Dying Scene Album Review: Doom Scroll – “Pyrrhic Victory”

What better than a deceptively upbeat collection of raucous guitar, mandolin, trumpet and even occasionally a washboard to shine a light on our Insta-Tok-fueled collective existential dread?   In their latest offering, the 4-track EP Pyrrhic Victory, Loveland, Colorado’s Doom Scroll deliver cautionary tales of modern-day electronic disassociation with a healthy dose of ska and […]

What better than a deceptively upbeat collection of raucous guitar, mandolin, trumpet and even occasionally a washboard to shine a light on our Insta-Tok-fueled collective existential dread?  

In their latest offering, the 4-track EP Pyrrhic Victory, Loveland, Colorado’s Doom Scroll deliver cautionary tales of modern-day electronic disassociation with a healthy dose of ska and folk to help the medicine go down.

A uniquely varied crew themselves – Elliot Lozier (We the Heathens and Atrocity Solution) and Taylor Dittman (Broken Bow, Hermit Stew) are joined by Chatterbox and the Latter Day Satanist’s singer-songwriter Micah Butler, Jon Pizarro of the black metal/folk project Dead Work and Marissa Sendejas, who has pursued a longtime solo career and has been a member of CLDS, Chad Hates George and Days N Daze – their collective sound results in an upbeat, addictive collection of songs destined to make you put down the phone or computer and dive into your local mosh pit…with other humans, you know…interacting…in person!

Building on themes from their previous album, Immoral Compass, the first track, “Anoxic,” reminds us that, while the virtual world keeps our minds entertained, it is also void of elements to support human life.  But, lest you fall too hard into a spiral of despair, the delightful mandolin melody suggests that there may still be an iota of hope after all.

“Boss Fight” features Lozier’s brother, Zack, on the trumpet, and a rousing anthem asks us, “When will we see this is all fake? It’s all a show, a masquerade.”  And, again, we’re swept into a unique, circus-like sound that promises a good time can still be had, and damn the Sunday Scaries.

Rest assured, the band’s punk roots run deep, and the track “Felled Spirits” is perhaps the most pessimistic of the bunch, and, appropriately, is also the most hard-core, musically. 

Legend has it that the band played on, even as the Titanic sank. Doom Scroll wants us to know that, though the spoils of human innovation may eventually be our downfall, we might as well enjoy ourselves along the way.   

Pyrrhic Victory will be released October 6th, via Bottles to the Ground, Fat Wreck Chords‘ newest imprint. 

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Dying Scene Photo Gallery: Mustard Plug, The Toasters, Half Past Two, and Malafacha – Reggies, Chicago Illinois (09/07/2023).

Mustard Plug’s ‘Where Did All My Friends Go’ Album Release show with special guests The Toasters, Half Past Two, and Malafacha at Reggies! This entire show is a great showcase of talent using a variety of instruments from horns, bass, guitar, trumpets, vocals…everything sounds RAD and you will end up having a blast! Mustard Plug […]

Mustard Plug’s ‘Where Did All My Friends Go’ Album Release show with special guests The Toasters, Half Past Two, and Malafacha at Reggies! This entire show is a great showcase of talent using a variety of instruments from horns, bass, guitar, trumpets, vocals…everything sounds RAD and you will end up having a blast!


Mustard Plug is a ska punk band from the Midwest specifically Grand Rapids, Michigan. They came to Chicago to promote the release of their new album ‘Where Did All My Friends Go’ (Bad Time Records, 2023). The band consists of vocalist Dave Kirchgessner, trumpeter Brandon Jenison, trombonist Jim Hofer, drummer Nate Cohn, guitarist/vocalist Colin Clive, tenor saxophonist Mark Petz and bassist Greg Witulski. The band have toured all over the world since they formed in 1991from the United States to Europe, Japan, South America and beyond. This ska punk band that will have you “skanking” into the night and having so much fun. Check them out here


The Toasters are one of the original American second-wave ska bands founded in New York in 1981. The band is comprised of vocalist/guitarist Buck, bassist Tim Karns, keyboardist Dave Barry, drummer Art Zamora, saxophonist Nathan Koch, trumpeter/trombonist Adam Birch, and trombonists Gilbert Covarrubias.  They have more than 19 albums behind them and released ‘Live at the Ska Fest 2021’ LP Album (Supernova Records) in 2023. You’re in for a real treat and be sure to check them out here. 


Half Past Two is an amazing 7-piece ska band formed in 2006 in Orange County, California. The band consists of vocalist Tara Hahn, guitarist/vocalist Max Beckman, keys/guitarist/ vocalist David Parris, bassist Mark Anderson, trumpeter Max Maynard, trombonist Luis Gracia Alonso, and drummer Savannah Tweedt. The band is full of so much energy and you will not find yourself standing still. Find them here.


Malafacha is a Ska band with Reggae and Latin rhythms that was formed in 2003 in Pilsen’s Hispanic Bohemian neighborhood in Chicago, IL. Malafacha is conformed of 8 members, vocalist Moises Bello, drummer Alejandro Cruz, saxist Ivan Bello, bassist Ezequiel Cruz, trombonist Juan Abad, percussionist Armando Pescador, guitarist Roberto Carlos Tovar, and keyboardist Martin Orosco. With this many band members you are bound to have different personalities and musical tendencies between the band members. This has brought the band together to obtain an original sound with a base of Ska, Reggae and Latin rhythms mixed with Punk, Metal, Cumbia, Rock, Disco and an endless fusion of genres that makes of Malafacha a unique band. Follow them on their social media pages to see where they will be next. 


Mustard Plug Photo Gallery


The Toasters Photo Gallery


Half Past Two Photo Gallery


Malafacha Photo Gallery

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DS Exclusive: London punks Old Chase premiere video for new single “Until the Bitter End”

In case you haven’t already heard, London (England, not Ontario) punks Old Chase have a new record coming out later this year on Cat’s Claw Records and Punk Rock Radar. To tide you over, we’re premiering the video for their brand new single “Until the Bitter End”. Check it out below! And stay tuned for […]

In case you haven’t already heard, London (England, not Ontario) punks Old Chase have a new record coming out later this year on Cat’s Claw Records and Punk Rock Radar. To tide you over, we’re premiering the video for their brand new single “Until the Bitter End”. Check it out below! And stay tuned for more to come on the band’s upcoming Showtime Split LP, also featuring their countrymen The Upshot.

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DS Photo Gallery and Show Review: Jawbreaker Return To Boston! With Joyce Manor! And Grumpster! I Know, Right?!

Near as I can tell, Jawbreaker first came through Boston as a band in the Summer of 1990 on their “Fuck 90” US Tour. That show took place at the legendary Rat in Kenmore Square (RIP) and found Jawbreaker playing alongside Rise and Chinchilla Whiplash (lol) and Full Nelson Riley (LOL). Here’s the show flier. […]

Near as I can tell, Jawbreaker first came through Boston as a band in the Summer of 1990 on their “Fuck 90” US Tour. That show took place at the legendary Rat in Kenmore Square (RIP) and found Jawbreaker playing alongside Rise and Chinchilla Whiplash (lol) and Full Nelson Riley (LOL). Here’s the show flier. Oh, and no, that is not from my personal collection, sadly, as I was not there, because even though I like to think that I was a cool kid growing up in southern New Hampshire, the reality is that I was not cool, and even if I was, “cool” meant that I had a pretty gnarly rat tail and could do a mean tight roll on my acid washed Bugle Boy jeans and I actually had a Champion pullover sweatshirt and oh by the way I was ten years old.

I didn’t really start making my way to Boston for shows until April of my junior year of high school, which if you’re keeping score at home was 1996. Jawbreaker were on their Dear You tour and I really liked Dear You because I wasn’t old/cool enough to know that you weren’t supposed to like that album if you were “a punk,” but also funds were limited so there was a bit of a coin-flip situation that found me going to the Bad Religion show that month instead of the Jawbreaker one, because the former was during school vacation and the latter was on a school night, and remember I was not what you’d call “cool.” Plus, it was still close enough to 1994 that punk was still in and so punk bands came around semi-regularly and so we’d just catch them next time around. If you’re still reading this, it means you’re probably familiar with Jawbreaker and so you know how that decision to catch them next time would be a colossal tactical decision on my part. (For the uninitiated; they broke up in rather catastrophic fashion the following month and didn’t play together again in public for another twenty-one years. Oops.)

And so fast-forward essentially a generation and a sold-out reunion tour show at Boston’s House Of Blues in 2019 and another on the Dear You 25th anniversary tour last year, both of which I had to miss for what we’ll call “reasons” and we get to last Friday, when the band returned to the Kenmore Square area for a date at the cavernous new MGM Music Hall at Fenway or whatever the official title is. Not only could the House Of Blues fit comfortably inside MGM with plenty of room to spare, I’m pretty sure The Rat (R.I.P.) could fit in the men’s room (which is super conveniently located on the second floor of the 5000-capacity theater but that’s another conversation for another time).

Given that travel to – and parking at – the venue is tricky at best on Red Sox home game days (the MGM shares a common wall with the bleachers at Fenway Park), showgoers were very much still filling in the lower GA bowl when Grumpster got the evening kick-started promptly at 7:00 sharp. If you haven’t seen Grumpster live, you’ve been doing yourself a disservice. The band is fronted by Donnie Walsh, a Massachusetts native who headed west to the Bay Area in search of the sort of melodic pop punk rock sounds that that scene put on the map thirty-plus years ago (so, in the time of Jawbreaker). Walsh is a human pinball on stage, frantically bouncing around the massive expanse of a stage while still maintaining bass and lead vocal duties (at least when he’s not given a reprieve by the band’s newest member, Alex Hernandez, who was officially added to the original three-piece lineup of Walsh, guitarist Lalo Gonzalez Deetz and drummer Noel Agtane over the summer to add depth on guitar and vocals). I can’t really say enough good things about Grumpster and their performance on this show and, I imagine, this whole run. They’re fun, funny, energetic, inspiring, at times painfully honest. They made a large and potentially intimidating setting feel a bit like an Elks Lodge punk rock show in all the best ways. Check out tracks like “Crash” and “Better Than Dead” and “Misery” off their latest record, Fever Dream, and you’ll get it.


The California punk rock party continued with Joyce Manor hitting in the number two spot in the order. Joyce Manor’s history dates back to the very early days of Dying Scene; near as I can tell, they were one of the very first bands we covered pretty extensively a dozen-or-so years ago, and I remember writing a lot about Of All The Things I Will Soon Grow Tired and Cody upon their respective releases, and yet in digging through the annals of DS/JM shared history, I couldn’t find another instance of us shooting them live. Strange!


Appearing as a five-piece on this run (with the one-and-only Neil Hennessy still manning the drum kit!), Joyce Manor tore through a twenty-song set that leaned heavily on their 2011 self-titled record and 2014’s Never Hungover Again. The crowd, which had by now filled to a respectable level, was primed and ready to go from the first notes of set opener “Gotta Let It Go.” We had ourselves not only a circle pit (in fairness, not a California-style circle pit, but still a pit in the shape of a circle so it counts) but enough crowd surfers coming over the abnormally tight barricade that a few backup security guards were called in from the front of the house to serve as backup. If it provides any context to how amped-up the crowd was for Joyce Manor, from my perch in the photo pit before and in between sets, I overheard more than one conversation that centered around showgoers being surprised that Joyce Manor was opening for Jawbreaker and not the other way around and that it must have just been a Jawbreaker show because they were the OGs. Kids these days…


And so finally, at 9:00pm sharp, after a thirty-minute wait for set changeover but really close to a thirty-year wait, it was Jawbreaker time. The foursome (Blake and Adam and Chris plus Mitch Hobbs, longtime guitar tech, on second guitar) hit the stage and dove into “I Love You So Much It’s Killing Us Both.” Like much of Dear You, it’s a song that resonated in a particular way when it came out the week I turned sixteen. But when you add to it the context that Dear You became the last album before Jawbreaker self-destructed and then when you add to THAT the context that I’m now forty-four, it’s a song that hits like a sledgehammer.

From there, the band plowed through about a dozen-and-a-half songs that leaned heavily on the once-maligned-but-now-adored Dear You, but still managed to cover the duration of the band’s five-year history of recorded material. (Side note: think about that…as influential and genre-defining a band as Jawbreaker was, their entire output of recorded full-length records was released in a five-year span from 1990 to 1995.) It seemed like it took the band a couple of songs to hit their stride, but once they locked in at probably the “Seafoam Green” or “Condition Oakland” part of the set, they were as tight and focused as ever. The gravel and snarl in Blake Schwarzenbach’s voice, which people for years lamented had disappeared, seem to have returned only in a more weary, road-worn fashion.

Bass player Chris Bauermeister stayed pretty well rooted in place in his place at stage right, his focus firmly placed on his Antigua Fender P bass. Fitting, I suppose, since his playing style always served as a pretty solid foundation from which the traditionally single-guitar attack could wander. Adam Pfahler, as always, provided the gas pedal for the whole thing. This is a bit of a rudimentary comment to make, but on more than one occasion, I couldn’t help but think “damn…Adam is a REALLY good drummer.” It’s one thing to hear his playing on recordings that are 25-30 years old, but it’s another thing to see it live circa 2023, and to gain a new respect for the sort of groove and feel created and to see how his influence has carried forward in myriad bands since.

And of course, at the front of the operation, is the inimitable Blake Schwarzenback. Schwarzenbach has always been known for his emotionally honest, drunken poet lyrical style, and his vocal stylings lent authenticity to his words. Thirty-plus years of experiences paint many of those songs – like set-opener “I Love You So Much It’s Killing Us Both” and “Save Your Generation” and “Unlisted Track,” the latter of which Schwarzenbach performed solo accompanied by only his trademark white late 80s Les Paul Custom which has yellowed with age – in a different light and provide newer, deeper context. What had sounded like high school or college-age scorned love songs take on more gravity with the passing of time and adult relationships and societal dysfunction in the years since the words were first sung. Much of the set felt cathartic in a way a lot of shows haven’t in a while, but the post-“Unlisted Track” three-song closer of “Basilica,” “Kiss The Bottle” and “Accident Prone” was just about perfect. And so do I wish that my first Jawbreaker show occurred on that infamous “Fuck 90” tour? No…I was 10 and it was at The Rat and I probably would have died. And especially no, because I think it means more now that I saw them for the first time after just turning 44 and Blake’s words and the band’s sound have carved such a deep and indelible path in my brain. Thanks, Blake and Adam and Chris (and Mitch!). More than you know.

Check out photo galleries from each band’s set below!

GRUMPSTER PICS

JOYCE MANOR PICS

JAWBREAKER PICS

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DS Albums Punk Forgot: Revisiting Night Surf’s 2017 debut EP “Blasted!”

This article is going to start the same way Night Surf‘s 2017 debut EP Blasted! does; straight to the point. The opening song “So Long” just fires into this EP while painting amazing apocalyptic imagery, which I am a huge sucker for. Call me old fashioned but heartfelt descriptions of the end of the world […]

This article is going to start the same way Night Surf‘s 2017 debut EP Blasted! does; straight to the point. The opening song “So Long” just fires into this EP while painting amazing apocalyptic imagery, which I am a huge sucker for. Call me old fashioned but heartfelt descriptions of the end of the world shouted over catchy pop-punk guitars just gets me fucking jacked. The execution in “So Long” is so perfect that you can’t help but scream along:

And I want you to know
That I don’t need to go
And we can stare at the dying sun
and wait for nuclear winter!
As long as you’re by my side
I’ll be ready when it’s our time to die
Say so long to the falling stars
So much for being so lucky!

Yeah. That hits the spot. Thankfully, there’s more where that came from. “This Is What It Takes” follows up with the same raw energy that’s felt throughout the EP. The harmonized shouted/sung vocals fit so well together and give a very sincere feeling to the albums’ lyrics.

“Straight To” continues with the directness and just blasts open. There isn’t any time to relax during the opening 3 songs on this EP. I mean, if your trying to relax and looking for rest periods between songs, an album named Blasted! is probably a bad place to start. That should be a given, really. But I digress. They all hit one after another and, along with their shorter run time, it adds to the chaos presented by the lyrical content. It’s so good to sing along to!

And I’m alone in an echo chamber
Living completely under the radar
And if I escape I hope I never
See your face again.

My hope is wasted on you!

Alright. I have to keep it down. My wife is trying to sleep and all of my shouting is getting the dogs all riled up. Whatevs. This EP rips. The closing track “Lungs and Throat” finally gives you a moment to catch your breath before it goes on another tear. It feels like the final act compared to the blistering and slammed opening track “So Long” and gives the album a feeling of closure and completeness. Bleak closure and completeness. Not triumphant but defeated yet accepting.

So far from home
Hoping for the best all alone
I’ve lost my direction
I gave up the ghost
I’m waiting for this moment to go.
With no one around to hold my hand
I’m heading to the dark all alone.

I head into the dark all alone.

And now you die alone!

Fuck it. It’s too good not to scream along to and I don’t care if it’s late. I’m screaming Night Surf in my office and I will apologize to no one!

This was a self released EP by Night Surf in 2017. I can’t remember exactly how I found it but I was hooked on it the first time I heard it. Since Blasted! was released in 2017, they have released 1 EP and 1 full length album. Blasted! is the perfect introduction to this Brooklyn based pop-punk band and is an album punk forgot.

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I made a Drunk History video of the Sex Pistols with Lego Minifigures and now I kinda regret it

I came to this job thinking that I wanted to have a little fun and do things differently. I can’t be arsed doing album reviews as I just want to enjoy new music without having to analyze or think about it too much. I thought I’d just empty my brain out through my fingers and […]

I came to this job thinking that I wanted to have a little fun and do things differently. I can’t be arsed doing album reviews as I just want to enjoy new music without having to analyze or think about it too much. I thought I’d just empty my brain out through my fingers and into your brains and only worry about the opinions of the people that enjoyed it.

Of course, that clearly meant that one of the things I should do was a crappy biopic of the Sex Pistols in Lego. Whilst drunk. You can find it below.

I’ve read most of the decent books about the Pistols, and (I think) all of the ones that they were closely involved with. John Lydon’s first autobiography is pretty decent and at the point he wrote it, it was the first attempt at telling the story of the Sex Pistols from the inside. It came out at a dip in his profile, when Public Image Limited wasn’t really doing much. It was two years before the Filthy Lucre reunion tour, and only fifteen years after his friend, Sid Vicious, died after murdering his girlfriend, Nancy.

At that point, the movie Sid and Nancy had come out, as well as The Great Rock ‘n’ Roll Swindle – the Malcolm McLaren-approved version of the band’s history and how he was responsible for its every success as part of some sort of masterplan.


Both were, and this is me being kind, highly problematic.

Sid and Nancy is relatively accurate in terms of how other accounts corroborate the sequence of events, at least.

The Great Rock ‘n’ Roll Swindle is McLaren’s onanistic fantasy version.

Rotten: No blacks, no dogs, no Irish (by the way – he’s quoting a common sign on boarding house and bed and breakfast windows there, and his being Irish in London, is referring to how black and Irish people were considered on the level of dogs in terms of how welcome they were in some areas) feels honest, and it utterly slates Sid and Nancy, and The Great Rock ‘n’ Roll Swindle.

The GRNRS (can’t be arsed to type all that out again, the initials will have to do from here) is dismissed as an egotistical fantasy that outright lies about how Malcom McLaren had a plan, and has led to the accusations of the Pistols being some sort of manufactured boyband.

Sid and Nancy is criticised for romanticising the deaths of two young people. One of whom was John’s best friend. I’ve since heard John talk about heroin, and whilst he does admit he tried it, he described in disgusted terms how a certain band’s ritualised way of taking it, in the shittiest of conditions, as if it were a Japanese tea ceremony, bemused and repulsed him. Regardless of anything else that happened, he lost his friend to it.

It was that honest and heartfelt commentary that led me to initially feeling that the two irredeemable figures in the Sex Pistols story were Malcolm McLaren and Nancy Spungen.

Rest assured, I still think Malcolm McLaren was a complete cunt.

However, in doing this fucking moronic little video, I had to rethink Nancy.

Now, I should say that Sid and Nancy does somewhat romanticise their relationship. And some people do regard them in the bullshit terms of being some sort of star-crossed lovers.

My unreconstructed feeling was that, I had no great attachment to Sid, Nancy was his downfall, and she took advantage of him, thinking he could and would be a star, but dooming him by getting him hooked on heroin, with their eventual co-dependence ruining Sid’s chance of a further music career, and leading to both their deaths.

I didn’t really think of her much, except as a groupie and an addict.

But the fact is, Nancy was murdered.

And when I went to look up a couple of facts, in order to get some sort of semblance of a straight timeline for this, I saw that she’d likely got schizophrenia and other conditions which she didn’t have any sort of proper help managing.

I was also reminded that Sid was a violent wanker, who attacked people without reason, blinded someone, and showed some of the traits associated with people who later went on to become serial killers, such as torturing animals. That line in his version of “My Way” possibly wasn’t a joke.

Yeah, I did hear John Lydon talk about his regret at losing his friend, and his feelings about heroin, and that affected me.

There’s possibly a narrative tract to go down which says both Sid and Nancy were pretty irredeemable figures, with Nancy being the one to set him on the path to where he ended up.

But yeah, this piece of drunken arseholery did make me think that maybe a whole load of that was down to misogyny, and that whilst it’s a real stretch to say that Nancy was misunderstood or misrepresented, she wasn’t around when Sid was being needlessly aggressive and glassing people, or killing animals.

Yeah, he had his own early issues, and his upbringing was fucked up, too. He wasn’t even sure what his real name was.

So, it’s possible to see them both as deeply damaged, and ill, kids. But that’s not really what the movie Sid and Nancy was doing, and I think John’s right in how that got it wrong.

And I’m not the person to do it, and this is probably as far as I’ll get in terms of making the case, but Nancy isn’t the smack-syringe-wielding harridan that I causally portrayed her as here. She’s a mentally ill kid who was sexually abused and murdered.

So, yeah, whilst I’m not really the person to try to rehabilitate her (in a manner of speaking), perhaps someone could have a look into that?

Oh, there’s a couple of funny bits in the video I made, I think, so don’t hate me for it completely.


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DS Festival Gallery: Riot Fest Returns to Chicago for a Three-Day Weekend of Punk Rock Featuring Turnstile, Code Orange, Quicksand & More! (Day One, 9/15/23)

Is it already that time of year again!? Riot Fest is back and we have three days worth of photo galleries of some of your favorite bands and some up and coming bands you should put on your radar! Check out some of the bands from the first day of Riot Fest and give them […]

Is it already that time of year again!? Riot Fest is back and we have three days worth of photo galleries of some of your favorite bands and some up and coming bands you should put on your radar! Check out some of the bands from the first day of Riot Fest and give them some love.


FEA is a Chicana all-female band from San Antonio, TX. Produced by Laura Jane Grace, they debuted their self-titled LP in 2016. FEA set the bar early on for the first day of Riot Fest with their raw, fierce, and powerfully feminist punk rock energy.


New York-based garage punk band The Bobby Lees quickly become one of my favorite bands of the year after hearing “Guttermilk” for the first time. In true punk rock fashion their drummer, Macky Bowman, ran laps around the stage in nothing but his tighty whities (and that was just a warmup).



Code Orange is a sludgy, thrashy, metalcore punk rock band that obviously cannot be defined by only one single genre. Their intense set was one not to miss.



The LA ska-rockers The Interrupters are no strangers to Dying Scene! Riot Fest was only the beginning before they embark on their US fall tour with The Dropkick Murphys and Jesse Ahern.



Yard Act is a fun post-punk British band. Their newest single “The Trench Coat Museum” was released in July and co-produced by Gorillaz member Remi Kabaka Jr.



Walter Schreifels had a particularly busy Riot Fest weekend not only performing with Quicksand on day one, but also Rival Schools and Gorilla Biscuits on the following days. For its 30th anniversary, Quicksand played their 1993 album Slip in its entirety.



Turnstile was of the headliners for the first day (along with the Foo Fighters). Check out the rest of the photos from the first day below, and look out for our coverage of day two and three of Riot Fest!


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DS Record Radar: This Week in Punk Vinyl (Against All Authority “All Fall Down” 25th Anniversary Reissue, Good Riddance, 88 Fingers Louie & 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 our friends at Punk Rock Radar:

The almighty Against All Authority‘s 1998 album All Fall Down is being reissued in honor of its 25th anniversary. I haven’t seen any official announcement from the band, but it’s available to pre-order on red colored vinyl with a listed release date of October 27th. Get it here and save 10% with code THANKS10.

Another record turning 25 this year is Good Riddance‘s Ballads from the Revolution. Fat Wreck has repressed the album on yellow w/ blue splatter colored vinyl and the same silver accents on the cover art as their other 25th Anniversary reissues. Get it here.

And that’s not the only anniversary reissue from Fat this week, because apparently The FlatlinersDead Language was released a decade ago. Time flies! Fat has a variant exclusive to their webstore, and Dine Alone Records has additional colors on their store as well.

And because you can never have enough Fat Wreck releases on the Record Radar, here’s another one! The label has some copies of No Use For A Name‘s Incognito on clear colored vinyl up on their store; these are leftovers from the No Use Black Box that was released last year. So if you somehow missed out on the box set or just want a copy of this specific record, you’re in luck!

Keeping with this week’s theme of anniversary reissues, Social Distortion‘s debut album Mommy’s Little Monster is getting a 40th anniversary reissue. There are a handful of retailer exclusive color variants for this one, including Brooklyn Vegan (500 copies, grey), Craft Recordings (black & white marble), and a clear smoke variant you can find at most independent record stores, to name a few.

Here’s a cool Replacements tribute album featuring Mikey Erg, Timeshares, Jon Snodgrass, Sammy Kay and a bunch of other cool people/bands. It comes out October 27th on Creep Records; you can get it on three color variants here.

Newbury Comics (aka the home of the $35 LP) has a new exclusive variant of Ignition by The Offspring, limited to 500 copies on gold colored vinyl. If you want to buy it, have at it. I refuse to pay $35 for a single record. Fuck that.

Tooth & Nail one ups Newbury Comics with a $40 LP! What is happening??? Anyway, it’s a Ninety Pound Wuss compilation album. It’s $40. If that sounds good to you, you can buy it here.

A mystery color variant of 88 Fingers Louie‘s Back on the Streets recently popped up on Revelation Records’ distro. They don’t specify if it’s a new 25th anniversary pressing or just someone leftover copies of the 2019 reissue someone found in a box… at the very least, it’s way cheaper than any of the Discogs listings, so why not roll the dice?

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 week!

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: Braid / Thursday (Riot Fest Late Night, Metro, Chicago, IL 9/16/2023)

I am of the opinion that everyone sounds better live. There’s something to the passion people feel when they’re onstage, playing their own music, that you can actually see, it’s infectious. That, and they’ve had more practice than they did when they were recording their songs. It’s because of this, that I was very excited […]

I am of the opinion that everyone sounds better live. There’s something to the passion people feel when they’re onstage, playing their own music, that you can actually see, it’s infectious. That, and they’ve had more practice than they did when they were recording their songs. It’s because of this, that I was very excited to see Braid (a band I hadn’t much listened to before) and Thursday (a band I’ve been jamming to for years) at a famous and storied place like the Metro. This was another installment in Riot Fest’s ‘Late Night’ series, a series of public after-parties played late night (shocker), the week preceding and during Riot Fest.


Let’s get into it. First up was Braid, a pretty popular band who I had only heard of trawling through the emo subreddit (yes that’s a thing). I would like the dear, gentle Reader to know I did my due diligence, and blasted Frame and Canvas for the month preceding this show as ‘research’. My first impression of them, as they played their first song, (‘The New Nathan Detroits’), was that they seemed like a bunch of cool dads doing something they loved – and being really good at it too. Todd Bell, the bassist, is full of energy, kicking his leg out past the edge of the stage. It seemed to me Bob Nanna (vocals and guitar, left) and Chris Broach (vocals and guitar, right) both gave him plenty of room to stagger around and fling himself across stage. They chugged through ‘Nathan’ and directly into ‘Killing a Camera’. Dads (and Moms and Others) were screaming and singing and jamming right along with them.

I had somehow been under the impression that Braid was to be doing the whole Frame and Canvas album, hence the ‘research’. Cut to me panicking when the next two songs are ones I hadn’t heard before. They ended up being ‘My Baby Smokes’ and ‘East End Hollows’ (I copped a picture of the setlist after the show, after fervently memorizing the faces of the dudes who were handed one like a serial killer). ‘East End’ had a killer solo.

They finally pause after the 4th song, and Nanna, sounding exhausted, squeaks out a “Heck Yeah”, before thanking everybody for coming out and being excited to see them and Thursday.

Slamming back into the music, they certainly don’t seem tired anymore as they rip through ‘First Day Back’, Broach helping carry the chorus with little fox wails. The crowd made sure to yell with the band “So I’ve heard that Chicago’s cold”. Next up is ‘Never Will Come for Us’, and Bell, during a particularly impassioned bout of flailing, knocks into Damon Atkinson’s drum set just a little. Damon laughs and adjusts his mic and drum quickly.

Next up is ‘Please Drive Faster’, another song I didn’t know. Throughout their set, Nanna and Broach had been trading off lead vocals and lead guitar. To the uninitiated (me), this seemed like a clever way to reserve stamina, but maybe they’ve always done that, or maybe even a little of both. After plays ‘Damages!’.

They pause again, and Nanna makes a joke about singing ‘Drive’ to your uber driver to help them take you through Riot Fest traffic. The band invites on stage their old friend Tim, who is given the microphone and then invites someone else on stage. Tim says he has a very important question, and that hes a little nervous to ask, before getting on one knee and pulling out a ring. Tim asks his friend to marry him, and his now fiance says yes. Tim requests ‘A Dozen Roses’, which the band happily obliges.

In my humble experience, sometimes there’s songs or stories you write that maybe have a specific, intense meaning or feeling when you wrote them, and then over the years, just by nature of time and experience, the old meaning gets diluted just a little, and new ones are stacked on top. That was my impression of what happened to ‘Roses’. A song that to me, lyrically at least, seemed to be about the fear and loneliness of being away from your partner for a long time, and not really having a way to spend time with them that keeps the feeling the same. At least during this show, it seemed a little the opposite. Nanna walks off the stage, and climbs up the edge of the barricade, screaming “I am not alone” while being lifted up and held in the arms of a crowd screaming with him. Like maybe they were pointedly looking at a different side of that same song.

Next up is ‘Puddle’, with some beautiful drumming by Damon. After is ‘No Coast’, where Broach does a cool technique with his guitar where he bends the neck a little, to make a warbling type of sound. Then ‘Forever Got Shorter’, and ‘Milwaukee Sky Rocket’, which was met with much cheering. Finally, the set was wrapped up with ‘The Chandelier Swing’.


It is at this point, dear, patient reader, that I feel obliged to inform you that I would have totally been a theater kid if not for dropping out of high school. If Braid was an intimate, heartfelt jam we were invited to watch, then Thursday is a dramatic, opera-style performance to witness. I obviously adore this, as I dedicated 8 of my 10 pages of notes to just Thursday.

The set opens with a recording of a somber lady singing. The lights are out except for some well-placed white overheads, and lots of fog is pumping out. All our players file out and take their places. Suddenly, the recording stops, and we’re slammed head first into ‘For the Workforce, Drowning’. Full of violent, spasming energy, Geoff Rickly (vocals) is throwing himself all over the stage. He starts clapping the beat to ‘Between Rupture and Rapture’, and the crowd immediately joins in.

A break in the music, and Geoff starts talking. It’s pretty quickly evident that he is much more talkative than Nanna. Starting out with the usual “How we feeling tonight Chicago!” and “It’s good to be back”, Geoff makes a joke about how he’s heard it’s a sold-out show, but that can’t be true, because after making a post about it on twitter, 3 different people messaged him about having extra tickets to sell him. Jokingly apologizing for some “Jersey bullshit” in the next song, we’re thrown into ‘Division St.’

“Jersey Bullshit” indeed, guitars were scratched at while lifted overhead, and Geoff sings the ‘la la la’s in the bridge with a cutting, ironic sort of tone, waving a hand as if in dismissal.

The music pauses again. Geoff’s tone is less banter, and more of a chant. “This song, is for the human rights of every person in this room tonight. This song, is for the reproductive health of every person in this room. This song, is for the sexuality and identity of every person in this room tonight. This song, is called ‘Signals Over the Air’.”

The crowd screams. It seems like everyone leans towards the stage in anticipation during the verse. Geoff points to the crowd during the chorus, as if saying to us, it’s our blood in the radio. His hands roam around and enunciate like a Broadway performer.

Another pause, and our cast is introduced. The guitarist on stage right is Norman Brannon, of Texas is the Reason (“A big inspiration for us”). On bass is Stuart Richardson, who plays in No Devotion with Geoff. On guitar stage left is Steve Pedulla (“You know who he is”), and drumming is Tucker Rule. Everyone is wearing a T-shirt (or button-up) and super skinny jeans, except for Tucker, who is wearing a sleeveless, royal blue button up, and a little red ascot.

Geoff says that 20 years ago, when this album came out, he “hated it”. He says it was angry, paranoid and claustrophobic. But now, 20 years later, he loves it. That was how those times felt, everybody was paranoid. This is the preamble for ‘Marches and Maneuvers’. Geoff holds up a snarky, ironic four fingers for “Four score and faded”, before walking away upstage.

Another pause. This is what I meant by talkative, but then again if I poured as much into this album as they did, and then let it simmer for 20 years, I would probably have a lot to say too. Geoff asks the crowd if they’ve heard of Victory Records. When the crowd boos, Geoff remarks that we must know them. He says they were a hardcore label, with the motto “We Run the Streets”. While being known for a couple of things they were also “known for not paying their bands”.

Next is ‘Asleep in the Chapel’. Steve juxtaposes Geoff’s high energy with an almost soulful, internal look. During the bridge, Geoff falls to his knees as if in prayer, singing “Oh lord, could you save us”.

All the lights on stage are turned off, except for one white spotlight in the middle, as if framing for a Shakespearean monologue. Geoff sways through “This Song Brought to You by a Falling Bomb”. Beautifully and mournfully sung, the beginning is just a warm-up for the rest of the song. Geoff holds the note on “down” until his voice breaks, and he falls to his knees again. Instead of ending the song quietly like on the record, Geoff proclaims repeatedly “By a falling bomb”.

The stage lights return, and the guitar leads us into ‘Steps Ascending’. Geoff hands us the microphone during the post chorus to help sing. During the bridge, the effects on the guitar make it sound like an organ. Tucker punches harder on the drums than on the record to give the ending a more emotional finish, while Geoff croons “I’m not giving up”.

Another break to jabber, Geoff mentions that since they got back together, the next song was always the song they close with, but they have to play it now since it was in the middle of the album. He says he feels like one of Pavlov’s dogs, and like he should just walk off stage after this one. Then he says his partner calls him a golden retriever, and that maybe he just needs to be “trained right”. Your dear, tactful author will not read too far into that.

The stage is set in blue and yellow lights, mixing to make a soft lilac. Like this, we’re led into ‘War All the Time’. The first, loud singing of “war all of the time” is given to us, with Geoff holding the microphone, stand and all, over the crowd. When the music cuts out before the refrain, everybody slumps like cut puppets on stage, before coming back to life.

Another break, and this time Geoff thanks everybody for coming to his book signing next door at the Gman Tavern. He remarks on how crazy it is that for a “DIY, Fugazi style” publishing, they’re already on their fifth reprint.

Slamming into ‘M. Shepard’, we’re dragged screaming through the song. Again during the break, the lights are cut to a spotlight, and Tucker hits a pad next to his set to play the ambient audio. Geoff is left floating during the bridge as if in space, before Tucker slams him back into the atmosphere with his drumming.

Another break, Geoff says they have two more songs for us. He says that the original record was meant to have two songs back to back, one about New Year’s Day, and the other New Year’s Eve. He says that maybe it was Victory’s fault, and “You can do your own research”.

With that we’re led into ‘Tomorrow I’ll Be You’, with Steve attending to his guitar like a potter engrossed at the wheel. His rapture is broken during the chorus when he belts out the supporting vocals. During the break, the guitar is again given effects to sound like a piano, leading Geoff like forward like a rope in a maze. The bass comes in to underline the point, with the drums finally pulling him back into the chorus.

And now for the other half of the twin songs, Geoff describes it as “A New Years where everything just goes wrong”, the chugging guitar for ‘Jet Black New Year’ plays, and the crowd explodes. There was even someone in a wheelchair crowd surfing (I saw them after the show, they were smiling, so I assume all was well).

At this point Thursday leaves the stage, and the crowd is still cheering. Someone starts clapping and chanting, and a stagehand attending to the guitars beckons with his hand to encourage it. Even the sound guy it clapping along, trying for an encore. The band relents and walks back on stage, Geoff with his arms out in front of him like a zombie.

Geoff tells a story about the end of a tour with Hey Mercedes, and how they finished 3 days early, and decided to book it home. It was snowing very hard, and they had to cross the cascades, but they figured they’re “From New Jersey, we’ve seen snow”. Cut to them sliding on ice down a hill, with the van sideways so everyone can see through the windshield a truck, also sliding down the hill towards them. He finishes saying that it’s okay, “We all came out safe and healthy”.

With that, we’re pushed into ‘At This Velocity’, followed by ‘Cross out the Eyes’. Another break, Geoff says this next one from their first album is “For all the Chicago people who put us up on their floor, and who helped fix our van when it broke down”. He said this next song is very important to him, the song that he uses to introduce people to Thursday. That song was ‘Understanding in a Car Crash’.

I must confess to the dear reader that at this point, I pretty much stopped writing notes, because I was too busy dancing. They ripped though, Geoff even getting a little silly and flapping around a bit.


Finally walking off stage for the last time, after waving and smiling a smile that seemed to say “Thank you for the enthusiasm, but please don’t ask us to play anymore”, Thursday leaves, and the house lights come on. People take their time and slowly start filing out. I snap a picture of the Braid set list, lovingly written out on a lined piece of notebook paper. A dedicated group of about 15 people wait at the barrier, tactfully ignoring the security guard begging them to please leave. Thursday set lists are ripped off the floor, and then squabbled over. After getting a picture of that, I stumble outside, and try to figure out how to be a normal person again.

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Dying Scene Photo Gallery: Interview With Jim Ruland, Printers Row Lit Fest, Chicago, Illinois (09/09/2023)

On September 9, 2023, I caught up with Jim Ruland, also known as Jim Vermin, while he was in Chicago to promote his books, Corporate Rock Sucks: The Rise & Fall of SST Records and Make It Stop, and participate in a couple of speaking engagements. The first was a talk at the Printers Row Lit Fest to […]

On September 9, 2023, I caught up with Jim Ruland, also known as Jim Vermin, while he was in Chicago to promote his books, Corporate Rock Sucks: The Rise & Fall of SST Records and Make It Stop, and participate in a couple of speaking engagements. The first was a talk at the Printers Row Lit Fest to discuss his recent novel Make It Stop, in conversation with Tony Tovano of the Chicago punk band Vortis. The second was a virtual conversation with Jim Ruland, Daniel Weizmann, and Kyle Decker about their books and punk rock, sponsored by the Chicago Public Library


Jim Ruland is the Los Angeles Times bestselling author of Corporate Rock Sucks: The Rise & Fall of SST Records, which was named a best book of 2022 by both Pitchfork and Rolling Stone. He also co-authored Do What You Want with Bad Religion and My Damage with Keith Morris (Black FlagCircle Jerks, and OFF!). Ruland is a frequent contributor to Razorcake fanzine and the Los Angeles Times. He lives with his family in San Diego.


Jim Ruland (left) with Chicago-based author, educator, and punk vocalist Kyle Decker, who sings for Bad Chemicals and recently released his novel This Rancid Mill through PM Press.


Short interview with Ruland below.

Dying Scene: What brings you to Chicago?

Jim Ruland: I’m here for the Printers Row Lit Festival to promote Corporate Rock Sucks — the paperback came out in April — and to do a reading with Kyle Decker and Danny Weizmann for my novel Make It Stop; the Chicago Public Library is sponsoring that. 

DS: How’s it going so far?

JR: It’s been a whirlwind. Usually, when I come to a city, I like to scope things out, let people know I’m coming. You know, go to some of my favorite spots or hit up a bookstore or record store but this has just been go go go.

DS: What are some of your favorite spots?

JR: I love Exile in Bookville. We’re right down the street from them on Michigan Avenue. And Lincoln Hall where we saw the OFF! show. Lincoln Hall was a lot of fun. I don’t drink so I really don’t have a lot of bar spots. It’s all like bookstores and coffee spots…things like that.

DS: How’s the transition from non-fiction to fiction? 

JR: It’s great except it seems like whenever I’m writing non-fiction, I’d rather be making something up. And whenever I’m writing fiction, I’d rather just stick to the facts. The grass is always greener.

DS: What’s the response been like from your punk rock supporters?

JR: The response for Corporate Rock Sucks has been overwhelming. I know from doing books with Keith Morris and Bad Religion that punk fans are the fans. But I was expecting a grumpier, more curmudgeonly response from fellow Gen Xers, who are very protective of SST and the things that they love, and they’ve been awesome.

DS: What’s a big lesson you’ve learned from being a writer?

JR: Double-check. Triple-check everything. Triple-check everything.

DS: What message do you have for aspiring writers?

JR: Read as much as you can and as widely as you can. First, follow your passion…the things you care about the most. And then follow your curiosity. There are some people who think that I don’t want other peoples’ voices in my head when I’m writing. The only people who have that are people who haven’t read enough. What makes you special is your voice, and you learn how to tell a story by reading one.

DS: What are the top five punk and hardcore bands you’re listening to this week? 

JR: I’m gonna go with Drain from Santa Cruz. I’m gonna go with Osees who dropped a new album that I really like. I’m gonna go with The Nerves. I’ve been listening to The Nerves a lot lately. A local San Diego hardcore band called Take Offense…some of their old stuff. And, mostly, The Stains because the guitar player, Robert Becerra, passed away last week. So, much respect to one of the greatest guitar players of the LA punk rock scene or any scene.

DS: Do you have anything else you like to share?

JR: Read more books. Support your local zines. And if there aren’t any, start one.


Photo Gallery below.


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