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Legendary guitarist Dave Hill announces the release of his long-awaited solo album, Dirty Foot Lane, due for release in October—a rich, autobiographical collection of songs reflecting a lifetime of music, creativity, and personal discovery.

Best known as a founding member of Slade, Hill steps into a new artistic space with a record that blends rock, blues, folk, and atmospheric soundscapes. The album captures both the energy of his live-performance roots and a more reflective emotional depth shaped by recent years.

Dirty Foot Lane is deeply rooted in Hill’s personal history. The title itself refers to a real place not far from where he grew up and still lives today, underscoring his identity as a true local lad. More than just a location, Dirty Foot Lane serves as the emotional and symbolic heart of the album, representing the centre of Hill’s family memories and formative experiences.

This is an intensely personal body of work, tracing Hill’s journey from childhood to global success. The album explores his upbringing, the influence of his parents and family, his early ambition to become a musician, and his rise to international fame. It also addresses more challenging chapters, including struggles with mental health and the profound impact of the COVID-19 lockdowns, ultimately arriving at a place of reflection and appreciation for life.

Leading the production is Django Holder, who also plays a key role in engineering and shaping the album’s sound. As the son of Noddy Holder, his involvement adds a meaningful generational connection to Hill’s musical legacy.

A key contributor to the album is Hill’s long-time collaborator John Berry, whose career includes work with Mud and The Sweet. “I’ve known John for over twenty years,” says Hill. “He’s incredibly talented, honest, and always gives you his very best. That’s invaluable.” Berry plays a particularly important role on some of the album’s heavier tracks, while Hill performs the majority of the lead vocals. Producer and musician Rob Childs also contributes to the project.

Songs like “Play It to the Crowd” and “Back in the Air Again” capture the exhilaration of live performance, written during lockdown as a response to the absence of touring. “I wanted to recreate that feeling of walking into a packed arena—the energy, the buzz, the connection with the audience,” Hill explains.

In contrast, Dirty Foot Lane also explores more personal and complex themes. “She Had a Troubled Heart” stands out as a deeply moving track addressing love, loss, and mental health, inspired by real-life experiences. “It’s about what happens when love becomes one-sided,” says Hill. “And the impact that can have on people’s lives.”

The album draws on every stage of Hill’s journey. “Thanks for the Good Times” serves as a tribute to fans, collaborators, and shared success, while “Reasons to Succeed” reflects his lifelong ambition. “Only Fools and Horses” revisits the unpredictable early days of the music industry, and “Fast Train” captures the intensity of Slade’s rapid rise. Elsewhere, “Dust My Axe” channels a blues-driven response to modern life, while “Sweet and Tender” offers a heartfelt tribute to his mother.

The title track, “Dirty Foot Lane,” stands as the emotional centrepiece of the record. Reimagined with Django Holder, it blends folk and ambient elements into an intimate, atmospheric soundscape. “It’s my story—my family, my home, my journey,” Hill says. “Everything connects back to that.

Stripped back and deeply expressive, the track encapsulates both the personal and artistic essence of the album.Together, the songs form a narrative that is both intimate and universal, grounded in memory, resilience, and a lifelong passion for music.

Dirty Foot Lane marks a significant step forward for Dave Hill—an artist still driven by creativity and curiosity after decades in the industry. “I’ve always been driven,” he says. “And I’m still looking for the next challenge. This album is part of that journey.”

Dave Hill is best known as the lead guitarist of Slade, one of the UK’s most iconic rock bands. With a career spanning over five decades, he continues to record, perform, and connect with audiences worldwide.

Dirty Foot Lane – Track List

  1. Thanks for the Good Times
  2. Back in the Air Again
  3. Dust My Axe
  4. She Had a Troubled Heart
  5. Sweet and Tender
  6. Fast Train
  7. Only Fools and Horses
  8. Play It to the Crowd
  9. Reasons to Succeed
  10. Dirty Foot Lane

Album: Dirty Foot Lane
Artist: Dave Hill
Release Date: October 2026
To pre-order / pre-save, go to: https://linktr.ee/dirtyfootlane

FEATURING SERJ TANKIAN AND ROMAN MORELLO

TOM MORELLO PRESENTS: POWER TO THE PEOPLE FESTIVAL 

A CELEBRATION OF PEACE, JUSTICE, SOLIDARITY, MUSIC AND COMMUNITY ACTION

FEATURING DAVE MATTHEWS, FOO FIGHTERS, JOAN BAEZ, , BRITTANY HOWARD, DROPKICK MURPHYS, JACK BLACK,  SERJ TANKIAN, CYPRESS HILL, KILLER MIKE, THE LINDA LINDAS, & A SPECIAL PERFORMANCE BY BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN 

JUST ANNOUNCED – TICKETS ON SALE TOMORROW – OCTOBER 3RD IN THE DC AREA

Tom Morello has released his new single “Adjourn It” from his forthcoming album on Mom + Pop. The track features Serj Tankian and Morello’s 15 year old son Roman and it calls on the listener to resist the rising tide of fascism. Earlier this year, Tom and Bruce Springsteen went to Minnesota to protest the Minneapolis ICE raids and the murders of Alex Pretti and Renee Good, and this month in New York City he joined with the organization Hands Off to protest ICE and its abuses outside of 26 Federal Plaza – an Immigration Court in Manhattan. Read more about it HERE and listen to “Adjourn It” HERE. The track was produced by Zakk Cervini  (Bring Me The Horizon, Yungblud) and written by Tom, Serj, Zakk, and Roman. Watch the visualizer: HERE

Tom Morello on “Adjourn It” 

At this historical juncture every act of art is an act of resistance and “Adjourn It”, a collaboration with long time friend Serj Tankian and my 15 year old guitar wiz son Roman Morello, is a clarion call for justice in unjust times. Produced by Zakk Cervini (Bring Me The Horizon, Yungblud, Aerosmith) this latest tune from my upcoming solo album combines multi-generational Morello bulldozer riffs with the great Serj Tankian’s prophetic wailings. Inspired by the  persecution of immigrants across the land and the heroic resistance to the rising tide of fascism it’s just about damn time to rock for freedom, justice and equality.

This week from stage with Bruce Springsteen, whom Morello has been touring with for the last month, Tom announced The Power To The People Festival — a non-partisan celebration of peace, justice, solidarity, music, and community action — taking place Saturday, October 3, 2026 at Merriweather Post Pavilion in Columbia, MD. The general on-sale is happening this Saturday, May 30 at 10AM ET. For more information visit www.powertothepeoplefest.com.

The one-day festival will feature intimate, collaborative and special performances from an extraordinary lineup of artists and activists including Dave Matthews, Foo Fighters, Bruce Springsteen, Joan Baez, Killer Mike, Brittany Howard, Dropkick Murphys, Jack Black (featuring Roman Morello, Revel Ian, Yoyoka Soma and Hugo Weiss), Serj Tankian, grandson, The Neighborhood Kids, Taylor Momsen, Matt Cameron, The Linda Lindas, Darryl “DMC” McDaniels and Tom Morello, alongside artwork and a DJ set by legendary artist Shepard Fairey. Curated by Tom Morello, Power To The People Festival brings together artists, fans, activists, organizations and community leaders for an unforgettable day celebrating the power of music and collective action to inspire change.

In addition to performances across two stages, attendees will have the opportunity to engage with nonprofit organizations, advocacy groups, artists, and community partners in the festival’s Freedom Village — an immersive space highlighting opportunities for civic engagement, grassroots organizing, education, mutual aid, and social impact initiatives. A portion of the proceeds from all ticket sales will be donated to VoteRiders, a pro-democracy, pro-voter organization working to restore and strengthen democracy by eliminating confusing and restrictive ID-related barriers to the ballot box, and Headcount, who will also be on site to help fans register to vote and learn more about how to participate in upcoming elections.

Tom Morello has a long history of organizing activism-oriented concerts, rallies, and events, including 2011’s L.A. Rising at the historic Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, which featured performances from Rage Against the Machine, Muse, Rise Against, Ms. Lauryn Hill, and Immortal Technique. Morello continues to be a leading voice for social justice causes and labor movements across the country and around the world. In addition to his solo work with The Nightwatchman and his role in Rage Against the Machine and Audioslave, Morello remains one of modern rock’s most influential guitarists and outspoken activists.

Tour Dates

Jun 4 – Sweden Rock Festival 2026 – Sölvesborg, Sweden

Jun 5 – Rock im Park 2026 – Nürnberg, Germany

Jun 6 – Rock am Ring 2026 – Nürburg, Germany

Jun 8 – SO36 – Berlin, Germany

Jun 9 – Klub Stodoła – Warszawa, Poland

Jun 11 – Nova Rock 2026 – Nickelsdorf, Austria

Jun 12 – Rock for People 2026 – Hradec Králové, Czechia

Jun 14 – Download Festival 2026 – Castle Donington, United Kingdom

Jun 15 – Electric Brixton – London, United Kingdom

Jun 16 – Bataclan – Paris, France

Jun 18 – Graspop Metal Meeting 2026 – Dessel, Belgium

Jun 20 – Hellfest 2026 – Clisson, France

Jun 21 – Pinkpop 2026 – Landgraaf, Netherlands

Jun 22 – Doornroosje – Nijmegen, Netherlands

Jun 24 – Copenhell Festival 2026 – Copenhagen, Denmark

Jun 26 – Tons of Rock 2026 – Oslo, Norway

Jun 27 – BBK Music Legends Festival 2026 – Bilbao, Spain

Jul 26 – Newport Folk 2026 – Newport, RI

Sep 19 – Louder Than Life 2026 – Louisville, KY

Oct 3 – Power to the People Festival at Meriweather Post Pavilion – Columbia, MD

Roger Clyne’s music and I go way back to the days in the 90’s when the Refreshments were playing at the Yucca Tap Room in Tempe, Arizona. Their independently and locally released ‘Wheelie’ CD was played by me constantly when it was released. The band made the leap to Mercury Records, where they released two albums but somehow never found the wide commercial success they deserved. Nationally, the Gin Blossoms had broken through, and it seemed like the diversity of awesome bands in Arizona at the time was never really acknowledged by others outside of Arizona. Bands that got lumped into the Gin Blossoms box, if you will, included Dead Hot Workshop, the Pistoleros, and the Refreshments. None of these bands struggled to find their own identity, though. After the Refreshments went their separate ways, Roger Clyne and P.H. Naffah formed Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers (RCPM), where they embraced some honky tonk and country into their Refreshments DNA for their first album. Ensuing albums would find the band continuing to expand their sound to build an awesome musical catalogue of rock songs with all types of musical accents from the U.S. Southwest. ‘Hell to Breakfast’ is the band’s 9th studio album as RCPM and first since ‘Native Heart’ back in 2017. I have seen interviews with Clyne where he talked about the process of finding inspiration to write this album and discovering what he now has to say as a writer. He and the band have assembled an album that hits the sweet spot and connects with me the most since their ‘Americano’ album from 2004.

Kicking off with the rock n roll flavoured ‘Fireflies’ serves as a great start to the album with Clyne’s witty lyrics on full display before the huge chorus explodes. This song would have sounded just as at home on a Refreshments’ record as it does here. The transition to ‘American Drugs’ works great, as this one contains hints of the ‘Americano’ album and tells an awesome story from down near the Arizona/ Mexico border. The tempo is slowed, and I can see this one being very popular in the live set. ‘You Got Lightning’ is another instant hook into the brain and one of the up-tempo songs from the album. My favourite line from the song is ‘while you feel like a b-side, always spinning face down.’

The diversity amongst the songs and approaches serves as a strength to the album for me. The tempo slows down again for both songs at the end of the first side of the album. ‘Sleepin’ With My Rifle’ is one of my favourite songs from the album, with another narrative-filled lyric. Trumpet is always a welcome addition to an RCPM song, and this is no exception. The musical breaks and the way the chorus flows at the end are simply perfection. ‘Sail Into Silver’ switches to acoustics with lyrics that hit the soul very powerfully at my age. The melody is beautiful, and it provides a great end to the first half of the album.

‘Special Guest ‘ gets us back to the rocking material with a song that I think will be extremely powerful live. The chorus simply explodes out of the speakers. Next up is the first song released from the album back at the end of 2025, and one that has become one of my all-time favorites by the band- ‘Agua Caliente.’ This one is as catchy as a wave of tumbleweeds across a New Mexico mesa. The trumpets and Mexican influences are divine. Growing up in New Mexico and Arizona, I could play this song for a stranger and say this is what home sounds like for me. The band changes gears with ‘Getaway’ which could be more of a challenge in a live setting, depending on the venue’s acoustics, with the long-sustained guitar notes that provide the backdrop of the song. This one has Shelby Stone dueting with Clyne to great effect.

Reaching the final turn of the album, ‘Wake Up Whistlin’ slows the tempo back down again with some acoustic guitars, but also some twists and turns. This one has been a real grower over the past couple of months. I love the way the piano notes close out the song. Closing out the album is the uniquely titled ‘Yeh Shoobeh’, where the band locks into a midtempo groove and a catchy chorus. While I don’t know if the band could ever top ‘Nada’ or ‘Leave an Open Door’ as an album closer, this one works perfectly for this album.

For me, this album has connected with me the most since their ‘Americano’ album, with my biggest complaint being that they have gone the old school route of 10 songs in under 40 minutes. Simply put, if you are an RCPM fan or Refreshments’ fan, this one should have already been added to your collection. If you have never heard the band, this also serves as a great starting point, and I don’t think you can say that about records from bands that have been playing for a few decades. Here’s to Life!

‘Hell to Breakfast’ is available now. Buy Here

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Author: Gerald Stansbury   

Once again, I find myself travelling to London this time accompanied by RPM main man Dom Daley, roll back to October 2025, and an announcement that I never thought would happen, the legendary Sugar announce their first gigs in 31 years!!! 

When the dates were announced, three New York shows and then two in London, it was a no-brainer that we had to be at a date. Thankfully, tickets were secured, hotel and travel sorted, then the 8-month wait, and it was well worth it, even if it was the hottest day of the year! 

The last time we saw Bob Mould it was in support of his fantastic last solo effort and we were lucky enough to meet the man in a in store signing, the fanboy I am I thought I’d take a chance at bringing along a few more items for Bob to sign and those items were the three classic Sugar albums, I had absolutely no clue that just over a year later we’d be seeing the original reunited band together, what a treat!!!!

So we get to the venue and pick our spot, and shortly after J. Robbins of Jawbox hits the stage with an acoustic guitar and a mic, so a proper stripped-down affair. Fair play to anyone who does a complete solo set and puts their all into it. I wasn’t familiar with his solo work, but I always liked what I’d heard of Jawbox and possibly their most well-known song, ‘Savory’ was great to hear live, and the crowd definitely enjoyed it too. I’ll be revisiting the Jawbox back catalogue for sure, great stuff. 

After a short refreshment break, the anticipation is building and Bob Mould, David Barbe and Malcolm Travis hit the stage and smash instantly the classic opening three songs off the all timer debut album “Copper Blue”, ‘The Act We Act’, ‘A Good Idea’ and ‘Changes’ the hairs at the back of my neck are standing these are songs I have loved for so so long and to finally hear them in their full glory is a emotional moment for myself and the whole audience as the insanely catchy melody’s get under your skin and choruses that the audience scream back to the band!!! 

After that frantic start, we move onto the many moments where David takes over on lead vocals with ‘Company Book’ off the massively underrated third Sugar album “File Under: Easy Listening”, the riffs and melody’s shine through and the band isn’t missing a beat and look to be having the time of their lives up there.

Next up, we get a big section of B-Sides and songs that have only officially been released as live recordings. “After All The Roads Lead to Nowhere” is one of the most frantic moments of the set. Bob Mould has always been known for his unbelievable songwriting, but the noise he makes from his guitar is second to none as well, and he is underrated. “In The Eyes of My Friends”, “Where Diamonds Are Halos” and “Running Out of Time” are all songs not on studio albums, most bands would kill to have songs like these. It just goes to show the strength of the songwriting on display here. 

Sandwiched in between that lot we were treated to in my eyes not only one of the best songs Bob has ever written but one of the greatest songs I have ever heard, of course it is the classic ‘Hoover Dam’ once more again off legendary “Copper Blue” album, hearing it is just one of those euphoric moments that make you glad to be in the here and now, a moment I won’t be forgetting for a long time. 

When you think moments don’t get much better, we are then treated to two classics from “File Under” the monster opening riff off album opener ‘Gift’, the distortion guitar on this is off the scales and then straight into the ridiculously catchy ‘Your Favourite Thing’ two of my highlights of the evening. 

A few songs later, and we get the double helping of two brand new songs. Not only did the band come back with tour dates, but they’ve also been in the studio and recorded a 7” single, House of Dead Memories’ and ‘Long Live Love’, which both fit into the set perfectly. Hopefully, there’s more to come from the studio!! 

As the set progressed, we noticed that the sound was getting louder and the distortion was off the charts. ‘Fortune Teller’, another classic and one of my personal favourites, which I believe they didn’t play on night one in London, so that was a fantastic moment. I said about the loudness, well it didn’t get any louder than the last two songs before the encore, we are finally treated to the frantic 1-2 off of “Beaster” ‘Tilted’ and ‘JC Auto’, Malcom keeps the tempo up and doesn’t miss a beat, the harmonies are massive and once again Bob’s like a maniac on the stage!!!

The band takes a short well earned break, it is like a furnace in the Kentish Town Forum and then come back out to a huge applause we have a few more songs to go and what better way to get it going than the drum fill that starts the classic ‘Helpless’ another massive singalong ensues, then another personal favourite that opens with a monster riff ‘Gee Angel’ honestly it is ridiculous how many brilliant songs Bob Mould has written over the years, from legendary Husker Du tracks to a stellar solo career and to here,  the final song of a unforgettable set possibly my favourite song he has ever written ‘If I Can’t Change Your Mind’ a perfect song of heartbreak and unrequited love that would resonate with almost anyone which never fails to give me goosebumps everytime and to hear it live for the first time was something special indeed!!! 

What a fantastic set and performance, one which I will never forget. If that was to be the one and only time I get to see Sugar, it will be treasured, but fingers crossed, there will be more to come if the reception of the audience is anything to go by. The world is a better place with Sugar in it. 

Long Live Love

Long Live Sugar 

Author: Christian Davies

Crawling from the darkest recesses of a London wasteland, Bad Fractals are a thundering, psychedelic, acid punk and glam trash rock might just be a new genre for me, but I suspect there will be several readers tuning in who aren’t familiar with the genre’s roster. Hailing from the UK, Latvia, Germany, Sardinia & Greece, and with culturally diverse backgrounds in music & performing arts, Bad Fractals bring a uniquely raw, theatrical energy to the party.

As the needle drops on the opening track, I strap myself in for a journey through some far-out places. In 2023, the band teamed up with Youth & Michael Rendall to produce & mix their debut album. I have before me, even if it’s taken the proverbial age to see the light of day. Claiming to be repping for the disillusioned, and being the rage of punk, it’s a big claim to live up to, so I pile on in with my elbows up and gumshield in as ‘Bee Sting’ kicks off, well, not so much kicks off, rather rides in on a cocksure groove with a lot going on the production sounds very clinical mixing some far out sounds with your more trad crust adjit punk.

The album unfolds with lots of gear changes, sounding part PIL, part groove, jazzy freeform rock and a bit of every type of punk tossed in for good luck. At times, I’m scratching my head about where to pitch it, and if I like it or not, one thing I do like is their confidence. These guys can obviously play and try to leave it all out there on every song. ‘Chemical Weddings’ grooves like the first dance again, not really knowing where this sits, maybe they have cracked it and created their own genre alongside the likes of former chumbawumba frontman interrobang. They are right out there musically, take ‘1/2 price paradise’ as an example, mixing Crass with an MDMA acid whig out if you want something more chaotic than the Ozric Tentacles, then these guys might be your jam.

‘Free Range’ is frantic and wacky, then it gets blown away by ‘Strike’ as it rocks hard, followed by a trippy ‘Walk Of Shame’. I guess it took three years to sort out the wonky head from trying to produce this bottle rocket, chaotic acid rock freak out.

Maybe not something I gravitate towards, but an interesting trip and once the earworm has been released, who knows, it might burrow into my noggin and I’ll be a fan in next to no time. Tell that to the Taxman. I’m off to lie in a darkened room

Buy Here

Author: Dom Daley

PRE-ORDER HERE

“No kings, No masters / Kick against fascist bastards”

“We write a song, a year later it’s more relevant than the day we wrote it. That keeps happening, and to be honest, it fills me with dismay.”

Backstage at the Camden Underworld, minutes before his band Dead Pioneers take the stage and devastate a capacity crowd with all the pain, power and primal energy of a classic punk-rock show, Gregg Deal exhales slowly. He’s been warming to his theme for almost an hour now, in much the same way an acetylene torch warms to the metal it must burn through. That theme is America, and there are few voices in punk-rock so uniquely qualified to speak on the country’s moral, social and political degradation, especially in the era of the orange despot.

Being Native American, however, Deal knows the systems he fights against, the history of injustice he chronicles, stretch back further than the Trump era, back past Nixon and segregation and the KKK and all those other white stains on the canvas of American history, to the very ‘birth’ of a nation that existed and was populated for millennia before Columbus ‘discovered’ it. It’s been the very text of all the work he did before Dead Pioneers began to form in 2020, motivating the activism he’s undertaken and the art he’s created, tackling the centuries-old culture wars against Indigenous people.

Deal was born in Tennessee, where his father grew up, but landed in Utah when he was two years old and grew up there; he says that “‘pioneer heritage’ is a big thing in Utah, meaning our band name is very pointedly irreverent”. He later relocated to Washington, DC and studied art, going on to work as a graphic designer. Throughout those years, he began another, parallel career as a visual and conceptual artist, creating powerful, political works like The Last Indian On Earth, a performance piece confronting the racism behind how white US society perceives Indigenous people; Redskin, an installation tackling the Washington NFL team’s racist name; and Supreme Law Of The Land – which Deal performed at the Denver Art Museum in 2016, shortly after moving to Colorado – exploring how Trump’s enabling of the Keystone oil pipeline in North Dakota, in the face of protest by Indigenous campaigners, contradicted treaties signed centuries earlier. “The line of work and its social awareness goes from racism, stereotypes and cultural appropriation, all in a socially aware lens, to the more specific politics of Native people as a whole and the way it’s engaged both socially but also through power structures managing these things, like the federal government,” Deal explains.

Dead Pioneers is rooted in a 2020 piece called The Punk Pan-Indian Romantic Comedy, a deeply personal work that dealt with Deal’s upbringing. Following an embryonic performance of the piece, Deal secured a grant to expand it to include music created especially for the work. “The idea was to mix spoken word with punk music,” explains Deal, who hooked up with drummer Shane Zweygardt and guitarist Joshua Rivera during lockdown and began kicking the concept around. “Josh is Mexican-American,” says Deal. “He is also inherently Indigenous, under a different set of circumstances within colonialism. But I consider him to be my Indigenous brother. We spend a lot of time trying to figure out how all of this fits together.”

But what became Dead Pioneers didn’t truly take shape until Deal connected with bassist Lee Tesche, who you may know from righteous Atlantan post-punks Algiers. Unlikely as it sounds, a wide-ranging conversation between Tesche and Deal about music (with Tesche clueing Deal into the righteous noise of future Dead Pioneers collaborators Sleaford Mods) evolved into a creative connection that’s now three albums deep; the arrival of guitarist Abe Brennan made the quintet quorate.

A miraculous, natural chemistry made this supposed one-off project an actual band almost as soon as they cut what became their 2023 eponymous debut album (“We approached it like I approach my visual art: execute quickly, first thought is best thought,” Deal says), but they didn’t necessarily take it seriously until, unexpectedly, the outside world did. “I was like, we’ve made this record – what should I do with it? Put it online?” Deal remembers. The response was vigorously positive, and soon came demands to commit this noise to vinyl. A first thousand-copy pressing sold out in minutes. “So then we pressed another thousand,” he adds, still marveling at it all. “And then they were gone, too.”

“Coming from bands that typically don’t make money,” grins Tesche, “I was like, ‘Gregg – what have you started??’”

What followed was “a series of strange accidents” that led to the group signing to Hassle, befriending Jello Biafra and touring with kindred spirits like Pennywise, Propaghandi, even Pearl Jam. “Punk-rock had made everything seem so accessible when I was a kid,” says Deal. “Like, simply having the balls to get up on stage and stage dive and then be carried off by people that become your best friends once they get your feet back on the ground.” Now, punk-rock was reaching out its hands to Dead Pioneers and pulling them onto larger and larger stages. The group returned that favour by simply getting better and better: their second album, 2025’s PO$T AMERICAN, was sharper, angrier, funnier than the debut, a riot riveted with punch-a-Nazi thrills.

And now, Wagon Burner, their fearsome third album. Described by Deal as “more collaborative”, it’s a heavier, harder but also more accessible set, vicious hooks scattered among the punk-rock melee and guest appearances by kindred spirits Cheap Perfume (on the righteous ‘Nazi Teeth’), The Interrupters (on the shout-a-long anthem ‘Never Alone’) and, bringing it back to the group’s beginnings, Sleaford Mods (on the searing slow-burn of ‘The Worst Among Us’). The world might be darkening by the day, but Dead Pioneers are rising to that miserable occasion, casting their empowering light into the gloom.

“The record was influenced by watching the political climate become more and more exacerbated, and feeling the responsibility that comes along with that,” says Deal. But of course, he’s under no illusion that the horrorshow of America in 2026 is anything new. “Reagan set the stage; Trump is the star of the show, the encore,” Deal says. “He’s a really terrible person. But the stage was set for him.”

What’s happening now, then, is a culmination of centuries of the same bullshit. “As a Native person, the past and the present and the future all exist in the same space,” Deal says. “My kids can probably school just about anyone on all the historical narratives, because we understand, as Indigenous people, that education and knowledge are tools of survival. Every Native person understands you might actually save your skin if you express and articulate something that helps people understand enough to shut their mouths. 40% of Americans believe that Native people no longer exist, that we’re completely extinct. We’re fighting to make sure that people know we are not foreigners in our own homelands, that we are here despite what history has told you. We speak our language, and white people need to hear it, because then you’re hearing the power of our words on our homelands, where our people have existed for thousands and thousands of years. It’s a responsibility that I understand.”

Their battle is our battle, on a landscape where, as Deal bellows on ‘Circle Jerk The Wagons’, “bootlicking cucks for billionaire bastards” and “fascist fucks abound”. On our side, we have Dead Pioneers, as fearsome, whip-smart and beautiful a noise as punk-rock ever mustered. The fascists and the Nazis and the white supremacists don’t stand a chance.

Pre-order ‘Wagon Burner’ HERE

Co-produced by Dead Pioneers and Chris Beeble.

Recorded at The Blasting Room in Fort Collins, Colorado.

See Dead Pioneers at the following dates in the UK and EU.

July

8 – IE Róisín Dubh, Galway

9 – IE The Workman’s Club, Dublin

11 – UK 2000 Trees Festival

16 – DE Back To The Future Festival

17 – DE Adieu Tristesse Festival

18 – DE Seepogo Festival 

Find Dead Pioneers online HERE:

stream HERE

New album ‘Nice N’ Rough’ set for release September 25th Via Venn Records

Pre-order HERE:

EU tour with Canadian rockers Danko Jones confirmed for October

“The sound of trouble.” Iggy Pop BBC 6MUSIC

“As a listener you are left with an unshakable feeling that this is the type of record British music has needed for some time.” CLASH

“Irrepressible, irresistible – their essential manual for street level rock thrills.” Kerrang!

Set to release their stomping new album ‘Nice ‘N’ Rough’ on September 25th via Venn Records, Bristol punk rock ‘n rollers Split Dogs, fast becoming one of the hardest working and hardest rocking bands in the UK, hit back with a fresh new single titled ‘Be Somebody’.

“Believe Nobody, Deceive Nobody” Rules we live by,” states singer Harry. “The new single is a call to arms, a shot at anyone stuck on the sidelines, letting life pass them by. This song tells you not to be the version of yourself that keeps waiting for life to happen. Get out there and go get yours! Stay sworn to fun and loyal to none.”

The ‘Be Somebody’ video was filmed at the 49 Social Club in Weston-Super-Mare, a working man’s club that Harry has been visiting for years and the perfect setting for the band’s explosive new single.

“I have always loved the space, and something about the workies just reminds me of home. I wanted to shoot a music video there and invite our mates. We put on a decent spread of sausage rolls and cheese and pineapple on sticks, hired Elvis to perform a set and had a good old knees up. The vibe was Martin Parr meets David Lynch. The music video is a love letter to our community. Loud, brash, sweaty and unapologetically alive! Up the Punx!”

2026 has already seen Split Dogs complete their own UK headline tour, before multiple festival appearances, a headline German tour in July, a string of instore performances in September (ticket link HERE) and an EU tour with Canadian rockers Danko Jones in October. This all comes off the back of a massive tour with Gogol Bordello in 2025 and gigs with Bad Nerves, Teen Mortgage and many many others.

New album ‘Nice ‘N’ Rough’ was recorded at The Station House, a recording studio based in a repurposed Victorian police station in Leeds. Split Dogs quickly discovered the studio also boasts one of the country’s finest VHS collections. Fuelled with classics like ‘Heavy Metal’, ‘Nightmare on Elm Street’, and a Tina Turner live tape, the Bristol-based four-piece went to work capturing their sophomore album, ‘Nice N’ Rough’, with producer Jonah Falco (High Vis, Rifle, and drummer of Canadian punks Fucked Up) and engineer James Atkinson (formerly of seminal hardcore band Voorhees). 

The result is thirteen thumping tracks featuring lightning-fast guitar licks, raspy hooks and cues from greats like Plasmatics, New York Dolls, Motörhead and The Stooges. Front-person Harry Martinez delivers a larger-than-life, undeniable rock ‘n’ roll performance, injecting the band’s reputable live energy straight into the vocal booth. 

Despite the glam rock glimmer, the music possesses depth and soul that can easily be missed. Album opener and new single ‘Be Somebody’ reminds the listener to shine in whatever they do, ‘Speed Demon’ highlights the importance of tuning out the noise that can plague mental health, while the Danzig-esque ‘Suffer’ tackles the lasting shadow of parental abuse. Overall, the message is clear: go out there and live your life how you want to. ‘Nice N’ Rough’ is playful yet pure, steeped in honesty and the soundtrack to all your future best days.

Catch Split Dogs live at the following dates in 2026:

FESTIVAL TOUR

10-Jun-2026 UK Download

18-Jun-2026 SP Bilbao Azkena Rock
26-Jun-2026 PL Zelebsko Ultra Chaos Pinik
08-Jul-2026 UK Cheltenham 2000 Trees
10-Jul-2026 B Gierle Sjock Fest
17-Jul-2026 NL Lichetnworde Zwarte Cross

GERMAN HEADLINE TOUR/FESTIVALS
18-Jul-2026 GER Selters Seepgo (Festival)
19-Jul-2026 GER Augsburg Ballonfabrik
20-Jul-2026 GER Tubingen Blauer Salon
22-Jul-2026 GER Cologne Sonic Ballroom
24-Jul-2026 GER Hnxe Ruhrpott Rodeo (Festival)
 25-Jul-2026 GER Trebur Trebur Open Air
26-Jul-2026 GER Munich X bar
27-Jul-2026 GER Bamberg Live Club
28-Jul-2026 GER Dresden Ostpol
29-Jul-2026 GER Erfurt MuseumsKeller
30-Jul-2026 GER Hamburg Welt TurboJugend (Festival)
31-Jul-2026 GER Goldenstadt Afreiht un Buten (Festival)

01-Aug-2026 GER Essen Freak Show

FESTIVALS

07-Aug-2026 UK Blackpool Rebellion Fest
13-Aug-2026 Slov Tolmin Punk Rock Holiday
16-Aug-2026 UK Winchester Boomtown Festival
21-Aug-2026 DK Vordingborg Gutter Island
22-Aug-2026 UK Devon Beautiful Days

SUPPORTING GOGOL BORDELLO UK

23-Aug-2026 NorthamptonRoadmender

24-Aug-2026 Southampton The 1865

INSTORE PERFORMANCES
25-Sep-2026 UK Leeds Crash Records
26-Sep-2026 UK Glasgow Blitzkrieg
27-Sep-2026 UK Liverpool Rough Trade
28-Sep-2026 UK Coventry Just Dropped in
29-Sep-2026 UK Bristol Rough Trade
30-Sep-2026 UK Nottingham Rough Trade
01-Oct-2026 UK Rough Trade East

TOUR W/ DANKO JONES

12-Oct-2026 GER Potsdam Waschhaus
13-Oct-2026 GER Nurnberg Löwensaal
14-Oct-2026 AT Wien Flex
15-Oct-2026 HU Budapest A38
16-Oct-2026 ROM Bucharest Quantic
17-Oct-2026 Bulg Sofia   Pirotska 5 Event Center
19-Oct-2026 ROM Cluj Form Space
21-Oct-2026 Cro Zagreb Vintage Industrial Bar
22-Oct-2026 Slov Ljubljana Kino Siska
23-Oct-2026 AT Salzburg Rockhouse
24-Oct-2026 CH Rubingen Muhle Hunzinken
25-Oct-2026 CH Zurich Dynamo
27-Oct-2026 GER Oberhausen Turbinenhalle 2
28-Oct-2026 B Ghent Handelsbeurs
29-Oct-2026 GER Frankfurt Batschkapp
30-Oct-2026 NL Haarlem Patronaat
31-Oct-2026 NL Tilburg Next Stage
01-Nov-2026 NL Leuwaarden Neusoorn

Find Split Dogs online HERE:

All of Conflict’s studio singles from 1982-2003 on a limited blue double vinyl 2LP, released for Record Store Day 2026.  The gatefold sleeve includes lyrics to all 24 tracks (which is 4 extra tracks than the CD version).  In tribute to Conflict frontman Colin Jerwood.

Sadly, main-man Colin Jerwood died in May 2025, shortly after the release of their first album in 20 years, ‘This Much Remains’. Conflict are one of the world’s foremost activist anarchist punk bands, who were first heard on their mentors Crass’s label. Their ‘To a Nation of Animal Lovers’ EP inspired anti-vivisection and anti-hunt campaigns, laying down the band’s stance in no uncertain terms. It was the perfect union, Crass and Conflict.

Espousing direct action and numerous political causes, on their own Mortarhate label (through Jungle) they dominated the top of the singles and albums indie charts through the eighties. Gigs turned into full-scale riots, with hundreds arrested, leading to national outrage headlines. Police banned them from performing in the UK, so they went underground and abroad. The music is as uncompromising as their lyrics espoused, and with Jerwood leading the charge, they had a vocal that walked the walk.

They kept touring; a resurgence of interest in the punk movement reactivated them in the 21st century. Following Colin’s death, they continued to gig in tribute to Colin’s legacy. With this, the perfect double album of singles spread over two blue records, it’s an ungovernable force and shows why the band always sat at the top table of crust punk, hacking and slashing their way to people’s consciences, forcing their ideologies and direct action approach from the pure hardcore of ‘To Whom It May Concern’ through the skanking of ‘Climbing The Stairs’. Conflict were a thorn in the side of the powers that be and the industries they campaigned against, and had the soundtrack to accompany it.

It’s mad to think that Conflict can hit over a million plays on the streaming platform Spotify for ‘The Serenade Is Dead’, but it’s the more extreme tracks that I remember, like the incredible ‘Berkshire Cunt’ that always struck me even as a youngster, being impressed that they would be so blunt about their lyrics and who they had targeted with their fury and ire. Saying that it’s not all crash bang wallop mind ‘Meat Means Murder’ is much more restrained as is the intro for ‘Whichever Way You Want It’ before kicking off with some proper punk drumming.

‘These Colours Don’t Run’ is a brutal thump from the opening slash to the chorus that got a subtle melody buried beneath the chaos and noise all around it. ‘Statement’ sounds like it could have beern written by The New Model Army if instrumentals were their thing (Crustpunk royalty going instrumental who’d have thought that?). ‘Conflict’ by Conflict is what I would play someone if they wanted to really know what Crust punks sounded like and its a purely British thing like Fish and chips or Coronation Street this style or band couldn’t have come from anywhere else and conflict were the masters of their craft. Its great that labels like Jungle put out records like this becuase where else are you going to draw in 24 tracks that made up their singles if you tried to track em down then good luck and how scratched would that collection be? ‘There Must Be Another Way’ is the perfect tribute to the life of Colin Jerwood a true believer and a man with a passion and platform that he used to great effect now pick up a copy and preserve the music of Conflict long into the 21st Century – punk as fuck! Buy it!

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Author: Dom Daley

“May you live in interesting times” is often used as a threat as much as a wish. The world couldn’t get much stranger, but the continued resurgence of One The Juggler is something to rejoice. Two years after ‘Memoir Days’,  they’re back with ‘Imperial Way’, and, if anything, it’s an even stronger set of songs this time round. I don’t say that lightly, because I love the previous album. For me, it was the natural successor to ‘Nearly A Sin’.

The lushly coloured album cover suggests the treats that lie within, and it doesn’t disappoint. ‘Imperial Way Intro’ gives a taste of what to expect, before ‘Fantastic Fun’ reminds us of their way with a tune that hooks you immediately. Sham’s voice is instantly recognisable, and, for sure, the Bowie-style melodies remain throughout. No complaints here, when it’s always been part of their sound. Aim high! ‘Jennifer Glows’ is a classy response to ‘Jennifer Heaven’, it’s hard to imagine any other band writing these songs. For long-term fans, everything you’re waiting for is here. 

 I imagine Ronno would smile at the vocal of ‘I’m Only A Man’ echoing ‘Only After Dark’, but Colin Minchin’s guitar work here is perfect. A tribute, rather than a rip-off. Gorgeous stuff. The piano-led ‘Wait For You To Come’ should get you waving your scarf from side to side, with a flavour of Mott in their pomp prime. ‘Calico’ could be about a cat, or not; “should I take her in?”. It’s moments like these that I realise Jonny Cola And The A-Grades were their natural successors. 

 ‘Twist City’ adds some groove to proceedings, while ‘Libertine’ slows things down with more deft melodies from Mr Minchin. A touch of class. ‘Hypnotised (Again)’ sounds, well, like classic One The Juggler. Between Sham and Jerry’s harmonies and the strength of their songwriting, they have something unique. These are the kinds of songs that used to jump out of the radio at you in the 70s, and are all too rare now. They remain in their own world, which is a bonus for us. If they’d released this album and ‘Memoir Days’ in the 80s, they would have deserved to be huge.

‘Madame Callenza’ has a smoky sound which I would call ‘arch’, or ‘mauve’, the story of a faded, reclusive star. ‘Stoned On Love’ cranks things up a notch, tipping a hat in a glam direction, before the title track whisks us away somewhere only Sham, Jerry and Colin can take us in 2026, and for that I’m very grateful. ‘Imperial Way’ is as great as it is unlikely. Long may they continue. 

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Author: Martin Chamarette

Cuddly Toys’ debut album was first released in Japan in 1979, then a revamped version in the UK in 1981. Not on vinyl since those original releases until this latest RSD drop.  This one has added bells and whistles. It’s an extended, limited edition double LP in red vinyl, with a Japanese obi-strip, and lyrics inside the gatefold sleeve- for Record Store Day 2026.  This 2xLP version adds a whole side of the different Japanese album mixes, a B-side, two tracks omitted from the UK version and three 1980 demos from the same line-up so a real treasure trove of Cuddly Toys.

Cuddly Toys are the theatrical glam-punk band that evolved from the London glam shock-punk band Raped (so 70s with a name like that). cross-dressing in an era when it was truly outrageous. An LP of Raped recordings was issued by US label Puke’n’Vomit in 2024. But holy shit, even now you wouldn’t touch a name like that, saying that CuddlToys is only marginally better.

Sadly, singer Sean Purcell died in 1996 from a brain tumour, so much of the story hasn’t been told for many years.  If you’re wondering what they sound like, there is the obvious Bowie influence, but I’d say Sparks and Tubeway Army weighs heavily in there, but saying that, they’re not too shabby influences, and you can throw in some Roxy Music as well.

‘Madman’ and ‘Universe’ are proudly Bowie in their delivery and structure, but there’s nothing wrong with that then nor now. ‘Slow Down’ is the bonus from the original on side one of the first LP, and again, the vocal leans heavily on Bowie, but the song is more aligned with Mott the Hoople and reminds me of Suede. ‘Astral Joe’ is a sprightly track with some parping synths over an energetic riff and melody. ‘My Commando’ is one of my favourite tracks with a great beat and riff and one the band executes really well, sounding like early Japan or even Hanoi Rocks before they were both a thing. The album’s title track is another uptempo banger with ‘Time Warp’ closing off the revamped record in style.

DISC 2 is made up of Japanese mixes for six of the tracks, as well as a clutch of bonus songs previously not aired and demo songs. ‘You Keep Me Hanging On’ is a fine version of a classic, maybe not as good as Rod Stewart’s take, but not far off it. The ‘Front Page News’ is an uptempo snotty track, and to be fair, side four might just be the jewel in the crown of this record, with some of the best songs from the whole release. So, a real treat for fans of real Glam Rock when it was fearless and innovative and bands like Cuddy Toys walked around like they owned the place, even if most of the world simply passed them by, until now that is. One of RSD’s best-kept secrets and a real joy to catch up with. Grab a copy whilst there are still a few available.

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Author: Dom Daley