Graveripper are a three-piece thrash combo from Indianapolis. They make a lovely noise. They hit the thrashing trail back in 2019 and have released an EP with the catchy title of ‘Radiated Remains’. They followed that up with a full-length LP – (Seasons Dreaming Death).

This latest effort, ‘From Welkin to Tundra’ is a full-on monster of an album. I can hear a plethora of influences, from Death to Iron Maiden, there’s even a hint of Lemmy and the boys in the mix. Add in some classic Venom and you’ve got a good idea of how Graveripper sound.

The atmospheric intro ‘Welkin, Now Tundra’ kicks off the album in style before the sledgehammer ear assault of ‘Bring Upon Pain’ shows you what Graveripper are capable of. Drummer Nick James plays an absolute blinder; it’s exhausting just listening to his barrage of double kick drums and blast beats. ‘Hexenhammer’ takes into Morbid Angel territory, guitarist/vocalist Corey Parks spits out the lyrics with power. Death’s Cold Embrace is another face melter, Parks is a very competent guitarist, and he shows off his chops here.

‘Sanctioned Slaughter’ has echoes of early Machine Head, crunchy riffs and more astounding drumming from James. ‘Hounds From Hell’ shows that there’s no slowing down, another belter of a track. New Gods, New Masters is another showcase for Graveripper’s obvious talents, including a fantastic mid-paced neck stretcher of a riff.

‘…And Now It’s Dark’ has more of a punk feel, Discharge come to mind. ‘Bullet Laden Crown’ starts with a melodic riff before we head off to full on metal mayhem again. Awesome stuff. The album concludes with ‘Burning Barren Plains’ which gives the listener another sonic assault.

‘From Welkin to Tundra’ is a fantastic album. I loved every minute. I look forward to hearing more of Graveripper. The album is released on October 17th. Go and grab a physical copy if you can!

Buy Here

Author: Kenny Kendrick

Lo-Fi, nasty, noisy punk rock with melodies Dee Dee would have killed for. Oh and guitar solos stolen from the good and the great of bygone eras. Jacket Burner is on fire! As far as debut LPs go this is a home run filled with hypnotic sleazy guitar slashing over even more hypnotic rhythms and drum beats.

One Man band Jacket Burner is a mystery wrapped in a conundrum wrapped in a spew bag of hate-filled anthems for a generation who probably can’t even remember a time when giants roamed the earth like The Ramones and The Cramps, but their spirit lives on on records like ‘Eat shit’. ‘Be Ur Man’ is a rapid slice of fuzz guitar fucked levels of gain on the vocals that are spitting out a love song to someone before th edirty rolling riff that would have been a love letter to poison ivy and Lux as ‘Re Wire My Brain’ leans on history for its melody and that riff thats drills down into your cranium and demands to be played louder and harder.

Quite how a one-man band can be led by V. Tiers is another story, but Mr Tiers has it going on and slapping around in the ‘Cesspool’ of punk rock is so lo-fi it’s beautiful and couldn’t have been recorded any other way, it just simply wouldn’t have worked.

The beautiful anthemic ‘Teenage Metalhead’ might just be the album’s peak, with great lyrics over a filthy riff. Coming at us via Italy’s Goodbye Boozy Records, this Londoner isn’t happy with ten new tracks (possibly because it would last less than fifteen minutes), but has tagged a bonus ten on side two. So double the hate-drenched, sleaze-soaked punk, the entire ‘Terminal Depression’ digital debut album, doubling the dose of unapologetic fury. This is also a limited run of 250 copies. So sit on it, and you will indeed Eat Shit and no doubt pay fortunes in months to come on Discogs. Don’t sleep on it! It’s been an exceptional few years for Jacket Burner with the split with Gino And The Goons and the ‘Tonight’ EP, then this, Jacket Burner is right where it’s at, go get it.

Buy Here Goodbye Boozy Bandcamp Here

With 26 years and counting as vocalist with r n’ b legends Dr Feelgood, Robert Kane is about to release his first solo album, which I’ve reviewed for RPM, natch. This seemed like the perfect time to put some questions to him about his 50-plus-year career, which may be more varied than some people realise.

After founding The Showbiz Kids in the 1970s alongside Olga (yes, he of The Toy Dolls), Robert became the singer with the reformed Animals, before joining Dr Feelgood in 1999. Some 1000-plus gigs later, he’s still happy on the road, and having seen the band recently in France, I can tell (see what I did there) that they are still loving it, and are very much on fire at the moment. Catch them if you can.

RPM: The press release says that you’ve had these songs sitting around for a while, from various periods in your career. Why did you choose this moment to release your debut solo album, and which is the oldest song? 

R.K: I write all the time, even if it’s just a line or two that might get used later, but a lot of finished songs don’t fit with what you’re currently doing, so if there’s no outlet for them and they just get left behind, languishing in a kind of no man’s land. One day, I was playing one of those songs at home and realised I’d never played it to anyone, and I thought, ‘Well, does a song actually exist if no one has ever heard it?’. It was then that I realised that I needed to get some of these songs together and get them out there. Originally, I was hoping to have the album out about five years ago and had got started on it when COVID came along and everything just stopped. When things opened up again, I was so busy with Dr Feelgood that it had to be put on hold until I had the time (and money) to get it done. And that time is Now! 

RPM: While the styles are slightly different, did you ever consider any of them for Dr Feelgood?

R.K: Well, Dr Feelgood is an R&B band and these songs are all rooted in R&B but there are many styles within the genre and I never heard these as Feelgood numbers. 

RPM: Tell us a little about the musicians that you chose to play on the album. What’s your history with them?

R.K: I worked with guitarist George Fearon in a band called The Alligators from 1989 to 1994, and two of the songs on the album were written with him. 

There are two drummers on the album  – Dave Dodsworth, who was also in The Alligators and Ian Hamilton, who is in great demand in the North East of England, where I live. 

Bass is played by Frankie Gibbon who also played some keyboard and even drums on one track. Also the recording was done by him at his studio. 

Steve Dawson played guitar alongside Hilton Valentine when I was in Animals ll from 1994-99 and he’s on a couple of tracks. He also did the mixing and mastering. 

Dave Chapman plays organ on one song and he was recommended to me by Steve Dawson. 

I play harmonica and rhythm guitar. 

RPM: I recently heard the first single by The Showbiz Kids, thanks to YouTube. I’m always fascinated by the history behind an artist. It’s a really good track, reflective of the era. Naturally, your voice and approach have changed over the years, and most singers take a long time to find their voice, which you clearly have now. What are your fondest memories of this time? 

R.K: It was a great time. I was young and ambitious and we really worked to try and make it.  We became very popular locally and worked a lot in London too but although we did our best to get a record contract it just didn’t happen for us. Good times though. 

RPM: While Dr Feelgood are pretty much always on the road, do you plan on releasing another solo album in the future? 

R.K: It has been mentioned, so I wouldn’t rule it out.

RPM: And, speaking of future releases, are you and Gordon Russell working on new songs at the moment, or do they just arrive when they’re ready to? ‘Damn Right!’ was such a welcome surprise; 11 great, new songs by Dr Feelgood that fit so well into the set. You obviously all had a blast recording them; it’s evident in each song. 

R.K: Gordon and I have got plenty of ideas but like all these things it’ll happen when the time is right. 

RPM: As a lifelong fan of Feelgood and a frustrated harmonica player, I have to ask. I read somewhere online that, during your audition, or perhaps just afterwards, the band gave you a nod during a practice, to tell you where the harp solos were. Your response was “I don’t play harp”, and they said “well, you better learn quickly, the tour’s coming up”, or words to that effect. Correct me if I’m wrong. And, how did you learn? After years of trying to ad-lib, I had some very technical harmonica lessons, which, as I had suspected, couldn’t teach me the ‘feel’ necessary for r n b. 

R.K: Yes, it’s true. When I auditioned and said I didn’t play, they said, ‘Can you sort that out for next week?’ My first thought was, ‘Does that mean I’ve got the job?’ 

Anyway, I had a harmonica with a busted reed, which I’d been given by The Alligators’ harmonica player but it had just been sitting in a drawer for years. So when I got home, I got this out and spent a few days frantically sucking and blowing and trying to get something out of it that sounded vaguely musical! By the end of the week, I’d managed to play a bent note with a bluesy feel to it and thought, ‘That’s it, I’ve cracked it!’ Of course, I hadn’t but I had enough to bluff my way through the songs. A few weeks later, I did my first gig with the band, and that was a bit nervy but it went really well. I never had any instruction or lessons, I just picked it up by gigging constantly, and twenty-six years later, I still don’t know what I’m doing! 

Buy Robert Kane’s ‘Blues Is Blues’ : Here.

Author: Martin Chamarette

The masked barons of Swedish High Energy Rock ’n’ Roll are charging ahead towards their tenth album. After the roaring success of the first single “Look! It’s Rock ’n’ Roll”, Märvel now returns with the follow-up “Biding My Time” – a powerful, honest, and melody-driven track about standing firm, holding on, and never letting setbacks break you.

“Biding My Time is about standing tall even when everything feels heavy,” the band says. “It’s a song about endurance – about waiting for the right moment and not giving up on life, love, or the words you want to say. It was written during a period when everything around the band was falling apart, but we held together and weathered the storm – and a lot of that feeling is captured in the song.”

Pre Save Links Here

With 23 years, nine studio albums, and countless high-voltage shows under their belts, Märvel has become an institution in European rock. From garages and beers in Colorado in 2002, through the celebrated debut EP Marvellous, to collaborations with some of Sweden’s rock elite, the band has built a loyal following through their unique mix of fat riffs, massive choruses, and explosive live performances.

In 2022, Märvel celebrated 20 years as a band with the double album Double Decade and their very own festival, MÄRVELFEST, where past and present members united on stage. Their latest album Graces Came With Malice was widely praised, and now The King, The Vicar, and The Burgher are gearing up for the next chapter.

“Biding My Time” shows Märvel at their most electrifying – with attitude, energy, and the hooks that have made them a guaranteed live favorite. The single is the second piece of the puzzle leading up to the 2025 album release, setting the tone for a record that blends raw power, honesty, and a brand-new spark in the band’s story.

“Biding My Time” will be released on Märvel’s own label Leather Lake and will be available on all digital platforms on September 26, 2025.

Official Website: https://www.marveltheband.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/marveltheband
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marveltheband
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@marveltheband
X: https://www.x.com/fivesmellcity

FROM THE UPCOMING LIVE ALBUM: “LIGHTHOUSE: LIVE FROM LONDON”


ALL-NEW 19-SONG LIVE ALBUM AND FULL-LENGTH CONCERT FILM

CAPTURED DURING LAST YEAR’S SOLD-OUT LIGHTHOUSE TOUR ‘24

In October 2023, Duff McKagan released his critically acclaimed third solo album Lighthouse. The following year, he brought those songs – along with fan favourites – to a sold-out audience at London’s iconic Islington Assembly Hall.

Now, one year after that unforgettable night in 2024, McKagan presents LIGHTHOUSE: LIVE FROM LONDON, a powerful document of his performance and its unrelenting energy. “Fallen Ones”, the second single and video from the live album. While its studio version is already a standout on Lighthouse, the live recording captures an added urgency and atmosphere, giving the song new dimension in front of an audience.

Backed by his core group of longtime collaborators – Mike Squires (bass, backing vocals), Michael Musburger (drums, backing vocals), Tim DiJulio (guitar, backing vocals), and Jeff Fielder (guitar, keyboards, backing vocals) – Fallen Ones becomes both intimate and anthemic. Their years of shared history come through in the tight interplay, driving rhythm, and a chemistry that turns the

song into a standout highlight of the set.


UNFORGETTABLE LIVE RECORDING OF FALLEN ONES OUT NOW!

PRE-ORDER AVAILABLE NOW

Duff McKagan online:

Website | Facebook | Instagram | YOUTUBE | X

40 YEARS OF  ‘I DON’T WANT TO GROW UP‘  WITH DEFINITIVE REISSUE OUT NOVEMBER 21

Org Music continues its acclaimed reissue campaign with the band’s second album, featuring multiple formats, exclusive color variants, and a special “Punk Note” edition with artwork by John Yates inspired by Blue Note jazz classics.

Pre Order Here

“…featured the most singable tunes the band had ever written. ‘Good Good Things’, ‘In Love This Way’, and ‘Can’t Go Back’ were positively sunny by Descendents standards; the Beach Boys-gone-punk vibe was an obvious precursor to Weezer.”- Jenny Eliscu

“When the four want to be straight up and perfectly poppy, they can and do with smashing success, with surprisingly mature, emotional lyrics and playing that doesn’t rely on all-speed all the time.”-All Music

Los Angeles, CA — Org Music is proud to announce the reissue of I Don’t Want To Grow Up, the landmark second album from legendary punk pioneers Descendents, arriving November 21, 2025. The reissue will be available across formats—LP, CD, and cassette—alongside a special Punk Note LP edition featuring alternate packaging.

This release marks the second installment in Org Music’s ongoing reissue campaign with Descendents, who recently reclaimed ownership of their master recordings. Following the acclaimed reissue of Milo Goes To College, this new edition brings fresh attention to one of the band’s most beloved albums—arriving just in time for its 40th anniversary.

Originally released in 1985 on New Alliance Records, the label founded by Minutemen’s D. Boon and Mike Watt, I Don’t Want To Grow Up was recorded after vocalist Milo Aukerman returned from college. It also marked the first of two albums to feature guitarist Ray Cooper. With brighter melodies and sharper hooks than its predecessor, the record helped the band avoid the dreaded sophomore slump while cementing their status as one of punk’s most influential voices.

Among the many formats, fans will find a standout: a limited Punk Note edition designed by John Yates (Stealworks). Inspired by the iconic Blue Note jazz label artwork of Reid Miles and Francis Wolff, these reimagined covers bring a bold, visual reinterpretation of punk history. The Punk Note series began with Org Music’s celebrated Bad Brains reissues, and continues here with deluxe case-wrapped jackets and new liner notes by BrooklynVegan senior editor Andrew Sacher.

The reissue will be available in the following variants:

Widely Available Formats:

  • Black LP
  • “Banana Peel” LP
  • Punk Note Edition (Black Vinyl)
  • CD
  • Cassette (Yellow)

Limited / Exclusive Variants:

  • Punk Note Edition (Transparent Yellow LP) — Org Music Exclusive
  • “Oxblood Docs” LP — Descendents Exclusive
  • Ocean LP — BrooklynVegan
  • Pink LP — Zia Records Exclusive
  • Green Bay LP — 1-2-3-4-GO! Records
  • Bubble Gum LP — Going Underground Records & Seasick Records Exclusive
  • Black LP with Exclusive Obi Strip — Celebrated Summer Records
  • Purple Swirl Cassette — Tapehead City Exclusive

With I Don’t Want To Grow Up, Descendents sharpened their signature mix of melody and urgency, laying down a blueprint that countless punk bands would follow. Forty years later, the album still feels raw, relatable, and essential—now reintroduced in a definitive reissue that honors its enduring legacy.

More reissues are on deck. The campaign will continue with Enjoy!ALLBonus Fat, and beyond—each release overseen by the band themselves, ensuring the music is presented exactly as they intend.

This effort isn’t just a trip down memory lane—it’s about preserving the work, honoring the intent behind it, and opening the door for a new generation to discover one of punk’s most influential catalogs.

Pre-orders and variant details available at:

https://bio.to/descendents

Follow Descendents:
[Webstore] | [Instagram] | [Facebook]

Drink The Sea announce their first ever UK and European tour 

Tickets – Here

celebrating their albums out on Sunyata Records / Sony Music

Drink The Sea, a new supergroup uniting some of the most acclaimed musicians of the last three decades, proudly announce their first ever UK and European tour.

The band features Peter Buck (R.E.M.), Barrett Martin (Screaming Trees, Mad Season), Alain Johannes (Eleven, Queens of the Stone Age), Duke Garwood (Mark Lanegan Band), percussionist Lisette Garcia, and bassist Abbey Blackwell. Together, they will perform material from their two forthcoming debut albums, alongside select classics from their celebrated former bands. The performance will also include exclusive film projections from award-winning filmmaker Tad Fettig, making this an unmissable night of music and visual storytelling.

Drink The Sea is kind of the band that all of us wanted to be in as we get older. When we were young, we played all the new alternative music, even invented a few styles of our own, and that happened back in the 1990s. Now as older musicians who have known and worked together on different projects over years and even decades, what we have found to be the most interesting thing in this new collaboration, is our focus on songwriting. It’s in our blood to write songs and everyone is really working hard to create something beautiful. I think we have succeeded with these first two debut albums, and it wasn’t hard to do it either, we all had songs flowing constantly and it was just a matter of which ones we were going to finish. 

In fact, we’ve already started working on album #3. So for this first tour of Europe, the US, and South America, we’re going to play most of these new songs, along with a few favourites from our former bands (R.E.M., Screaming Trees, Mad Season, etc.)  We are also playing with beautiful films that are projected behind us, created by the PBS filmmaker, Tad Fettig. Tad filmed these scenes around the world and they show incredible natural landscapes, people from all over the world, and they just kind of visually weave together the same feelings that our music has: that the Earth and the people are intimately connected and it’s much more beautiful than what the powers above us want us to believe. It’ll just be us on stage with our various instruments, playing these songs along with these beautiful films, and telling the occasional story to bring it all down the Earth. Give us a couple hours of your life, it’s really special and you won’t regret it.” – Barrett Martin, Olympia, WA

Drink The Sea release two highly anticipated albums digitally through Sony/Orchard on September 19th and October 3rd, followed by a special double CD edition on October 3rd.

Bringing together a lineup of pioneering artists who helped define alternative and rock music in the 1990s and beyond, Drink The Sea represents a rare convergence of vision, history, and innovation.

Stream the music, pre order the vinyl and double CD, and explore all things Drink The Sealinktr.ee/DrinkTheSea

Stream Drink The Sea here .

DRINK THE SEA –  European and UK tour dates in full 

November 

Fri 28th Oviedo, Spain @ Kiuvi

Sun 30th Santiago De Compostela, Spain @ Sala Capitol

December 

Tue 2nd  Cadiz, Spain @ Edificio Constitucion 1812

Wed 3st Sevilla, Spain @ Sala X

Thu 4th Valencia, Spain @ 16 Toneladas

Fri  5th San Sebastian, Spain @ Dabadaba

Sat 6th Madrid, Spain @ Sala Villanos

Tue 9th Paris, France @ La Maroquinerie

Thu 11th  Portsmouth, England @ The Wedgewood Rooms

Fri 12th Liverpool, England @ Arts Club

Sun 14th Dublin, Ireland @ The Button Factory

Mon 15th  Belfast, Northern Ireland @ Empire Music Hall 

Wed 17th  London, England @ The Jazz Café

Thu 18th  Leeds, England @ Brudenell Social Club

Fri 19th Glasgow, Scotland @ Room 2

Sat 20th Birmingham, England @ O2 Institute 

Sun 21st Bristol, England @ Thekla

Tickets available here for all shows https://bnds.us/z1hbz3

It’s been a long time coming, but it’s good to be back. I was racking my brain (or what’s left of it) to recollect the last time I saw Tyla perform and decided it’s been a while, quite a while. From the early heady days of The Fleece in Bristol, when How Come It Never Rains was released, to the wonderful night in The Square Club in Cardiff, through countless London trips and the legendary nights in The Astoria, Hammersmith Odeon, The Dominion, Dingwalls, and Town and Country Club, and the classic line-up reforming to play The Borderline – hell, I even saw the band tear HMV Oxford Street a new one on an afternoon back in their heyday. It’s been quite the journey, and one I’ve thoroughly enjoyed. And of all the hundreds of shows I’ve ever had the privilege of attending some of the most memorable are when Tyla has been the ringmaster and principle performer.

With a truly magical album in tow, this line-up set out on a quick jaunt through South Wales and a couple of English shows. To say I was looking forward to catching Tyla would be a disservice to the guy’s catalogue of magical tunes.

Anyway, enough waffling on with the review. The band ambles on stage. And, without fanfare, rips into ‘Last Bandit’ and immediately I was transformed into a wonderful, happy place as memories washed over me, but there was no time to drift off. Focus, Daley; stay on task.

One of my favourite songs has to be ‘Firework Girl’, which was a rare treat, as Matty James Cassidy hit that bassline hard and Tyla sang the words like the last forty years had melted away. The big hitter came thick and fast, and happy punters lapped it up in the impressively busy venue. ‘Billy Two Rivers, ‘I Don’t Want You To Go’, and ‘Heroine’ chased one another out of the setlist with aplomb. The band was tight. And new guy Jamie Turnbull stepped into some pretty big shoes without dropping a note, and if he did, he was able to play such classics with sympathy and style, and from the engine room, the energy of the band was there for everyone to see and hear, and this long-time fanboy was suitably impressed.

It was great to hear more recent songs like ‘111’ and ‘All Of Them Gone’. sandwiched between golden oldies like ‘Satellite Kid’ and ‘Drunk Like Me’ with communal Jager for good measure. Tyla cracked jokes, told some quick stories, and played the jester and looked to be having a ball, and so he should. This had been a fantastic journey through some awesome tunes.

Let’s not forget Tyla J Pallas has a brand new album for sale, and we were also treated to ‘Baptism By Fire’, ‘Cadillac Man’, before walking us through a stunning rendition of ‘Don’t Ever Stop Loving Me’. As the night wore on towards its conclusion, we were dealt the epic one-two of ‘How Come It Never Rains’ and a bombastic ‘Errol Flynn’ to close off an inspirational performance from one of the best. Now, if all Friday nights played out this well and the soundtrack was this stellar, life would be just peachy all the time. Now fire up the Batmobile, we’re going to The Patriot for another round. It would be rude not to.

I thought the venue was perfect, but the band was just as good on night two, sounding impressive and doing justice to pretty much the same setlist but in a different running order. Now, let’s not leave it the best part of a decade before we do this again. That was bloody awesome. Chin, Chin and Cheers, Mr T. you bloody legend.

Author: Dom Daley

It’s 11 pm and I’m standing outside The Exchange, blinking my eyes in relief that I don’t, in fact, need a cataract operation after all. It’s the dry ice, you see, and these dark wave types bathe in the bloody stuff, so much so there are times tonight where I could have been on set at a Hammer horror film… But that’s the point; it’s all about setting the mood, and tonight the mood is brooding.

There was no way I was going to miss the return of Then Comes Silence, the undisputed kings of Swedish gothic gloom pop, to the UK, and thanks once again to the sterling work of promoters Reptile, they are also back in Bristol for the third time in just two years to keep all of us local(ish) boils and ghouls happy. The other great thing about a Reptile night is that they always pack it full of quality music, from the DJs spinning the graveyard dancefloor fillers to the support acts, and tonight The Foreign Resort are a new name to me but are a trio who immediately impress.

Hailing from Denmark, The Foreign Resort initially hit me like a Scandinavian Home Front (yup they are that impressive), with frontman Mikkel hanging off his mic stand whilst his bandmates Henrik (on guitar) and Morten (on drums) weave their widescreen sonic magic, but it’s when Mikkel picks up the bass guitar a few songs in that the band truly hits their stride. For a band who’s 16 year old back catalogue I’m totally unfamiliar with to instantly grab my attention, is ultimately down to just how immersive the Foreign Resort live experience is. Yes, there’s a HUGE Cure influence (largely due to Mikkel’s vocal stylings) but there’s also swathes of Killing Joke, Depeche Mode and (bringing things bang up to date) Home Front in their sound too.

‘Flushing’ is the track that really did it for me, a song I later discovered was released well over a decade ago. It’s Bauhaus meets Gary Numan, if Depeche Mode had written it…and it’s fucking fantastic.

Which is something I also seem to say quite a lot when describing tonight’s headliners to anyone willing to listen, and tonight Then Comes Silence are even more fucking fantastic than ever before.

Someone remembers to finally turn on The Exchange’s air conditioning as the band hits the stage with ‘Flashing Pangs Of Love’ and it’s almost like an evil entity has entered the room, as a shiver suddenly runs down my spine. There’s nothing evil about Then Comes Silence’s music, though, as guitarist Hugo pirouettes around the stage like a marionette Richie Manic, and to his right singer/bassist Alex thunders and growls away like Peter Steele if he’d been a veteran of The Blitz Club and not CBGBs, whilst songs like ‘Ride Or Die’ and newbie ‘Like a Hammer’ all pulsate to a hypnotic backbeat courtesy of the ever rock solid Jonas on drums.

I must admit that ahead of tonight, I was a little worried that if the band’s set were to lean heavily on tracks from last year’s ‘Trickery’ album, I might be a little lost at sea, as, thanks to a house move and the insane price of the CD online, I’d yet to fully absorb its gothic goodness. Fear not, though, as it’s just ‘Blind Eye’ along with the aforementioned ‘Hammer’ that (as far as I can recall) make it into tonight’s set. Otherwise, it’s banger after banger from the band’s hugely impressive back catalogue, and when the band tears into the likes of ‘Dead Cry For No One’ and ‘Warm Like Blood’ mid-set, I’m still left wondering how Nuclear Blast didn’t make Then Comes Silence the household names they so deserve to be. Well, on Mockingbird Lane at the very least.

There’s always something that makes me stop and take a step back at a Then Comes Silence show, and tonight it’s when Alex ditches his bass guitar for a stint at the keyboard, and the carnival-esque throb of ‘Feed The Beast’ has me thinking of early Roxy Music, whilst it’s ‘Strangers’ also from the band’s third album, that brings things to a close.

You know, after witnessing Suede deliver a post-punk/gothic masterclass in London over the previous weekend in support of their excellent ‘Antidepressants’ album, I’m pleased to say that Then Comes Silence more than matched them here tonight. In fact, if anyone has Brett’s number, give him a bell and get him to put these Stockholm lads on their UK and European tour in 2026, now that really would be something truly exceptional.

Author: Johnny ‘Nosferatu’ Hayward

I know punk rock ‘n’ roll happens in cycles, and whilst you wait for a void to be filled when one band of reprobates falls, you tend to hear several bands rise to the surface, and there’s no time like the present for a sleazy band of rock ‘n’ rollers to kick down the door with some rampant, distorted, sleazy rock ‘n’ roll. Lipstick Vibrators hail from the Seine and have been peddling their rock and roll since 2006, give or take a few hiatuses, but their brand of self-styled “Savage Rock’n’Roll” is most welcome from the dark, dank underbelly of Paris.

This, their third long player, is full to the brim of reckless wild riffs pushing their amps to the limit as they hack and slash through the weeds of rock n roll. The opener is a perfect example of what they’re all about, whereas ‘Revolution Baby’ enters Hip Priests territory with a thumping Stooges engine powering the rhythm along with some sleazy vocals barked out of a distorted speaker spitting punk rock n roll all over the listener. It’s suitably aggressive and wild, which is exactly what the rock ‘n’ roll doctor ordered for these wild times. It’s drinking music baby, dark and dangerous and bloody loud!

What’s not to like about the thunderous intro of ‘Partners In Crime’? It’s like pure Scabies- and James-inspired noise, and we totally approve. ‘Vivid Dreams’ is giving me UK Subs vibes on the intro, and then all hell breaks loose after the choppy guitar interlude.

‘Two Fisted Drinker’ is a beautiful, reckless noise; this album just gets better and better. In fact, it’s so sweet it could eat itself. Twelve songs in thirty-five minutes from top to bottom are loaded with bangers. ‘Burning Inside’ is a savage beast before the full-throttle whiplash of ‘Workers’ cuts loose.

Before we’re done, there’s the ragged ‘Do The Pop’ something of a Cramps-meets-Ramones speed paying homage to those who paved the way in some uber-cool punk rock genres. The Johnny Thunders guitar breaks are most welcome over the solid backbeat.

It’s not all crash bang wallop (almost but not quite). ‘Lockdown’ is a hypnotic rhythm and a more restrained charge with an emphasis on the groove and melody. Then, just to remind you what these cats are all about, they pull out all the stops for one last attack, and ‘Amphetamine’ is unleashed before we go back in for seconds. What a great record and a fine example of high-octane sleazy punk rock ‘n’ roll. Viva la Revolución, brothers. Go get a copy of this before it’s all gone.

Buy Here