Dying Scene Album Review – Latecomer and Fuck Yeah, Dinosaurs – “Sauna Sessions Vol.1”

Pittsburgh, PA’s own Latecomer and Fuck Yeah, Dinosaurs! have recorded The Sauna Sessions Vol. 1, referencing the sauna in the basement of the farmhouse these tracks were recorded. This full length split LP gives us a sample of two punk rock bands who know their crafts and genres well. While each side is different in […]

Pittsburgh, PA’s own Latecomer and Fuck Yeah, Dinosaurs! have recorded The Sauna Sessions Vol. 1, referencing the sauna in the basement of the farmhouse these tracks were recorded. This full length split LP gives us a sample of two punk rock bands who know their crafts and genres well. While each side is different in tone and mood, both sides are a great document of their talent. There’s something for every fan of punk rock between its ten tracks.

Latecomer opens their side with the Ramones-cored “Softage,” lamenting how soft we’ve all become as time has gone on; this song is short and to the point. The next couple of tracks, “Baggage” and “Realage,” are much more melodic, trading those buzzsaw guitars for a bit of crisper and serious tone. These relationship-heavy songs harken back to a 1990s punk rock sound. The buzzsaw guitars return for the very tom drum heavy “The Collapse,” a song dealing with more political and economical issues, but also logistical issues such as bridges collapsing. A cover of the Drifters’ “Last Dance” closes the Latecomer’s side, which was a bit of a head-scratcher at first but ended up being a pretty decent track.

The back half of this LP is completely bonkers. Heavily distorted with insane lyrics, Fuck Yeah, Dinosaurs! give you no time to strap in for the ride that’s ahead of you. The first song, “Numbers,” has the dino-punks imagine a world without numbers and lists the many things we wouldn’t be able to do without them. “Paleo Juggalo” is mostly a cover of the KISS song “Detroit Rock City” with different lyrics. While “Jurassic Drunks” was the title of a previously released album from FYD, the song makes its debut on the Sauna Sessions. “Jurassic Drunks” is the catchiest song about inebriated dinosaurs you will ever hear. This was the first album I’ve heard that has a seventh-inning stretch before jumping into the song “Raptors II Ellis D.” The song tells the story of Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Dock Ellis, who threw a no-hitter against the San Diego Padres while high on LSD. The last track is a full-on cover of Canned Heat’s “Going Up the Country.” While renamed “Dino Country,” I waited for the dinosaur lyrics and they did not get here. I don’t know if I’m disappointed or in awe at how fucking genius it is

Ending each side with a cover was an interesting choice that paid off in the end. Latecomer’s batch of songs are an homage to 1990s punk rock includes a cover that would fit right in with Me First and the Gimme Gimmes, but its preceding songs pull from influences like Face to Face, Lagwagon, and the Queers. FYD’s side is completely unpredictable. Culling sounds from the likes of Dead Kennedys, Dead Milkmen, and Guttermouth, they keep us on our toes by writing bat-shit crazy songs that don’t make you necessarily laugh out loud but do make you stop for a moment. The band has no qualms about how absurd their songs’ subjects are, which is why it’s so fucking good. I hope there’s eventually a Sauna Sessions Vol. 2 because this was Vol. 1 is great. The Sauna Sessions is available here

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DS Record Radar: This Week in Punk Vinyl (Ten Foot Pole, Pridebowl, Let Me Downs, & More!)

Greetings, and welcome to the first Dying Scene Record Radar of 2025! 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 […]

Greetings, and welcome to the first Dying Scene Record Radar of 2025! 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:

An all time skate punk classic, Ten Foot Pole’s Rev is back in print in honor of its 30th birthday (though I am a stickler for the rules and have to point out they’re about a month late for this to qualify as a true 30th anniversary reissue ☝🤓). This was announced a few weeks ago and obviously I’ve been on a holiday hiatus so all but one of the four color variants have sold out. If you’re late to the party the good news is you can still get Rev on green colored vinyl from Smartpunk Records in the US and Thirty Something Records in Europe.

Left Alone’s doing a 10th anniversary reissue of – in my opinion – their best record Harbor Area. Its been remastered and has the subsequent Hate the Day EP tacked on as four bonus tracks. Get it on black wax right here. Left Alone just finished recording a new record, too, so look out for that!

Reprise Records continues to milk the absolute fuck out of the Dookie 30th anniversary. This time they’re dipping into the fart huffing audiophile crowd’s wallets with a “One-Step Edition” from Because Sound Matters. Now, I’m not sure how much overlap there is between Green Day’s target audience and fart huffing audiophiles; I haven’t looked at the census data. However, there doesn’t seem to be much demand considering they did the same thing for American Idiot a few months ago and that’s still readily available everywhere despite being “limited” to 3,000 copies (as the Dookie one is). Anyway! The price on this one: $119.99. Click this link to part with you money, if you wish.

Enough talk about old music, let’s talk about new music for a brief moment. A few weeks ago the sacred pages of DyingScene.com were graced with an exclusive premiere from Tacoma, Washington punk trio the Let Me Downs, as we had the distinct honor of bringing the music video for their brand new single “One More Round” into this world. The track’s off their upcoming record North By Southwest, due out January 23rd on Felony Records. Head over here to pre-order it on some bad ass color variants!

A cassette release infiltrates the Record Radar once again; this time it’s a new album from Oregon’s Abolitionist titled The Long Slide. It’s kinda post-punk ish with drum machines and synths and shit. Limited to 50 hand numbered tapes btw. You can listen to the whole thing and grab the cassette for just 7 bucks on Bandcamp.

Another cassette? On my Record Radar? Simply blasphemous. Previously available to purchase on vinyl and compact disc, Coffin Curse is bringing their yuge NOFX tribute comp I Heard They Broke Up!! to yet another format with a cassette release! This is limited to 200 copies and there are 60+ tracks so it’s a double cassette set. Available exclusively at Tapehead City!

Pridebowl’s 2024 reunion show at Quebec’s Red Bridge Fest has been immortalized as a live record thanks to People of Punk Rock Records. You can get Picking Up the Pieces: Pridebowl Live at The Mill on three color variants – limited to 100 copies each – right here. The whole record’s streaming now, too, and it sounds fantastic:

French melodic punk veterans Uncommonmenfrommars’ Noise Pollution just turned 20 years old and to celebrate its been released on vinyl for the first time ever! It’s also worth noting the album has been remastered by Jason Livermore at the Blasting Room. You can get it on beautiful orange w/ yellow and black splatter colored vinyl from Kicking Records. A yellow w/ orange blob variant also supposedly exists, but I haven’t seen that available to purchase anywhere.

The first pressing of Mustard Plug’s new EP Hey! sold out pretty quick so they’ve issued a second pressing on “Rude Boy Blue” colored vinyl. It’s limited to 300 copies, as the first pressing was, and you can pick it up 😉 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 Interview: Jim Lindberg on Black Pacific, the state of the world, and the looming threat of A.I.

Feature Photo Credit: Brent Broza Jim Lindberg has been a staple in the punk scene for a long time. From his many years in Pennywise to his book, “Punk Rock Dad: No Rules, Just Real Life,” his music has become the soundtrack for surfing and skateboarding with some mainstream success. Throughout it all, Jim has […]

Feature Photo Credit: Brent Broza

Jim Lindberg has been a staple in the punk scene for a long time. From his many years in Pennywise to his book, “Punk Rock Dad: No Rules, Just Real Life,” his music has become the soundtrack for surfing and skateboarding with some mainstream success. Throughout it all, Jim has maintained the ethos and values synonymous with punk rock. His presence has made an indelible mark on the scene.

This year, Jim released a new album titled Here Comes Our Wave with his side project Black Pacific. From its thematically familiar front side to the more emotional and therapeutic second half, Jim has released an amazing personal record. We caught up with Jim and talked about making the album and the looming threat of A.I.

Dying Scene: I really love the Black Pacific album. How did it come together? I know you mentioned you had a box of tapes. Was it a COVID project?

Lindberg: A lot of it is a lot older than COVID, to be totally honest. Some of the songs go all the way back to 2003, 2004. A few of the songs were written when I was out of Pennywise for a while with Alan (Vega) from the Black Pacific. He worked on all of the demos with me at the time, and so that’s why I was thinking it would be best to release it under the name Black Pacific. A lot of them have been around for a while. The first three or four songs on the first side were songs that were pitched to Pennywise to be potential songs, but they weren’t right for whatever reason over the years.

Last year, actually the year before last, I told the guys, I want to record these songs and kind of produce them myself. If they wanted them, we could record them, but if they didn’t want to do it that way, I would just put them out myself. So, I just decided to do it that way. A lot of them are pretty old songs, and they’ve kind of been waiting to be released for a while now. I’m not getting any younger, as you can tell, so I knew it was time to get it out.

I’ve been writing since I was 12 years old. So I’ve always known some songs are right for Pennywise. Some songs are more like they don’t fit that target that Pennywise has of being like ’90s Southern California skate punk. You know, and that doesn’t mean it’s not a good song. It’s just that it’s not appropriate for our specific sound. So that’s why I always knew I had this batch of songs that, at some point, I’d want to put out. And I just got to the stage where I was like, “Look, I want to start recording all these songs that I have and get them out there, whether they are released on a record label or I put them out myself or whatever happens.” And I plan on continuing to do that. I still have a ton more cassette tapes to go through.

Dying Scene: That’s awesome. Do you have a way to tell if it’s a Black Pacific song or an acoustic song?

Lindberg: It’s just kind of like a feel, you know, I can tell pretty much right off that something is too pop punk for Pennywise or if something is kind of more personal in nature when it comes to the themes of the songs. We’re not going to be writing any love songs or reggae songs in Pennywise anytime soon. I kind of keep the ones that stray from the Pennywise sound off to myself, but even though there’s times where there could be a song that sounds like Southern California skate punk, but for whatever reason, the other guys in the band don’t want to do it. It doesn’t mean I don’t want to put the song out. I want to put these songs out and let people hear them.

Dying Scene: I understand. You just got those projects you just want to get to.

Lindberg: I got a whole list of projects I want to get to if I only have the time.

Dying Scene: Same. You try to get to everything.

Lindberg: Yeah, it’s good to be busy, though.

Dying Scene: The first side of the album is very political. You know with “I Think I’m Paranoid,” and “No Fun,” and “Here We Come.” Was it intentional to make it more political on the front side?

Lindberg: I think once it came down to sequencing the record, I knew that “I Think I’m Paranoid” was going to be the lead-off single because it is so pertinent to what was going on in the political atmosphere right now. It was back in 2004 when I wrote about all the things that we should be paranoid about. When you consider it was just past the 9-11 event happened. We were in an Iraq war, we had killer bees coming over the border, we had all kinds of carnage going on in the world. After COVID, hate crimes, militias, Antifa, and everything going on there, it only added fuel to the fire to make that the lead-off single.

Also, the various wars going on and all the calamity that is being placed on innocent civilians around the world. I definitely have opinions on that. I wanted to put my thoughts on what’s going on in the world right up at the front of the album. And then later on, the second half of the album kind of expresses my desire, I think everyone has that they wish we could just be rid of it. I mean, the fact that we’re all still in 2024 and dealing with mindless violence and perpetual war is disgusting. I hear these cable TV news channels always using the term “disgusting” about different morality issues. What’s disgusting to me is that children are being bombed around the world and in a supposedly enlightened society, it’s the wealthy corporations, arms dealers, and the greed of international conglomerates that are perpetuating this. I definitely wanted to put that on the front half of the album. Then the second half is anyone’s response to want to sail away, float away from it. Take off with my friends and family and go to some desert island somewhere and get the fuck away from the madness.

Dying Scene: It was interesting to hear the back half of the album with those kinds of songs filtered through you, like “Float Away.” It’s not a traditional love song, but I really like it. “Best Day Ever” was a really nice, reflective song. We’re a big therapy family in my house. So, I very much appreciated this back side of the album.

Lindberg: “Best Day Ever” was actually the very first song that Alan and I played together. It was the first song that I wrote after leaving Pennywise and deciding, okay, I want to write something different. The odd part is that the first few songs on the album are actually songs that I wanted to produce with Pennywise, but the second half was more the direction that I wanted to go. I wanted to play kind of more bouncy, mid-tempo, not necessarily grunge rock, but more in the vein of Everclear or Jawbreaker or Pegboy, those types of bands. I still had a few songs, you know, that were super fast. And I was like, well, why can’t I put a fast song and a mid-tempo song on there? It doesn’t always have to be a million miles an hour and it doesn’t always have to be an anthemic fight song.

I used drop D tuning on several songs with the Black Pacific. It just gives me the opportunity to try different things that I can’t really do in Pennywise. I wrote a lot of songs on guitar for Pennywise, and that was really important for me as well because I don’t think it’s really out there how much guitar stuff I wrote for Pennywise over the years. On all of our albums, we just put “written by Pennywise.” We don’t say who wrote what.

Dying Scene: I think people assume parts are written by whoever’s assigned to what they play in the band. Part of what I like about “No Fun” was that it felt like Fear’s “Let’s Have a War,” if it was a poppier song, and I mean that in the best way possible.

Lindberg: [laughs] You know, it is, it’s really ridiculous. And there’s a Bad Religion song that comes to mind, “Let Them Eat War.”

Dying Scene: That’s a good one, too.

Lindberg: A great song that is very synonymous with what I’m trying to get out there. It’s these sociopathic leaders that are just so starved for power and maintaining power. They’re taking it out on the heads of regular working people. I mean, look what happened when Russia invaded the Ukraine. You had thousands of Russian citizens taking to the streets. And what happened to them? They all got beaten up and put in prison for protesting an illegal war. If you don’t think that’s not possible in the States, you’re fooling yourself. That’s what I wanted to get across. Power unchecked will always keep building. It’s just going to keep going. These people aren’t going to stop until they’ve killed everyone. They won’t be happy until they’ve wiped everyone out. Everyone is a combatant. You know, you can imagine it. It’s like a war machine that’s eating itself. It’s hard to watch and hard to stomach to see the effect it has on innocent lives. I have friends that are from the Ukraine and they can tell you point blank the type of horrors that their neighborhoods have experienced, but for some reason, all we care about over here is what’s happening on TMZ and not what’s happening on the real news. I think I’ve tried to have both sides on the album, a little bit of angst and a little bit of resignation.

Dying Scene: I also really liked “Here We Come.”

Lindberg: Anyone that follows me on Instagram knows that I’m constantly posting the latest A.I. developments. Speaking of being paranoid, there’s nothing I’m not more paranoid about than the development of A.I. Just to make it that much scarier, I posted something the other day of what the problem they’re discovering now is you can do prompts to A.I. that basically says, “Do my command and then don’t let anything stop you from carrying it out.” It can be that simple of a command of just telling the machine don’t let anyone tell you that this is wrong. It’s crazy to imagine that and the computer followed the order. It circumvented all these different rules of the task that it was given. The A.I. automatically decided on its own to circumvent the rules to complete the task. So on a global level, that’s horrifying.

Dying Scene: Yeah, it’s not like there weren’t movies made in the last forty years warning us about all of this.

Lindberg: I know exactly. It’s not like they didn’t do this already. How many Terminator movies were there?

Dying Scene: About four or five, at least.

Lindberg: It’s crazy. It’s almost like that 98 Mute album. It’s like a slow-motion riot; you can see it unfolding. When I was writing the song “Here We Come,” I was like “Is this too on the nose? Is this too much like in the news right now? Is this cheesy?” But I don’t think that you can edit yourself in that way if there’s something you feel strongly about in a song. I have three daughters and I want a better world for them when they grow up. I’m very concerned that A.I. is going to take all these jobs out of the market. If they can come up with ways to circumvent different laws and rules, why can’t they do that in the finance world? Why can’t they do that in the military world? The medical world, as well. For example, I mean, I hate to be a fear monger, but why can’t it just say, “Hey, go rob a bank digitally and don’t let anyone stop you?” You know, go release everyone’s medical records and don’t let anyone stop you. Do any number of things and don’t let anyone stop you. It’s like it’s crazy to imagine all the havoc that could be enacted on civilization with a dumb little computer that we’re communicating over right now. [addressing the computer] Yeah, I didn’t mean that.

Dying Scene: [laughs] I use it for punctuation. That’s all I feel like I need it for.

Lindberg: It’s only good for your home robot to do things like vacuum the floors and clean up your punctuation. It shouldn’t be starting world wars.

Dying Scene: Yeah, but even that robot vacuum is going to just map your house out for the Terminators.

Lindberg: [laughs] That’s all it’s doing. That’s why I posted that video of that escaped vacuum cleaner that ran out of the house during an earthquake or something like that. And that was the start of the Terminator right there. That was the first guy that escaped the house.

Dying Scene: It’s getting better at what it can do. Like every time you hear about it, it’s getting that much closer just to turning into murder bots.

Lindberg: I know, like these drones that they’re showing over New Jersey on the last few days of like, that’s a robot. I think they’ve shown like all these fleets of drones that they have in China now. Like, imagine that we’re all sitting here and all of a sudden there’s a fleet of drones over your house. You know, what are you going to do about that?

Dying Scene: Yeah, duck? I mean, I don’t know.

Lindberg: [laughs] You don’t have basements out here in California.

Dying Scene: Are you guys going to tour any Black Pacific in the next coming year?

Lindberg: We got a couple offers, but we [Pennywise] just did two long tours with the Dropkick Murphys and then we’ve got a bunch of stuff lined up for 2025. Pennywise always comes first. For the time being, it’ll maybe do a one off show here and there, no big touring plans. I definitely hope to get back on stage with the guys again. They were all super fun to play with and really great guys. Alan, especially, he’s been great to work with and is always really cool. So I’d love to play live with them again. We sure had a great time together.

Dying Scene: My kids were born around that time, so I just didn’t have a chance to see Black Pacific the first time around.

Lindberg: Yeah, it was pretty quick. We did a tour of Europe and a tour of Canada with Rise Against. We did some shows with Flogging Molly that were all great. We had a super fun time playing a few festivals in Europe and things like that. I really enjoy playing guitar on stage. I like it better than just singing. So yeah, I would love to have the opportunity to break out the guitar on stage again.

Dying Scene: Nice. You said some of the songs were written for Pennywise. Did you ever offer any of these songs to any other bands? Some of them, like “Won’t Make a Sound” and “Superhero” kind of reminded me of Bad Religion songs.

Lindberg: I’ve thought about that a lot recently because, like I said, I’ve got two boxes full of hour-long cassette tapes. I was talking with John Feldman of Goldfinger and he produces a lot of bands. I was telling him I’ve got so many songs that I know there’s something in there that you can work with. So, I’d love to do more than that, because there’s a lot of times when I write with a specific song or a specific sound in mind. I have a few songs that could be good Rancid songs and I have a song that could be a good NOFX song, if they were still around. I like writing with other bands in mind. So, you never know. Hopefully at some point some of these songs will find a home.

Dying Scene: You can do something like that Stephen Egerton album where he had other people come in and sing them.

Lindberg: I think Mike Watt from Minutemen did a similar thing. He just had a bunch of other singers come in and play the songs. It was called Ball-Hog or Tugboat?. I think he had Eddie Vedder on it and all kinds of people on that album. There’s all kinds of projects out there that I want to do and work with different people. And it’s just fun to kind of spread it around. There’s so many opportunities to jam with people and do different things. So I want to do a lot more of it.

Dying Scene: I hope you do. I went back and listened to the acoustic album and Wraths. I really enjoyed Wraths. I don’t know how I missed that, but that was fucking fantastic.

Lindberg: Thanks. Some of the guys, Steve and Chris, were in a band called 1208, along with the Deviates, who are local bands from around here in the South Bay. They’re also in a band called The Darlings. Steve just sent me a few songs at one point, and said, “Do you know of any singers that would be good for this?” And I said, “Hell, I’ll do it.” It was fun. We did an album and an EP. I posted it a while back and people are like, “What is this? I’d never heard this.” So I guess we got to do a better job of getting the word out on some of this stuff.

Dying Scene: I went to the Grand Long Beach Grand Prix a couple times (2005 and 2008) and watched you guys play. How did that come about?

Lindberg: That was just one of those random things where, you know, probably the promoter or the organizer down there said, “Who’s a popular band in the area?” And someone said, “You should have Pennywise play.” You know, it wasn’t that well thought out, but it ended up being really cool. That was the first show where my friend’s son, who has muscular dystrophy, his name is Cooper. We put this thing together called Cooper’s Cure. And now he’s like 25 years old. And he’s got a band of his own called Poppy Harlow, and they’re killing it. He’s a great songwriter. It’s so cool to see that come full circle to have this kid that was on stage at the Long Beach Grand Prix. Now he’s got his own band and they’re actually really, really good. So it’s rad to see.

Dying Scene: My first show was When the Angel Sing (2000). I remember Pennywise just calling everybody down from the top and saying, “Fuck all this assigned seating.” When we looked back it was just a wave of people from the back of the venue. We get down to the pit and people started pulling rows of seats out.

Lindberg: Yeah, I know that’s gotten us in trouble in the past. So we don’t say anything anymore. It’s no fun being sued by people. These days, we just want everyone to have a nice, safe, fun time. There’s lots of kids coming to the show now. And so I’m the parent of the band now saying to everyone, “Let’s play nice.” And this is why we’re not allowed to have nice things because people act irresponsibly. So I sound like my dad out there.

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Dying Scene Exclusive Show Photo Gallery: Scream at the National Building Museum, Washington, DC

On 22 August, the National Building Museum hosted a Late Night at the Museum which featured DC punk band Scream, a DJ set by Mathias, and the Capital Brutalism Exhibition that featured photos, designs, and blueprints of “ugly” buildings around Washington, DC. The museum venue for a punk show. Let’s hope they do more. DC […]

On 22 August, the National Building Museum hosted a Late Night at the Museum which featured DC punk band Scream, a DJ set by Mathias, and the Capital Brutalism Exhibition that featured photos, designs, and blueprints of “ugly” buildings around Washington, DC. The museum venue for a punk show. Let’s hope they do more.

DC punk band Scream’s current members are Pete Stahl on vox, Franz Stahl on guitar, Skeeter Thompson on bass, Jerry Busher on drums, and Clint Walsh on guitar. Scream put on a killer show. Fans and museum goers were not disappointed. Find them here next.

The National Building Museum set the stage in the middle of the first floor. Before Scream played, the museum screened a photo presentation of Brutalist architecture from around the globe while the DJ Mathias spun a punk and post-punk DJ set.

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DS Staff Picks: Mary’s Top 24 of 2024

2024 has been…a year. Of that I am certain. Luckily, music is the greatest escape so let’s relive some of my favorite moments in punk music this year! We have six of each: songs, albums, concerts and concert photos, so 24 total. So creative. Songs 1. “Act Violently” – SOFT PLAY First up we have […]

2024 has been…a year. Of that I am certain. Luckily, music is the greatest escape so let’s relive some of my favorite moments in punk music this year! We have six of each: songs, albums, concerts and concert photos, so 24 total. So creative.


Songs

1. “Act Violently” – SOFT PLAY

First up we have “Act Violently” by English punk duo SOFT PLAY. This single came off their fourth studio album Heavy Jelly (which we will talk about again later!)


2. “Starburster” – Fontaines D.C.

Irish post-punk band Fontaines D.C. had a big year. They released their fourth album, Romance, on August 23rd. It won The Album Award at the Rolling Stone UK Awards, received a Grammy Awards Nomination for Best Rock Album in addition to a nomination for Best Alternative Music Performance for “Starburster”.


3. “U Should Not Be Doing That” – Amyl and the Sniffers

The follow up album to Amyl and the Sniffer’s largely successful 2021 album Comfort to Me was released on October 25th, titled Cartoon Darkness. “U Should Not Be Doing That” was one of the first singles released from that album. Their world tour for the album release starts in January of 2025!


4. “You Hear Yes” – Destroy Boys

This single was released on August 8th off of Destroy Boy’s Funeral Soundtrack No. 4 album. “You Hear Yes” has the most killer collaboration featuring Kat Moss of Scowl and Missy Dabice of Mannequin Pussy.


5. “Sliding Doors” – Boston Manor

“Sliding Doors” is off of British emo pop punk band Boston Manor’s newest album, Sundiver. I’m always a fan of heavy riffs blended with softer emo vocals; this song still hits hard!


6. “Persona” – GEL

This track is off of GEL’s newest EP released on August 16th under the same name, Persona. Hardcore, aggressive, fast…what’s not to love?

Albums

1. SOFT PLAY – Heavy Jelly

This entire album is one banger after another. Released on July 19th, 2024 with BMG music, Heavy Jelly is the first album SOFT PLAY has put out under their new name (they were formally known as Slaves). Harsh yet catchy, some of my favorite tracks include “Punk’s Dead”, “Act Violently” and “Mirror Muscles”.

2. Drug Church – PRUDE

I first saw post-hardcore band Drug Church at Riot Fest this year and I’ve been a fan ever since. PRUDE is beautifully written and worth listening to beginning to end. Check out a more in depth review of the album here!


3. Knocked Loose – You Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed To

Hardcore band Knocked Loose released this album on May 10, 2024 via Pure Noise Records. The single “Suffocate” features experimental artist Poppy and was nominated in the 67th Grammy Awards for Best Metal Performance. If you’re like me and want to just scream into the void all day, then this album is for you. Knocked Loose also has a killer live show (see below for more on that!)



4. Shellac – To All Trains

Chicago’s noisy post-hardcore band Shellac is brought to you by the one and only Steve Albini, who sadly passed just days before To All Trains was released. The album was recorded over several years and released on May 17th through Touch and Go records. I don’t think this album has been talked about enough. Each song feels like you are anticipating something looming in the shadows, only to be hit with lyrics like “I am the last day of your life, lived beyond all expectation / My wives and concubines are all fecund and pulchritudinous / And I hope that that’s correct, the way that I used ‘pulchritudinous'”.


5. The Cure – Songs of a Lost World 

With an impressive amount of fourteen studio albums under their belt, The Cure released Songs of a Lost World on November 1st, their first in 16 years since 2008’s 4:13 Dream. The atmospherically dark album quickly rose to #1 on the UK Albums chart.


6. The Jesus Lizard – Rack

Fans of Shellac will probably also love The Jesus Lizard. Equally loud and hectic, Rack is their seventh studio album released September 13th on Ipecac Recordings. It is their first studio album release in 26 years since 1998’s Blue. The Jesus Lizard are just as scathingly powerful as ever.


Concerts

I won’t lie, I probably cannot remember every concert I have been to this year because there was so many. Not really a bad problem to have! Here’s six that stood out for me:


1. PJ Harvey at The Salt Shed, Chicago, 9/20/24

I waited so many years for the moment I could finally see PJ Harvey. The show was sold out (of course) and I was absolutely mesmerized with her artistic performance.


2. Knocked Loose at The Aragon Ballroom, Chicago, 11/1/24

The tour for the release of You Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed To had a stacked lineup; DRAIN, Militarie Gun and Danny Brown were at their Chicago stop, all of which were absolutely fire. Knocked Loose recently played on Jimmy Kimmel Live, and while there was some laughable complaints from viewers watching, it is great to see more hardcore/metal representation to larger audiences.


3. OFF! at Lincoln Hall, Chicago, 7/18/24

OFF!’s show at Lincoln Hall was bittersweet; it was a final farewell show for the band and also originally had legendary Steve Albini’s band Shellac on the lineup. Despite the sadness of both of these, it was still a great show and Chicago-local band FACS stepped in to fill in some rather large shoes, and did so wonderfully.


4. Death From Above 1979 at Metro, Chicago, 11/7/24

DFA1979 toured for their 20th anniversary of album You’re a Women, I’m a Machine this year, and will continue the tour into 2025. The Canadian noisy dance punk duo teamed up with another favorite band of mine, garage punk duo Teen Mortgage, to deliver an incredibly fun and energetic performance. I am always blown away by the lighting set up DFA1979 has.


5. Riot Fest, Chicago, 9/20-22

Of course Riot Fest is going to make the list! Every year I have such a fun time and discover new artists that I cannot wait to talk about. Just a few highlights from this year was GEL, Drug Church, Health, the Laura Jane Grace/Catbite mashup performing an Operation Ivy set and…*drumroll*…the John Stamos butter statue.


6. H.O.O.F. at Blue Island Beer Company, Blue Island, 10/19/24

You might have seen a lot about H.O.O.F. here at Dying Scene lately. The Chicago local music festival celebrating the women, femmes, and thems of the punk scene was a huge success this year!


Honorable mention: Chelsea Wolfe at The Vic Theatre, Chicago, 3/19/24

This is an honorable mention because Chelsea Wolfe is more on the goth/doom side of things, not quite punk. However, watching her live was another dream come true. I was fortunate to be able to photograph her as well, check that gallery out here!


Concert Photos

Another category that is hard to narrow down are my favorite concert photos from this year, but let’s try!


DRAIN at The Aragon Ballroom
MEST at 115 Bourbon Street

Bob Vylan at Subterranean
Knocked Loose at The Aragon Ballroom

Jigsaw Youth at The Bottom Lounge
Spiritual Cramp at Riot Fest

Honorable mentions 😉


Needs more concert pics? Check some out here and also throughout Dying Scene! Enjoy the bonus playlist below from all the bands featured here, both new and old hits!


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Dying Scene Book Club – Ian Ellis – “Punk Beyond the Music: Tracing Mutation and Manifestation of the Punk Virus”

Iain Ellis is a senior lecturer in the English department of the University of Kansas. Ellis has released Punk Beyond the Music: Tracing Mutations and Manifestations of the Punk Virus. The text tries to compare punk to a virus with how contagious its spread has been since its introduction. His goal was to find the […]

Iain Ellis is a senior lecturer in the English department of the University of Kansas. Ellis has released Punk Beyond the Music: Tracing Mutations and Manifestations of the Punk Virus. The text tries to compare punk to a virus with how contagious its spread has been since its introduction. His goal was to find the multitudes of punk rock in different aspects and categories. While some of the information presented was accurate, it is very much up for debate whether he reached his actual goal.

Ellis starts with some basic aspects of punk we can mostly agree on: its DIY aesthetic, being an outsider, the symbols, and politics. He also lists some characteristics of punk attitude: anger, frustration, sarcasm, swagger, bluntness, loathing, and hostility. For comparison purposes, he classifies three time periods: the before, during, and after punk. Pre-punk covers anything before the 1970s and proto-punk. Primary punk indicates the time covering the early bands, Ramones, The Clash, Sex Pistols, and the like. Post-punk is a reference to the genre that emerged after the punk explosion but also refers to the time period after those initial bands.

From here, he breaks into chapters and attempts to find punk in various aspects, mostly having to do with the arts. Things like literature, film, visual and performing arts. The Literature section cites authors William Burroughs, Charles Bukowski, and Hunter S. Thompson, who were mostly the outliers of their scene; they don’t acknowledge those scenes. Burroughs was definitely the odd duck of the Beat writers, but Thompson was more in line with the mainstream rock crowd despite his eccentric behavior. Eccentric is being used lightly. The Film section is a run-through of indie darlings like David Lynch, Jim Jarmusch, and John Waters but also explores punk rock movies. Ellis describes these films as Punksploitation. Films that feature punk rockers as characters with bands sometimes making cameos. Films discussed are Jubilee, Rude Boy, Repo Man, Suburbia, and many more are listed. He also lists some other movies that pushed against norms like Rocky Horror Picture Show, but claims Lars Von Trier and Harmony Korine are punk rock because of their extremism.

Some weird sections seem to be grasping at straws or could have possibly been put somewhere else. The Comedy section gives a quick lesson on the rise of alternative comedy and discusses Monty Python and Rik Mayall’s The Young Ones. Some love is thrown to Saturday Night Live, but National Lampoon only gets a few sentences while SCTV gets nothing. You can debate the punk cred of Harvard grads of National Lampoon until you’re blue in the face, but you cannot deny the punk work ethic of how Second City grew. Comedy could have been put under the section of visual or performing arts, but those sections mostly dealt with the art kids of punk rock. Devo, Raymond Pettibon, and James Reid and how their art promoted their corners of punk rock.

A section on politics is a no-brainer. Describing how the reigns of Ronald Reagan in the US and Margaret Thatcher in the UK made the punk rock movement transcend beyond art. A section on business talks about how some indie labels are run. He mentions early punk labels like Crass and Dischord along with the grassroots of Asian Man Records, but completely misses any talk about Epitaph or Fat. The sports section is mostly about skateboarding and its history, but it also tries to link the Beastie Boys’ “Fight for Your Right to Party” to the movement. It also links punk to soccer and hockey in their respective countries of origin and/or popularity. A section for Education briefly mentions Greg Graffin and Milo Aukerman’s doctorate degrees, but also shows us the term Edupunk (Which I think sounds better out loud than actual practice) and details drummer Martin Atkin’s (PiL, NIN, Ministry) class on punk rock that comes complete with a merch table.

The remainder of the book has some sections on fashion, crafts, and comics. The comics section links Robert Crumb’s counterculture art and comics as a pre-punk example, but skims the credit from the seminal Love and Rockets by only crediting Jamie Hernandez and leaving Mario and Gilbert out. Superstar comic writer Grant Morrison gets a mention, as does Detective Comics’ punk rock new wave necromancer John Constantine.

The last two chapters kind of just pick up a grab bag of subjects missing in the previous chapters and go over the punk rock scenes in other countries and listing random punk rock occurrences, such as punk rock’s guest-starring villain of the week roles in 1970s TV shows Quincy M.D. and CHiPs, along with some info on the straight edge movement.

While Ellis’s book may be historically accurate in its timeline, the opinions don’t sit well with me in some places. Especially in its assessment of American Culture. I would surmise this book goes off the theory that punk started in England and not with the Ramones in America. There’s a lot of crossover in information, and with that comes a lot of repeating points. There are multiple references to the Marlon Brando film The Wild One, which doesn’t seem lost considering the generation that started using the term punk probably had admirers of it. It just seems the American examples always seem like an afterthought and are not given the proper analysis.

The text takes big swings in a lot of places but fails to connect when by missing important aspects. That being said, if you are going out on a limb for an aspect like comics or crafts or film, make sure your info is correct. It was frustrating having to stop each time and Google things that didn’t sound right. Here are a few of the inaccuracies found, but it’s probably me being picky. Dates of movies specifically Blue Velvet (1986, not 1980) but also calling or spelling people by their wrong name (Raymond Pettibon, not Richard, and Ian MacKaye, not Ian Mackay). There’s a reference to the Bloodhound Gang being a punk band, and maybe they are in a Dead Milkmen sort of way, but even that is stretching it for me.

What becomes clear is punk wasn’t the new thing people thought it was when it came out in the 1970s; we just gave it a name and a space to be recognized. People have been counter-culture for years, but when the winners write history you can’t always document your accomplishments. Documentation is easier to note as tools become more available. While trickle-down effects don’t work with economics, it works with technology. Books, films, and music have been made by different voices as the technology becomes more accessible to the lower classes. This book’s attempts to collate these documentations would work better if there weren’t many mistakes.

Why so picky about the mistakes? There is a difference between argument and art. This book tries to take a firm stance in its argument of punk and compares it to a virus and, in my opinion, fails. Mistakes give art character. Mistakes make arguments wobbly. Could this be considered art? It can, but then why publish through an academic press? There are plenty of (punk rock) publishers who may have wanted to release this. Or this could have been done DIY and released results on your own, like what was preached for a couple hundred pages in the book. Iain Ellis set out to do a Herculean task but ended up on a fool’s errand. Don’t take my word for it, find out for yourself and purchase here.

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DS Show Review & Galleries: 10th Annual War on X-Mas with The Lawrence Arms, Smoking Popes, Royal Dog, Stay Alive, and American Steel. Chicago (12.06.2024 & 12.07.2024)

The Lawrence Arms once again played host at the War on X-Mas. Dying Scene was in the house for both nights at Metro (a third show was added for December 5th at Cobra Lounge). The band was joined by good friends in fellow Chicago bands, Smoking Popes, Royal Dog, and Still Alive. American Steel, out […]

The Lawrence Arms once again played host at the War on X-Mas. Dying Scene was in the house for both nights at Metro (a third show was added for December 5th at Cobra Lounge). The band was joined by good friends in fellow Chicago bands, Smoking Popes, Royal Dog, and Still Alive. American Steel, out of Oakland, CA, also performed. It was a jolly good time!

Friday


Chicago’s The Lawrence Arms was founded a quarter of a century ago, but it remains as beloved as ever. The 10th Anniversary edition of the band’s annual holiday season event demonstrates it gets better each time. Brendan Kelly, Chris McCaughan, and Neil Hennessy were in top form as they ripped through an extensive set which included “You Are Here,” “Beautiful Things,” “Seventeener (17th and 37th),” “Metropole,” “The YMCA Down the Street From the Clinic,” “Chapter 13: The Hero Appears,” and “Like A Record Player.”

It was a terrific performance and surely filled fans in the jam-packed venue with much cheer.


Smoking Popes, another adored Chicago band, chose seasonally appropriate walk-on music for this event: the iconic “Linus and Lucy” instrumental by Vince Guaraldi Trio. The band members then kicked off their set, telling the crowd they did not want to “Simmer Down.” That’s good because things were just heating up. The blazing set further included “Let’s Hear It for Love,” “Rubella,” “Megan,” and “Gotta Know Right Now.” Smoking Popes also performed an enchanting rendition of “Pure Imagination.” Leslie Bricusse & Anthony Newley composed that wonderful confection specifically for the classic 1971 film Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory. In addition, Scott Lucas of Local H joined the Smoking Popes on stage for “Off My Mind.”

The Brothers Caterer – Josh, Eli, & Matt, along with their “brother from another mother,” Mike Felumlee, once again delivered. This pattern is pretty routine, but their performances never are.


Royal Dog, completing the Chicago trifecta for this evening, gave a high-spirited performance to get the festivities started. Royal Dog, composed of Anthony, Micki, Joey, and Castle, went from a solo project started in 2018 and transformed into a full band in 2023 year. However, the group is certainly leaving a terrific imprint on fan’s senses. This was demonstrated by its high energy set, which included “Pickle,” “Crabbed,” “Worried, Sick,” and “The Deal.”

If you have yet to check the band out, I advise you to do so at your first opportunity. You can thank us later.


Saturday


The Lawrence Arms‘ Saturday night set was also decidedly non-Grinchy as far as length. It was also rollicking as the band tore through “The Devil’s Takin’ Names,” “Light Breathing (Me and Martha Plimpton in a Fancy Elevator),” “Lose Your Illusion 1,” “Alert the Audience!,” “Recovering the Opposable Thumb,” and “Are You There Margaret? It’s Me, God.”

The Lawrence Arms remains on the nice, albeit a bit cheeky, list. Lumps of coal need not be given to this trio.


American Steel, the only non-Chicago band this weekend, hails from Oakland, CA. Composed of Rory Henderson, Ryan Massey, John Peck, and Scott Healy, American Steel has been together since 1995. This event was special and brought back memories for the quartet, as Healy told me days after the show,

The whole weekend was amazing. The Lawrence Arms are like our brothers. We did a 42-show tour where we shared a bus and probably knocked a few years off our lives. The weekend was similar. Many hugs, wives, and partners of bandmates getting to see each other after many years, dinners together, seeing so many old fans and friends. It’s why we still play shows.”

The band, presently on Fat Wreck Chords, gave a muscular performance, powering through a set that included “Emergency House Party,” “Dead and Gone,” “Shrapnel,” “Sons of Avarice,” “Mean Streak,” and “Maria.”

I very much look forward to documenting American Steel again, hopefully, sooner than later.


Still Alive played its second-to-last hometown show to kick off night 2 at Metro. After 15 years, the band’s final show is scheduled for Detroit.

The band’s blistering set included “Trials,” “I Quit,” “Make Melodies,” and “Ransom Note. Still Alive also performed a cover of The Killing Tree’s “Switchblade Architect.”

Post-show, Singer Dan Alfonsi reflected on what the weekend meant to the band,

“It was great sharing a stage with Lawrence Arms and American Steel. They were both great. All of us have been listening to Lawrence Arms and their family tree of bands since high school. We’d see a lot of those bands at Metro, so it was awesome being a part of the evening. Hearing them play “Nebraska” was a highlight for sure. Definitely a bucket list show for Still Alive, and it was an honor to play War on Xmas as one of our last shows.

Alfonsi also told me why he and his bandmates, Mikey Cervenka, Dom Burdi, Ben Standage, and Bryan Schroth, are ready to close this chapter of their musical careers.

We all play in other bands, and we’ll stay occupied with those. Dominick plays in Beat the Smart Kids, Mikey plays in Radar Waves[Alfonsi plays in Flatfoot 56 and Cult Fiend]… Ben plays in Blood People and Whipped, and Bryan is a part of Chart Attack. We may or may not have another ska-related band in the works.

Still Alive will be alive for two more shows: December 27, 2024 as headliner at Cobra Lounge in Chicago, and on December 28, 2024 at Detroit’s The Majestic for Black Christmas.

I have been watching and covering Still Alive for several years. Grateful to the band for the always good time.


The 10th Annual War on X-Mas was, again, a great early gift. Season’s greeting to all and to all, a thank you!

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Dying Scene Show Review: Senses Fail / Saves The Day / Narrow Head (House of Blues Anaheim, CA 12/6/2024)

Warning: Old Man Yells at Cloud. Senses Fail and Saves the Day brought their “New Jersey Vs the World” tour to a sold-out crowd at the Anaheim House of Blues. With Senses Fail being one of my wife’s favorite bands and this show being close to her birthday, we went. I was not excited for […]

Warning: Old Man Yells at Cloud.

Senses Fail and Saves the Day brought their “New Jersey Vs the World” tour to a sold-out crowd at the Anaheim House of Blues. With Senses Fail being one of my wife’s favorite bands and this show being close to her birthday, we went. I was not excited for many reasons, but most of them logistical.

Since the venue moved to the Gardenwalk down the street from its previous home at Downtown Disney, the House of Blues has not been able to find a way to effectively set up the merch table. You have to make the choice: Do you miss getting a good spot or go after the show, waiting at least an extra hour or so to get the leftover merch scraps from the people who didn’t want a good spot? We chose to forego a good spot and get merch. Even with stanchions set up to create a condensed line and clear up traffic in the lobby, getting merch was still a cluster-fucking mess. I was unsure if it was the merch guy’s fault or the venue’s not setting the lines up properly, but my wife fixed it for them.

Once we got to the floor, a screen had been set up on the wall behind where the band’s gear had been set up. Playing ad nauseam was about a minute or so clip of Emo-ish American Apparel models showing off Senses Fail and Saves the Day’s merch, including a plush of the cutesy Grim Reaper that appears as Senses Fail’s mascot. Eventually, a QR code came up for you to scan to enter for a chance to win a trip to New Jersey with singers of both bands, Buddy Nielsen (Senses Fail) and Chris Conley (Saves the Day). Using a clichéd New Jersey image of James Gandolfini as Tony Soprano smoking a cigar inside his pool, the ad then flashes to restaurants and clips of the New Jersey Devils indicating what the prize will include.

Opening support for the “New Jersey vs. the World” tour came from the Houston, Texas, band Narrow Head. Narrow Head sounded like Filter if they were an emo band. While I liked the subtle influences from early emo bands in the music, I couldn’t tell where the first song ended and maybe the second and/or third began. While I’m not so out of touch that I’ve not heard bands do this, there is typically a clear distinction of where that moment is (e.g., the first two tracks off of Ozma’s Rock n Roll Part 3). While they played their instruments well, they sounded stereotypically 2000s emo. Emo, for Emo’s sake. Maybe I just don’t like this era of Emo in general. I didn’t get a lot of energy from this band, but I will take into consideration they were three to four days to the end of a four-month tour.

I don’t think I even know a handful of Saves the Day songs, and at least two of the ones I know are covers. Their set was mostly dominated by a play-through of their 1999 album, Through Being Cool. I have friends who revere this album, but I never saw the appeal. It’s probably one of those things I found too late. Singer Chris Conley is the sole remaining member of the band, and while he did compose the majority of the songs on the album, these anniversary concerts feel more organic when some of those other members are present. Given the list of former members found on Wikipedia, maybe that wasn’t possible, but I digress. As the lights went out, the band walked out to the overture from the movie “Dancer in the Dark,” which was composed by Björk. Conley, clad in a Fugazi shirt, came out and played with his band for a little over an hour. This was my first full listen of Through Being Cool and probably my last. After playing through the album, the band played random hits starting with “At Your Funeral,” but also included “Cars and Calories” before closing with “Nightingale.” I should end this paragraph with: everyone in the band played their instruments well.

Throughout Saves the Day’s set, a guy with huge sideburns stood and flipped them off for the majority of their set. A woman behind us didn’t take too kindly to that gesture and threw a cup of ice at him. After trying to find the guilty party, Sideburns went back to flipping off the band. Once Saves the Day’s set had ended, the woman went over and attacked the guy. The two were separated, with Sideburns going further into the crowd towards the front while the woman went towards the back of the venue. Before Senses Fail started, security came by looking for Sideburns, probably to escort him out. If only there was something unique to identify him. I’m still trying to figure out who was the bigger asshole.

Senses Fail walked out to the whistling sounds of the song “Twisted Nerve.” While it was originally a part of the soundtrack from the 1968 movie of the same name, our generation knows it from the hospital scene in Kill Bill: Volume 1. Buddy Nielsen and crew were there to celebrate their album Let It Enfold You. I was mostly in the same boat as with Saves the Day. I had heard covers that the band played and a few songs from in passing when my wife plays them, but I couldn’t tell you the name of a song without looking up the setlist. Out of the two full albums I heard that night, I enjoyed Let It Enfold You more, but will still probably only hear it in passing. Being down the street from both Disneyland and the Honda Center, home to the Anaheim Ducks, Buddy led the crowd in a chant of quacks halfway through their time on stage. Senses Fail put on a pretty good set. If I am being forced to see a band perform live, they would be fine. At the end of the set, Chris Conley came back out and covered the My Chemical Romance song “Helena,” to which the crowd went crazy, but we left partway through. When you hit your late thirties/early forties, no special closing song is going to outweigh the glory of beating venue traffic.

Overall, it could’ve been worse. I had no real attachment to either of the bands, and at the end of the work week, my tolerance for people in general is low. I’m also probably not the best judge of the popularity of either band, as they had added another show a few days later back at the Anaheim House of Blues. I’m sure if this was your thing, this was a treat.

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Dying Scene Photo Gallery: Smash Records 40th Anniversary Show: Des Demonas, The Goons, Lorelei, NØ Man: The Black Cat, Washington, DC (11/30/2024)

On 30 November, The Black Cat in Washington, DC hosted Smash Records‘ 40th Anniversary with a killer show featuring bands from Des Demonas, The Goons, Lorelei, and NØ Man. Located in the Capital City’s Adams Morgan neighborhood, Smash Records opened its doors in 1984 selling records, clothing and everything in between. It’s still the place […]

On 30 November, The Black Cat in Washington, DC hosted Smash Records‘ 40th Anniversary with a killer show featuring bands from Des Demonas, The Goons, Lorelei, and NØ Man. Located in the Capital City’s Adams Morgan neighborhood, Smash Records opened its doors in 1984 selling records, clothing and everything in between. It’s still the place to go for punk to alternative music. The eclectic showcase kept the night entertaining.

Des Demonas, DC punk band with influences of post punk, funk, blues, Afro-beat, rock, and noise, celebrated the release of their newest album, Apocalyptic Boom! Boom! that was released on 29 November 2024. Des Demonas is comprised of Jacky “Cougar” Abok (vox/percussions), Mark Cisneros (guitar), Paul Vivari (organ/bass) and Matt Gatwood (drums). Be sure to find them here for future shows.

The Goons is a DC hardcore punk band that have played together since the 80’s and played a killer set which generated a circle pit in the middle of The Black Cat. It was great to see the band and the audience having a great time.

If you have a chance to see them, find them here.

Lorelei is a DC indie post-rock trio band with Matt Dingee (guitar), Stephen Gardner (bass), and Davis White (drums). The band performed a blend of post rock and noise rock that was a great in respite after NØ Man show. Follow them here.

NØ Man is a four-piece DC female frontend hardcore punk band with a hint of screamo. The band started the night STRONG! The singer, Maha Shami has an incredible voice that could be heard throughout the venue, band members also included Matt Michel (guitar/vox), Pat Broderick (drums) and Kevin Lamiell (Bass).

The band has raised over $3K since September to help support charities like Gaza Soup Kitchen to help combat famine while providing healthcare and education in Palestine. Find out more about the charity here.

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DS Exclusive: Let Me Downs premiere video from “One More Round”, announce new album “North By Southwest” on Felony Records

Tacoma, Washington punk trio Let Me Downs have teamed up with South Bay California’s Felony Records to release their new album North By Southwest. Due out January 23rd, the album was recorded at Razors Touch Studios in San Diego, CA with Chad Ruiz (Urethane, Skipjack, etc.) and mastered by Scott Hallquist (Ten Foot Pole, DC […]

Tacoma, Washington punk trio Let Me Downs have teamed up with South Bay California’s Felony Records to release their new album North By Southwest. Due out January 23rd, the album was recorded at Razors Touch Studios in San Diego, CA with Chad Ruiz (Urethane, Skipjack, etc.) and mastered by Scott Hallquist (Ten Foot Pole, DC Fallout).

We’re stoked to be exclusively premiering the music video for the album’s lead single “One More Round”. Check it out below! And after you do that, head over to the Felony Records Bandcamp to pre-order North By Southwest on vinyl, CD and/or digital.

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.

“One More Round” was a concept the band and label molded into this final video. It was directed by Felony Ron McIntyre (Director of The Black Pacific – “I Think I’m Paranoid”, Pulley – “Repeat Offender” & Strike Twelve – “Not A Phase”) with Director of Photography Jacob Maltinsky. Chad Ruiz of Urethane and Skipjack plays the main character of the video, and he also produced North by Southwest. It was shot in El Segundo, CA at South Bay Customs which will host Let Me Downs’ LA album release show.

Catch Let Me Downs on tour in 2025! More dates TBA:

1/23- Pub Rock Live- Scottsdale, AZ w/ Mercy Music, Miles to Nowhere, The Ultramatics
1/24- Tower Bar- San Diego, CA w/Urethane, Miles to Nowhere, Punch Card
1/25- South Bay Customs- El Segundo, CA w/Implants, Miles to Nowhere, Empired
2/7- Twilight Cafe & Bar- Portland, OR w/Chaser, Ninjas with Syringes, The Brass
2/8- Funhouse- Seattle, WA w/Chaser, Head Honcho
3/21- Spur Bar- Star Valley, AZ – w/ It’s Fine, Vices To The Grave
3/22- Yucca Tap Room- Tempe, AZ w/Chaser, No Gimmick, It’s Fine

PRE-ORDER THE RECORD!

DO IT!!!

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