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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Modern Adult Kicks is available for purchase

Tour Dates & Locations

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DS News: Slam Dunk announce full line up for 2024 + we say goodbye to You Me At Six

Let’s go! A New Year means a new round of festivals we plan to attend. First up is Slam Dunk; last week, they announced their last names to their already impressive line-up, but bad news was also shared. So, who are the last names that will be joining Pennywise, Snuff, The Interrupters, Waterparks, The Ghost […]

Let’s go! A New Year means a new round of festivals we plan to attend. First up is Slam Dunk; last week, they announced their last names to their already impressive line-up, but bad news was also shared.

So, who are the last names that will be joining Pennywise, Snuff, The Interrupters, Waterparks, The Ghost Inside, Boys Like Girls, The All-American Rejects, State Champs, Taylor Acorn, L.S. Dunes, Mom Jeans, and our overall favs, The Wonder Years?

Beauty School, Caskets, The Dangerous Summer, Arm’s Length, Everything Unfolds, and Guilt Trip. Also announced was You Me At Six, which will also be their last-ever appearance at Slam Dunk Festival. As they announced, they are going their separate ways after twenty years, after they conclude their last tour next year.
Slam Dunk 2024 will occur in Hatfield on May 25th and Leeds on May 26th.

You can buy tickets here.

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DS Show Review & Gallery: Death and Memphis; The Linden Method; and Fire Cat! in Chicago (04.21.2023)

Death and Memphis, out of Joliet, IL, with support from The Linden Method, and Fire Cat! both of Chicago, headlined at Burlington Bar for a diverting night of music on April 21, 2023 on the Second City’s north side. Recently, I’ve documented several shows at Burlington Bar. It’s always a terrific experience. Burlington Bar is […]

Death and Memphis, out of Joliet, IL, with support from The Linden Method, and Fire Cat! both of Chicago, headlined at Burlington Bar for a diverting night of music on April 21, 2023 on the Second City’s north side.


Recently, I’ve documented several shows at Burlington Bar. It’s always a terrific experience. Burlington Bar is a cozy spot tucked along a well-known street on the north side of Chicago. With the actual bar up front and the music room in the back, separated by two doors, there is a warm and welcoming ambiance to the place. Whilst every show I have been to at the venue thus far has featured highly energetic bands, said shows have also been quite mellow. It may sound contrary but it’s not. Burlington Bar is a cool little joint working hard to provide its customers with good times. The Burlington’s vibe, set by the staff, and its physical appearance, is just relaxing and laidback sans pretension. We could use a few more of these types of places nearby.


Death and Memphis takes inspiration for its name from the song “Alex Chilton,” by the Replacements. Its music is a potent mix, frequently of sorrow and longing. Singer and guitar player Paul Garcia’s voice grittily conveys both sadness and hope. If the music was ever added to a soundtrack, surely the film would about a fighter (literal or metaphoric — either will work) who has been knocked down, but the full count has yet been given. In “Exhausted,” the title track from the band’s 2019 release is a prime example:

So exhausted

I’m sick of feelin’

So exhausted

(My feet are broken

My knees are broken

My back is broken

But my spirit’s holdin’ fast)…”

Steev Custer, razor thin and leaning sharply forward, appears almost elastic while swinging his guitar loose and low. However, his tight shredding adds an integral jolt of intensity into the music.

The group is rounded out by the very strong backline of Devin Morris on bass (also on vocals), and newest member, Dave Spearman, on drums. Working in conjunction, Morris and Spearman, contribute a rhythmic gravitas and growl suited to the lyrical content and howling guitars. In addition to “Exhausted,” the band also tore through “Way Back Home,” “Maybe It’s The Way,” “Change,” and “Satisfied.” In the end the members may have been exhausted themselves, as they appear to put everything they had into the performance.


The twin heartbeats of Death and Memphis are Steev Custer and Paul Garcia. Friends since their teens the two have played together in numerous precursors to Death and Memphis. It’s the type of friendship and musical partnership in which they seem to share their own language. An often-mournful language with a slight inflection of twang. But rather than merely being two copies of one thing, Custer and Garcia, complement each other with their individual playing styles. Days after the show, I asked the two men about their relationship. Garcia responded,

To answer your question, Steev and I are almost always on the same page. We can read each other. We’ve been doing this together for so long we developed a sense, similar to a married couple. We all as individuals as well as a whole have a passion for making music so we put in 100% right outta the gate. We are a family. Though we’ve been through other members Steev and I try to make everyone feel comfortable and an integral part of what is happening.


Custer describes their relationship this way,

Paul and I have been in bands together for 35 years now. He’s the only person I’ve ever met whose drive and passion for music is a match for mine. I’m certain there is no other way.

But lest you think Death and Memphis is all melancholy, I assure you it is not. The band brings a rollicking good time as well. Garcia, Custer, Morris, and Spearman can be counted amongst some of the more positive people you’re bound to meet in the Chicago area punk scene.

Death and Memphis has a new EP coming out in the near future, to be released by Bypolar Records. Until then, members are keeping busy in various ways. For Steev Custer,

Right now I’m focusing on the upcoming Death and Memphis release, playing in Space Age Zeros and teaching music which is a full-time job in itself.” Custer’s teaching takes place mostly at Fine Tunes Center For the Arts, a business he founded, owns and of which he is the director. He also added,

“The new EP should be out within the next couple of months. There’s a couple of other projects that go along with it, so there are several announcements coming.”

At the same time, Custer reflected on this evening,

I thought the show was a blast. All the bands were awesome and it was  great to see everyone having a good time.


Chicago skate punk crew, The Linden Method (TLM), used this night to showcase its latest album “Grief.” The band, comprised of singer/guitar player Alex Wight, Xack Brame on bass, and Jake Fritzler, drove through “November,” “Reverent,” “Original Sin,” and “Is This Thing Even On?”

TLM also performed “Monsters Inside,” a searing portrait of mistakes made and redemption being sought:

It’s past the past-time

‘Cuz I’m trying to be better than the prick you knew from the suburbs

And I’m not running from memories

Not passive or patient

I’m trying and failing

And still not prevailing and clinically struggling.”

Robby Di Domenico, TLM bassist for several years, joined the band on secondary vocals for “Better Off Dead.” Di Domenico played on the recording of the tune from the group’s EP “Falling Short.”

Echoing the sentiments of Death and Memphis’ Steev Custer, Wight was ecstatic with how the evening went. A day or two later I touched base with him to get his feelings on it,

I thought the show was a perfect intimate punk show at a great venue. We all had an absolute blast and are thankful that Death and Memphis and Fire Cat! had us out for the evening.


The night’s bill also marked the first show of 2023 for Chicago’s Fire Cat! The band is in the planning stages for more events this year per singer/guitarist Tim Robaczewski. Fire Cat!, which also includes Lou Pontillo on bass, guitar player/backing vocalist Justin Saunders, and drummer/backing vocalist Liam O’Brien lit up its set with “Sleepless in Chicago,” “Big Business,” Wide Awake,” and “Eastland.” The band seems to address the idea of last stands in the face of futility in “Battlecry!,” the title track from its 2018 EP, which they played as well.

All differences aside, this is goodbye, I try to accept

But I can’t help but sympathize

I see them all running like it’s the end

Like they have something to live for

Hum their battle cry: next time I’ll try.”

Fire Cat! may sing of trying “next time,” but this time it succeeded kicking off the show in a very lively way. Hoping the band finds itself quite busy during the remainder of the year.


Please see below for more images from the show!


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DS Staff Picks: Dylan’s Top 10 Punk Rock Albums of All Time

Hello, friends! My name’s Dylan, but you probably know me better as Dying Scene editor “Screeching Bottlerocket”. I’m sure you read “Top 10 Punk Rock Albums of All Time” and broke out your pitchforks before clicking the link. Settle down! This isn’t meant to be a definitive list by any means, I just thought it […]

Hello, friends! My name’s Dylan, but you probably know me better as Dying Scene editor “Screeching Bottlerocket”. I’m sure you read “Top 10 Punk Rock Albums of All Time” and broke out your pitchforks before clicking the link. Settle down! This isn’t meant to be a definitive list by any means, I just thought it would be fun to tell you about some of my personal favorite punk rock albums. If you like the same shit I do, that’s cool. If you think my list is overly 90’s centric trash, that’s also cool. Enough formalities, let’s have some fun! These are my Top 10 Punk Rock Albums of All Time:

#10

RAMONES
Too Tough To Die

I’ve probably already lost some of you picking this record over the self-titled LP, Leave Home or Rocket to Russia, but it’s no secret that I love Too Tough To Die. The production is great, the songs are great, and Richie brought the balls back to the Ramones‘ sound. This is my all-time favorite Ramones album. Waaaaaa Warthog!!!

#9

NO FUN AT ALL
Out of Bounds

No Fun At All is one of the greatest skate punk bands of all time. If these guys were from the states they’d be much bigger. Nevertheless, the Swedish skate punk band has been chugging along for 30 years. Out of Bounds is a top tier 90’s punk album. No bad songs to be found, but some of my favorites are the first four tracks, “In A Moment”, “Invitation”, and the title track. This is a bad ass record.

#8

BAD RELIGION
The Gray Race

Though I’m sure most of you wouldn’t consider The Gray Race to be the pinnacle of Bad Religion‘s discography, I’ve got a major soft spot for this album. My introduction to BR was hearing “Them and Us” and “Ten in 2010” while playing Crazy Taxi. I love this record, Bobby’s drumming is awesome, my favorite song is “The Streets of America”.

#7

STRUNG OUT
Suburban Teenage Wasteland Blues

When it comes to 90’s skate punk, Strung Out‘s Suburban Teenage Wasteland Blues is the gold standard. This album seems to build as you listen to it; every song is better than the last. It’s a perfect record.

#6

NOFX
So Long and Thanks for All the Shoes

Picking a favorite NOFX album is a tough task, but ultimately I had to go with So Long and Thanks for All the Shoes. This is probably their most well-produced record and it’s got some of my favorite NOFX songs like “Kids of the K-Hole”, “180 Degrees”, “Eat the Meek”, and “The Desperation’s Gone”. Mike’s bass sounds awesome, too.

#5

FRENZAL RHOMB
Meet the Family

I seriously considered putting one of Frenzal Rhomb‘s two most recent records here; they’re both excellent. 1997’s Meet the Family prevailed on the strength of classics like “Mum Changed The Locks”, “Mr. Charisma”, and “All Your Friends”. Is this Frenzal’s best album? I don’t know! It’s my favorite though.

#4

BELVEDERE
Fast Forward Eats the Tape

Fast Forward Eats the Tape is a criminally underrated record by an equally underappreciated band. Every single Belvedere album is killer but this one’s the top dog. Steve Rawles and co. have always been head and shoulders above the competition when it comes to songwriting and technical proficiency. My favorite song on here is “All About Perspectives”. This is an essential skate punk record.

#3

MXPX
Life In General

MxPx is one of my all time favorite bands. Life In General is one of my all time favorite records. They were at the top of their game and captured lightning in a bottle on this album, delivering 40 minutes of 90’s pop-punk excellence. My arms get sore just listening to Yuri hammer away on the drums.

#2

GREEN DAY
Insomniac

Like most people my age, Dookie was my introduction to punk rock, but there’s something about Insomniac that strikes a chord with me. This album has a more aggressive, no-nonsense feel than its predecessor and it has my favorite Green Day song “Walking Contradiction”. If I’m pissed about something and wanna blow off some steam, this is usually the album I turn to. I can always count on ol’ reliable.

#1

LESS THAN JAKE
Losing Streak

I’m a Florida Man so naturally Less Than Jake is my favorite band. I love all their records but Losing Streak rules the roost. I listen to this a few times a week and will never tire of it. That seamless transition from “Happyman” into “9th At Pine” gets me every. fucking. time. Losing Streak is my all-time favorite record.

So there ya have it, those are Dying Scene editor Screeching Bottlerocket’s Top 10 Punk Rock Albums of All Time! Thanks for checking it out. I’m curious what your favorite albums are! Lemme know in the comments on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or on here.

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a shadow of a hand in a square of light on a black background, with hand in hand written in like digital pen in red

Dying Scene Album Review: The Cruelty – “Hand in Hand”

Hello again friends! Back again with a single to review. It’s been about a month since the release of this single (9/30), and I’m FINALLY getting around to reviewing it. I wanted to put this out sooner, but life got kinda crazy over here (like, couch surfing and boilers exploding crazy), BUT better late then […]

Hello again friends! Back again with a single to review. It’s been about a month since the release of this single (9/30), and I’m FINALLY getting around to reviewing it. I wanted to put this out sooner, but life got kinda crazy over here (like, couch surfing and boilers exploding crazy), BUT better late then never!

I want to start out by saying that I love this single, a lot. Like, listen to it once and buy it for $10, a lot. And it’s their debut! I really, really hope this band – The Cruelty – keeps going, or at least puts out a full-length LP, because just this single is stellar.

Let’s get to it, shall we? It seems to me a prevailing theme in this track is the dichotomies in life that we just kind of live around, and avoid looking at. Homeless and housed, screaming and laughing, even down to the intro, the juxtaposition of some softly strummed, acoustic chords, immediately followed by heavy, overdriven electric guitar, grumbling bass, and overwhelming drums. The visceral, unsettling tragedy that the distance between these things can evoke is really quite elegantly expressed.

Co-vocalist/bassist Jeff Wright says, Hand In Hand is a direct observation from a darker time in (bandmate) Cody’s life – shrouded in possibly one too many visits to the local dive bar. Written from watching a houseless person from afar while they had a breakdown – they quite literally dropped a Safeway cake on the hot pavement and ate it off the ground. After seeing that go down and meeting them, it was a reminder that when all things seem lost, sometimes all it takes is someone to lend a hand and guide you out of the dark.”

Even this precedent set by the intro doesn’t get to stay the same. It transitions into a bass lead, a simple plucked guitar riff, and a rim shot keeping beat. Here the vocals are introduced, gently crooning. Halfway through the verse, tension builds with a reintroduction of that acoustic guitar, quickly strumming, with more bass and complicated drumming.

Everything cuts out except that acoustic, playing those intro chords again, before getting thrown into the chorus. The back and forth between loud strummed chords, and a lilting, screaming riff, accentuates that feeling of being caught between two sides of the world. Gang vocals behind the lines “Head in your hands, you scream and shout”, I’m reminded of the feeling of being surrounded by people, but feeling stuck and alone.

A lovely break post-chorus, with a guitar riff leading the bass and drums into something more solemn in feeling. The drums still keeping with a complicated beat, holding a feeling of mildly controlled panic. In come the vocals, juxtaposing the homeless man from the chorus with someone in the lyricist’s own life. A delay effect and subtly increasingly layered vocals make it sound like someone talking with ghosts.

Cut again to that acoustic in the pre-chorus, and suddenly these two sides are talking to each other, as the acoustic repeats the chords of the electric. The two lines “Hand in hand, foot in mouth” and “Head in your hands, you scream and shout” are the only lines sung in this chorus. Again, in my mind, the lyrisist’s own ghosts from a failing relationship are talking with the memory of the homeless man on the street. Finally coming to a close with isolated vocals in the outro, the vocalist sounding drunk, almost talking, with the line “you scream and shout”.

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The Venomous Pinks rally for reproductive rights with ‘We Must Prevail’

<p>The Venomous Pinks have never shied away from a fight. But now they’re taking on something we can all get behind, as the Arizona punk band rally for reproductive right and rage against abortion bans in their new single and video “We Must Prevail.” The visual, which went live on Independence Day (July 4) depicting The Statue of Liberty gripping a coat hanger and scenes of uprising and protest, is a direct response to the overturning of Roe v. Wade. It […]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://vanyaland.com/2023/07/10/the-venomous-pinks-rally-for-reproductive-rights-with-we-must-prevail/">The Venomous Pinks rally for reproductive rights with ‘We Must Prevail’</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://vanyaland.com">Vanyaland</a>.</p>

Videos: The Venomous Pinks: "We Must Prevail"

The Venomous Pinks have released a video for their song “We Must Prevail”. The video was directed by Nikki Carmela and Alexander Thomas and was produced by Eternal Film Productions. The song is off their album Vita More which was released in 2022. The Venomous Pinks will be touring Europe with Bad Cop/Bad Cop starting later this month and will be touring the US with Less Than Jake starting in August. Check out the video below.