick.

Kealty: Oh, also, The Wonder Years, Soupy has my heart. I say this piece all the time, but I’m so tired of like, Blink-182 singing about jacking off when they’re all fifty years old, like grow up. The Wonder Years have aged gracefully, I feel.

DS: They have one good thing and they’re not gonna stop.

Kealty: They had songs about being sad and lonely, and now he sings about being sad but being strong for his wife and kids. I feel like that’s beautiful.

Mike: As an almost thirty-year old man, I feel like I can relate to that still. Yes, like, give me my pop-punk, but I wanna relate to the lyrics. I don’t wanna be like, “And she left me at prom,” I don’t remember, I never went to prom, and that was also twelve years ago, bro, I don’t know.

DS: Yeah, like, you hit a point with the music that you listen to and you say “fuck, this isn’t for me anymore.” But the people who make it are still making the same way they’ve been making it for all these years and you ask “what are you doing?”

Mike: It was so long ago for you, over twenty years, just let it go.

Kealty: I also really like August Burns Red but it does not inspire my music. I am not a metal musician.

DS: That was one of the things I really liked about [your album] Reject was that it starts in this very melodic hardcore space, kind of grungy, and by the end of the album it’s really hardcore punk. Was there a reason or an inspiration for it, because there’s a full gradient along the album.

Kealty: I love hearing interpretations of our art. I don’t think we intended to do that with the writing, but we’ve always kind of just wrote what we feel like writing.

Xavier: I like to say what we write is just a capsule in time of how we feel and Everything that’s going on in our lives at that moment.

Kealty: Yes, exactly.

Mike: Which is sometimes why, not in a bad way, sometimes we hold on to songs for a while. Not that we don’t like the song, but like, “This song’s different for me now.”

Kealty: It needs more time to cook.

Xavier: It needs to not suck.

Kealty: Yeah, like, for example Avalon messaged on an Instagram story about playing “Joke At A Funeral.” Xavier actually wrote that in like, 2016 as a solo song, didn’t like how it came out, and then we sat on it for a few years. And then we said, I guess we’re gonna release it as an Alliteration song. And one of the songs on the LP we just recorded, “Bunny”, was written around the same time that was written and now we’re comfortable with it.

DS: So there’s a process.

Mike: I think we’re getting a lot better about that.

Xavier: We’ve either written things, and then liked it, and then released it or we’ve written things, didn’t like it, and forgot how to play it.

Mike: We’ve been official with how we write things, like–

Xavier: Where’s the poop song?!

Mike: Don’t talk about that, put that down.

Xavier: where’s the poop song?

Mike: Put that down! Put that down.

Kealty: we’ll come back to it, we’re sitting on it. It’s gotta ripen.

DS: It’s gotta ferment.

Mike: Yes, exactly.

Kealty: I think I’m getting better, but Xavier has a quicker process.

DS: How long have you guys been writing? Do you write fiction?

Mike: I was a game master for a Dungeons and Dragons, briefly, got all my friends into it, then they stopped playing without me, in a good way, in a good way. All my friends who went to the LEGO movie without me, fuck you, I put the idea out there.

Kealty: In my defense I was DMing for a year or two, and Mike was in the group, and everyone stopped showing up, so I stopped hosting it.

DS: That’s how it goes!

Kealty: It happened cause of COVID. But outside of music, in terms of creativity, I do more painting and diorama building. I like building miniatures for Dungeons and Dragons, I think it’s nice to have DnD as an excuse for your creative outlet. Cause it’s like, “You’re really busy and have all this stuff to do, you have no time to be creative,” but I can go “you’re running DnD later this week so you should probably paint it.”

Xavier: I have my own solo project, @xavier_ayy follow me baby, aye, I started a producer account trying to do a more Kenny Beats type thing, we’ll see how far that goes. I’m trying to play with other bands but it’s flaky, cause musicians are flaky. I know from experience.

Mike: We’ve all done it.

Kealty: I started casually playing in a cover band with my coworkers, we don’t gig. We just kind of jam. It’s fun to meet once a month with a bunch of 45 year old dudes and play like, Sweet Child of Mine or Sum-41. There’s a couple people my age, a couple people like fifty, so it’s a give and take. I wanna start doing carpentry but that’s expensive and I don’t have enough space.

Mike: This is news! This is news!

Kealty: yeah, it’s calling to me.

Mike: I wanted to try blacksmithing, but that’s tough. Recently I did track down an embroidery machine, and for awhile I was doing all the embroidery stuff we had but the machine I had crapped out on me. I managed to track down another machine, and that is coming back, so if anyone embroidery stuff I’ll do it for the love.

Kealty: Hit my mans up, he’s gotta pay that machine off. We also do our own screen printing for merch, and I also do that for friends’ bands.

Mike: And if you wanna hang out and have me cook for you, I’ll do that. I was a chef for a while and I want to get back into it. It’s my love language.

DS: You guys have been on the scene for so long, do you have any major inspirations? Anyone you look up to in the area?

Xavier: Take One Car where’s that fourth album! Where’s that fourth album godamn it!

MIke: They haven’t released since 2012.

Xavier: One Fell Swoop, that’s dating myself but I don’t give a fuck, they were dope.

M: Ourselves, Ourselves was dope too.

Kealty: There was this band from Albany that came here a couple times called Artisan. They were a melodic hardcore band (Mike: They were so cool.) There was also this other melodic hardcore band from Connecticut I like called Homestead. Those guys are good friends, if they ever formed another band and wanted to gig we’d be so down.

Mike: I hope they hear this, honestly.

Kealty: I saw Luke and another guy opened an ice cream shop.

Mike: I remember that. “Yeah, I gotta go help my family with, like, an ice cream shop.” And I was like, that’s the most wholesome thing, you do that.

Kealty: These christcore bands just be wholesome outside y’know.

Mike: Who’da thunk! The most violent mosh pits you’ve ever seen, terrifying vocals, and then like, “yeah, when I’m not doing this, I’m saving puppies.”

DS: “I love my family!”

Mike: “I love everything, I love cats, I love dogs, I love all the little animals. And I love watching sweaty people throw themselves against each other in a bloody mess.”

DS: What else are you gonna do on a Saturday night, really.

Mike: It’s the best thing to do, really.

DS: Or on a Thursday.

Kealty: Yeah, it is a Thursday. Tonight’s show is on a Thursday, for context. I think one of the things I liked most from our early years was like, I liked seeing people go crazy for my friends bands, and then kind of made me hungry too. Like even though they were all younger than me I looked up to Crosscheck. Seeing how they made everyone go insane made me think I wanted to do that one day.

DS: I think you’ve got that.

Kealty: Yeah we’ve definitely got there.

DS: You’re pretty primo on the local scene.

Kealty: I think we’re definitely scene elders at this point.

Mike: definitely.

Kealty: so for us at the time, scene elders were like all the oldheads in HVHC bands but like their individual bands didn’t stick around but the same guys did (Xavier:Where’s that fourth album!) so like, Take One Car, Ourselves, and a coupel others were the elders. But my question to you Avalon is, who do you, for your perspective, see as the scene elders. Aside from us.

DS (Avalon): You guys, Scott from DXPC Live, there’s definitely Ovid [the owner of the bar] because he knows everyone, Noelle at Doors at Seven and all the people who crew with her. I table at shows sometimes, to give away free clothes, and they’re like “C’mon! Come do it!” and it’s cool butI didn’t think it would be this easy. No Momentum fucking definitely. The Getoffs maybe not but they definitely have the vibe.

Kealty: When were on the Reduce Reuse Recycle show they were on our radar, and that was like two years ago.

DS (Avalon): And I heard that they were gonna breakup soon, maybe.

Kealty: Oh really?

DS (Avalon): yeah but I heard that when I was fucked up so it might be wrong. I’m not super sober half the time I’m here, not alcohol, so it mightbe wrong. It’s crazy, I’ve benn to more bars after I stopped drinking then when I did drink.

Mike: The DIY scene has a way of bringing you to bars like that.

DS: Yeah, exactly. Now, lemme get a picture of all three of you… Now kiss.

Kealty: I think the best genre of Alliteration picture is me and Mike freaking out Xavier.

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DS Record Radar Alert: Ratbones’ new album “Spaghettification” out this Friday on Mom’s Basement & I Buy Records

We’re hot on the heels of the digital release of Italian Ramonescore band Ratbones’ brand new album Spaghettification – out now and streaming on Bandcamp! Our friends at Mom’s Basement Records here in the states and I Buy Records over in Italy will be releasing the album on vinyl and CD this Friday, April 18th; […]

We’re hot on the heels of the digital release of Italian Ramonescore band Ratbones’ brand new album Spaghettification out now and streaming on Bandcamp! Our friends at Mom’s Basement Records here in the states and I Buy Records over in Italy will be releasing the album on vinyl and CD this Friday, April 18th; the day otherwise known as tomorrow!

On this special 🚨 Record Radar Alert 🚨 we’re thrilled to bring you the exclusive(!) world premiere(!!!) of all three color variants you’ll be able to grab the record on. These include Scoffera Sky Translucent Turquoise, Yellow Titania Tint, Green Dargos with Black Splatter – limited to 100 copies each! Feast your eyes upon them below and set a reminder to grab the record at noon eastern tomorrow.

A few other fun facts about Spaghettification before I let you go: It’s a concept album about aliens and cool sci-fi shit! It features guest vocals from Lucy Ellis of Lucy & The Rats and Pat Termite from the Beatnik Termites! And most importantly it’s fuckin bad ass!

‘MERICANS BUY HERE

ITALIANOS BUY HERE

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DS Book Club: “Room 100: Sid, Nancy, and the Night Punk Rock Died” by Jesse P. Pollack

Plenty of stories have come out of punk rock throughout the years, but none have received the attention that the story of Sid and Nancy has. Sometimes dubbed punk rock’s Romeo and Juliet, their relationship is often shown as turbulent as the scene it came from. Most famously depicted in Alex Cox’s Sid and Nancy, […]

Plenty of stories have come out of punk rock throughout the years, but none have received the attention that the story of Sid and Nancy has. Sometimes dubbed punk rock’s Romeo and Juliet, their relationship is often shown as turbulent as the scene it came from. Most famously depicted in Alex Cox’s Sid and Nancy, the film gives a hyperbolized overview of the tumultuous couple and the uproar it caused with the Sex Pistols‘ accelerated disintegration. Jesse P. Pollack’s book Room 100: Sid, Nancy, and the Night Punk Rock Died, does its best to set the stage for the story of the first rock star convicted of murder.

While there have been documentaries, dramatizations, and true crime TV shows about the night of Nancy Spungen’s death and Sid’s subsequent overdose, they have felt very scant. This book doesn’t speak in facts as much as it does witness accounts. Pollack’s chapters focus on one aspect of the killing and then stack up witness accounts next to each other. Everyone gives their side of the story; Pollack leaves in the contradictions and differences between each interviewee, even putting their direct responses together.

There is a short prologue describing the Sex Pistols’ on-stage implosion at their last gig in San Francisco. From there, it alternates chapters, back and forth between Nancy’s murder and the histories of Sid and Nancy. As with most true crime books, it is padded with short biographies of some of those involved, starting with Sid Vicious’s mother, but it doesn’t overdo it. These parts are succinct enough to avoid sounding like a textbook.

We learn about the understandably rough pasts of our subjects and get the history of the Sex Pistols, from Sid’s entry into the band through everything leading back to the prologue and their ill-fated twelve days on the road in the US, as well as the aftermath and the four months between Nancy’s and Sid’s deaths. If you thought the story was straightforward, Pollack’s book presents enough evidence to show there is much more to it.

My one complaint, and this is more of the true crime genre than Pollack’s book, is that there are photos for reference, including crime scene photos and photos of other suspects. It does that thing that true crime books do, placing all the pictures in the middle of the book, leaving the context for only half the pictures you have read about.

While my younger self loved the raw emotion of Cox’s telling Sid and Nancy, my older self has settled into detective and true crime stories and finds these details of the story more interesting now. It is a true crime book, full of dense retellings pieced together by evidence and small print. It’s not exactly a tough read, but the amount of information sometimes thrown at you regarding the case can be overwhelming. It was smart of Pollack to break up the chapters the way he did. Pollack pulls on the strings with the possibility of other suspects.

I know many of these things are cornerstones of true crime novels, but Pollack’s presentation of Nancy’s killing has more twists and turns than you would expect. If you thought Kurt Cobain’s death warranted an investigation, Nancy’s has just as many unanswered questions. Jesse P. Pollack spent six years going through mountains of evidence and transcripts, and the work has paid off. Room 100: Sid, Nancy, and the Night Punk Rock Died walks the line between true crime and rock history book seamlessly. The book is available here for purchase.

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DS Record Radar: This Week in Punk Vinyl (Green Day, Refused, My Chemical Romance, Rabies & More!)

Greetings, and welcome to the Dying Scene Record Radar. If it’s your first time here, thank you for joining us! This is the weekly* column where we cover all things punk rock vinyl; new releases, reissues… you name it, we’ve probably got it. Kick off your shoes, pull up a chair, crack open a cold […]

Greetings, and welcome to the Dying Scene Record Radar. If it’s your first time here, thank you for joining us! This is the weekly* column where we cover all things punk rock vinyl; new releases, reissues… you name it, we’ve probably got it. Kick off your shoes, pull up a chair, crack open a cold one, and break out those wallets, because it’s go time. Let’s get into it!

Check out the video edition of this week’s Record Radar, presented by Punk Rock Radar:

Up first we’ve got Czech skate punks Rabies with their brand new record High on Sugar, due out May 15th. Check out the new single “MTV” down there 👇 and pre-order the record on black wax from Punk Rock Radar (US) and the band’s webstore in Europe.

Also coming out next month on Punk Rock Radar, it’s the new LP from Madrid, Spain’s WEAK! Strangers At Home is the band’s third full-length album and it’s available to pre-order now on orange and/or black vinyl from Punk Rock Radar here in the states, as well as La Agonia De Vivir in Spain, Morning Wood Records in the Netherlands, and Exabrupto Records in Mexico.

Refused is currently rolling off into the sunset on their final tour and they’re also releasing a “Final Version” of 1994’s This Just Might Be… the Truth. This reissue comes with bonus LP featuring a full album’s worth of previously unreleased demos from 1993. They’re also repressing Everlasting on “red gold” colored vinyl and Songs to Fan the Flames of Discontent on a beautiful “sparkle/starlight” variant. And finally, they’re re-releasing all three records on cassette! Send your money here.

Laura Jane Grace has a new record called Adventure Club due out July 18th and there are a bunch of beautiful color variants for you to choose from – or you can do the smart thing and just buy all of them! Why choose? You can find links to where you can pre-order all of the variants right here.

The good people at Revelation Records are releasing deluxe editions of all three Nerve Agents records. 1998’s self-titled LP and 2000’s Days of the White Owl have been out of print for over a decade, and this is the first time 2001’s The Butterfly Collection has ever been reissued. In other words, this is fuckin YUGE! Get all three records here.

Gainesville Rock City’s You Vandal have signed on with Euclid Place Records for the release of their brand new record This is Where People Come to Die, due out May 23rd and limited to 100 copies on beautiful transparent blue splatter colored vinyl. Check out the lead single “Feeling Zen -or- Covered in Shit” down below and pre-order the record here.

The Smoking Popes’ just released a brand new record called Lovely Stuff and you can get it on three two(!) color variants right here. I’m late to the draw on this one and the cool-ass Sweet Tart variant is already sold out. Oops!

Here’s a must have for the discerning pop-punk appreciator. Mike Erg! Grath Madden! A bunch of the other usual suspects! It’s Whimysland! with their new 7″ Bounty Bay, out now on Bloated Kat and Worst Idea Records here in the states, Stardbumb Records in Europe, and Waterslide Records in Japan. Available on “Bounty Bay Blue” colored vinyl and black wax. This shit is bad ass!

New Found Glory’s From the Screen to Your Stereo covers album is getting a 25th Anniversary reissue from Drive-Thru Records, with new cover art and three color variants to choose from. Get it here.

Just shy of its 40th anniversary (and out of print for as long), 7Seconds’ New Wind is getting a big time reissue thanks to Trust Records. The record has been remastered and comes with a 24-page book and – more notably – a bonus LP with a totally reimagined version of the album called Change In My Head, featuring two previously unreleased tracks. There are two variants up for pre-order on the Trust Records store, along with 7Seconds store exclusive, Revelation Records exclusive, and what looks like the retail variant on purple colored vinyl you can get on good ol Amazon.com.

Useless ID’s No Vacation from the World is being released on vinyl for the first time ever, 22 years after its original release on the beloved CD format (CD means “compact disc” btw for those not in the trade 😉). Get it now on yellow colored vinyl!

Green Day is stealing a page from Blink 182’s playbook double dipping with a deluxe edition of a record that only came out a year ago. Saviors (édition de luxe) is a 2xLP set featuring 5 brand new bonus tracks and acoustic versions of 2 of the worst songs on the record! There are two variants – clear w/ pink splatter & pink w/ white splatter – each of which is supposedly limited to 2,500 copies. Either Green Day’s sales are down yuge or that’s bullshit because I find it hard to believe these haven’t sold out in a full-ass week. ANYWHO! You can get it here.

I told you about this big time reissue a few weeks ago, but it’s time to pay the piper now because it’s finally up for pre-order. The Gamits! Endorsed By You! 25th Anniversary! Featuring a resequenced tracklis and a handful of bonus live recordings, this is due out May 9th and you can pre-order it on yellow and/or green colored vinyl right here.

A year after its digital release, Quebec melodic punks XXsmile’s self-titled debut album makes its way to vinyl with an ultra-limited pressing of 100 copies on Lemonade Yellow colored wax. Head over to People of Punk Rock Records and snap this one up.

Speaking of old albums being released on vinyl for the first time, Bowling For Soup’s 2016 album Drunk Dynasty is being released on vinyl for the first time! 2022’s Pop Drunk Snot Bread is back in print, too, but that’s been released on vinyl before 😉 Double Helix Records has US exclusive variants up for pre-order on their store, while SBAM Records and Lockjaw Records have you covered in Europe and the UK. SBAM has some fancy uber limited “liquid filled” variants as well.

The almighty Hives have a new record on the way! The Hives Forever Forever The Hives is due out August 29th and you can get it on black & white splatter colored vinyl (signed by the band!), black wax and/or gold vinyl from the band’s webstore. There’s also a silver variant and signed version of the gold variant available exclusively from Rough Trade. Very cool! Check out the fuckin bad ass lead single “Enough is Enough” 👇

UK power pop band The Speedways have a new 7″ singled Visiting Hours coming soon and you can pre-order it now on red, white, blue, and black vinyl right here. Co-released by Stardumb Records FOLC Records, and Beluga Records! Check out the wonderful title track below 👇

We’re putting a bow on this week’s Record Radar with a big time DELUXE! reissue of My Chemical Romance’s 2004 breakout album Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge. There are an absolute fuckload of variants for this thing. It’s got new cover art. It’s remixed! It’s got 4 bonus live tracks. And I don’t care what anyone says this record kicks ass! Find links to pre-order all 5 billion variants rite here.

Well, 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, leave us a comment below, or 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 (or do, I’m not your father). See ya next time!

Wanna catch up on all of our Record Radar posts? Click here and you’ll be taken to a page with all the past entries in the column. Magic!

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DS Show Review: Punk OC: From the Streets to Suburbia at the Fullerton Museum Center Opening 4/5/2025

As punk rock bands in the 1990s were making waves, they would praise the names of the bands that had influenced them or in some cases had been peers. A lot of these bands had either broken up or had a fraction of their original members that were still carrying the torch. The anthems they […]

As punk rock bands in the 1990s were making waves, they would praise the names of the bands that had influenced them or in some cases had been peers. A lot of these bands had either broken up or had a fraction of their original members that were still carrying the torch. The anthems they created became the anthem for the next couple of generations. After years and years of flag-waving, Orange County’s punk rock scene is getting its due at The Fullerton Museum Center with its exhibit, Punk OC: From the Street to Suburbia. On Saturday April 5th, the museum celebrated the opening of the exhibit with a concert featuring two of the scene’s most enduring acts, T.S.O.L. and D.I.

Doors for the sold-out event opened at about 5 p.m. A stage was set up in the plaza to the left of the museum. Each band had a booth set up for merch, along with a few others including one from the Orange County Record Show that had records on hand for people to buy. Vandals bass player, Joe Escalante, DJed a set that was a wide variety of OC punk bands and old punk rock favorites. The night was hosted by comedian Chris Estrada, who quipped that he was who you hired for your punk rock events when Fred Armisen is too expensive. 

The crowd was a grab bag of punk rockers from all walks of life. While it was mostly an older group of people, there were some kids walking around. It’s endearing to see these songs live on in the next generation. It was also cool to see some of my punk rock heroes walking around in the crowd. I’m pretty sure I spotted Mike Patton from Middle Class in the crowd. I was also able to buy T.S.O.L. lead singer Jack Grisham’s newest book, Transmission, from the man himself with a signature and a warning at how insane it is. For those not lucky enough to get a ticket, some people watched from the parking structure adjacent to the Fullerton Museum Plaza. The one complaint I had was that the stage was too short. It was a bit hard to see the bands at some points.

D.I. was the first band to play that night. You won’t find anyone who loves Orange County more than Casey Royer and his crew.  The forty-five-minute set was heavy with songs from their first few albums. Opening with their cover of “Rock and Roll, Part 2,” Royer led the band through a forty-five-minute set that included favorites like “Johnny’s Got a Problem,” “Hang Ten in East Berlin,” and “Amoeba.” While Rikk Agnew did not play, there was definitely love shown for him as D.I. played two of his songs, “Falling Out” and “OC Life,” the latter with a dedication to Fullerton added to its introduction. If it’s been some time since you’ve seen D.I., definitely check out a show.

I have never seen a bad TSOL set. The four remaining members, Jack Grisham, Ron Emory, Mike Roche, and Greg Kuehn always play hard. In the last year or so, Mike Roche has not been able to tour with the band due to his Parkinson’s diagnosis, but does come up for “Code Blue.” Drummer Antonio Hernandez and touring bass player Brandon Reza hold their own with the punk rock veterans. TSOL played a wide variety of songs, but like D.I. mostly stuck with stuff from their older albums. They were able to sneak a song from their anthologized, but anomalous album, A-Side Graffiti. Grisham reminisced about some memories he had of living in Orange County, such as buying some equipment from the pawn shops that once occupied some of the storefronts in downtown Fullerton to being sentenced to county jail at a courthouse down the street for sneaking into Disneyland with machetes to vandalize the park. When one kid told him he could play the drum part for “Dance With Me,” Jack allowed him to come up onstage and play with the band. Despite being a little fiery on the kit, the kid did well. It was a cool moment. 

The line for the exhibit stretched around the building and only died down when the bands started playing. I was able to get in between sets. The exhibit itself is amazing. I haven’t had a chance to visit the Punk Rock Museum in Las Vegas, so I cannot compare it, but the care and love shown for the Orange County scene is evident. Walls are dedicated to classic bands like Middle Class, The Vandals, and Agent Orange, but also bands like the Cadillac Tramps, who are as important but don’t get the credit they deserve. The two biggest Orange County bands, Social Distortion and the Offspring, have spots, too. The exhibit also highlights L.A. bands X and the Circle Jerks, as well as the Agnostic Front and the New York Hardcore scene. The defunct, but still legendary venues of the scene like the Cuckoo’s Nest and Safari Sam’s are mentioned, and there is a section dedicated to Anaheim’s Doll Hut, where most, if not all, of these bands played. The Fullerton Museum Center has really put together a great event, giving these bands their due.

While the Fullerton Museum Center celebrates the genre that caused the city so much trouble in the 1980s, there was a weird vibe. Of course, this event was cool. It’s great that this music is getting recognized for its contribution to the world, but at times it felt like the city officials were treating it as this cute baby being kept at arm’s length after massively shitting itself. City Council member Nick Dunlap said some nice things about the genre and referenced some of the locations listed in Social Distortion’s “Story of My Life,” but it’s not like this was billed as a family event. D.I. played “Chiva,” a song about heroin. T.S.O.L. closed with “Code Blue.” Despite the content of the songs alone, the show was relatively mild. Don’t get me wrong it was amazing to see both of these bands in a space reserved for cover bands playing at the city’s weekly farmer’s market, but punk rock still feels like the red-headed stepchild.

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