Well, we’re a few months into a new year, and there’s already been plenty of quality new music, but I think there’s a big contender for album of the year already, up step Isle Of Wight finest the brilliant Grade 2 with the excellent ‘Talk About It’

This 3 piece are going from strength to strength and just keep getting better with every album. Being well into over a decade of making music from the earlier Oi!  And Street Punk influence Grade 2 are now fully cementing themselves as one of the UK’s finest melodic high-energy punk rockers. 

Sid (Vocals/Bass), Jack (Guitar/Vocals) and Jacob (Drums) are certainly honing their craft, and since singing to legendary Rancid frontman Tim Armstrong label Hellcat Records a few albums ago, they just keep stepping it up a notch. I could give lots more superlatives, but let’s get down to it, the new album. 

First up we get one of the singles ahead of the release and it’s a banger ‘Cut Throat’ starts with guitar feedback and you immediately sense this is going to be aggressive and in your face and that it is, a opening guitar lick that will be stuck in your head and a brilliant and prominent bass line throughout that Matt Freeman would be proud of. This sounds huge and brilliantly produced, these boys aren’t messing about here with the message being even in this Cut Throat world, Grade 2 are here to stay. 

Next up, we have the insanely catchy ‘Hanging On To You’ which showcases both Jack and Sid exchanging vocals on the verses, and with a chorus, I dare you to try not to sing along to. 

‘Standing In The Downpour’ will surely have audiences bouncing up and down on the band’s current UK and European tour. I’ve had a smile on my face every time I’ve heard it, it took a few listens to notice, but when the chorus kicks in, I’m sure fans of The Clash will also have that same grin as well. 

‘Better Today’ is up next and has a great message for anyone who’s struggling in this world, be it with mental health or loneliness. Speak to people, you are not alone, this is euphoric stuff. 

Title track ‘Talk About It’ comes in close to the halfway mark and is my personal highlight, with a brilliant opening riff that bursts into a “Nah Nah Nah” right out of the Lars Frederiksen playbook, with the surprise of piano playing throughout, this 2:37 song will have everyone pogoing around the room, no doubt about it. 

‘Don’t Worry About Me’ lyrically is brilliant and is a middle finger to the naysayers and people who try to push in certain directions. “I mean everything I say, I’m doing it my way, I never need anyone to validate me, so don’t worry about me”.

We’re getting deep into the album now and the next three songs “Crash And Burn”, “Smugglers Haven” and “Rotten” show off how tight this band have become, Jacob the man with the sticks keeps the pace up throughout and Sid’s bass-lines are right up front in the mix and of course there’s some monster riffs in here from Jack and some great vocal exchanges, this is like going back to the Rancid classic 2000 album and that’s a big compliment. 

And to finish this superb album, we get a double salvo of the dark, brooding atmosphere of ‘Wasteland’, which tackles the dying towns and cities of the UK, whether it’s the Isle of Wight or the country in general, it’s very apt. The writing is on the wall indeed. This is followed by the light at the end of the tunnel, the excellent ‘Otherside’, which is a song full of hope and looking forward, not backwards, overcoming difficulties. Grade 2 have made it through to the other side and is exactly where they should be!!!! 

There we have it, ladies and Gentlemen, 11 songs, 25 minutes, and we have one of the albums of the year with Grade2 and ‘Talk About It’. Once this album is in your head, it will be on repeat. Catch them on their current tour and buy yourself a copy, it’s an absolute banger. 

Buy Here

Author: Christian Davies 

6 am on a Sunday morning, why on earth am I awake? Well, I’m off to London to see the brilliant Home Front all the way from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, so I can’t really moan about having to travel now, can I? 

I’ve been a fan of Home Front for less than 12 months so to say that they have left an impression on me since hearing last years album of the year “Watch It Die” would be an understatement, it was a album that I never thought I needed in my life, the mix of 80’s New Wave with elements of Punk and Oi just instantly grabbed me and there’s barely been a day since the release date that I haven’t listened to them. 

A few months ago, I saw the advertisement for tour dates, spotted the one UK date in London, and without hesitation booked the ticket, hotel and travel. Yep, that’s how excited I was for this one! Would my expectations be met? Would the trip be worth it?  Well, the answer was a resounding yes! 

I get to the venue and realise this is going to be an intimate affair. The Lexington is a 200-capacity venue in the upstairs of a pub, so this was a warm one to say the least. I meet up with a friend whom I’m meeting for the first time, so unfortunately, after we share a drink and have a chit chat, we miss the support. We make our way into the venue, and it’s a struggle to move; the venue is rammed. We then find a spot and wait patiently for headliners Home Front, this small run of dates is to promote the before mentioned album “Watch It Die” as the band emerges they rip straight into lead single “Light Sleeper” which has the first of many big singalongs of the evening “We’re Born Alone, We Die Alone” the crowd screams back at frontman Graeme McKinnon who is grinning from ear to ear as is the entire audience. His energy is infectious throughout and doesn’t let up for a moment; he owns that stage. Keyboardist and percussionist Clint Frazier is also like a madman, not standing still for one second; it’s hard to take your eyes off the two of them. 

Next up, we have the brutal “Young Offender” This song could easily be the soundtrack to an apocalypse. It’s great to hear these songs live with a bit more ferocity, and the band replicates the studio recordings down to a tee. We get a number of quality tunes from full length debut album ‘Games Of Power’ with ‘Real Eyes’, ‘Born Killer’, and ‘New Face Of Death’ all keeping the pace going nicely. Sandwiched in between, we get my personal favourite, of mine ‘For The Children (Fuck All)’, which produces another mass singalong during the ridiculously catchy chorus, that one keeps the punks happy. 

The middle of the set the band show off their melancholy side with songs The Cure, New Order etc would be proud of ‘Eulogy’, ‘The Vanishing’ ‘Between The Waves’ and all extremely reflecting songs that hit hard emotionally none more than the stunning ‘Overtime’ with the lyrics “Hurts a little less over time” which I’m sure can resonate with everyone in the room.

Graeme then says it’s time for the final song of the set, and the keyboard intro to the band’s anthem ‘Nation’ kicks in and the crowd go wild, “Hear us all screaming at a nation, a nation that doesn’t hear a word we say” which couldn’t be more relevant in the world right now. 

We get asked if we want to hear more, and the crowd answers with a resounding yes. Well, they’ve played the vast majority of the two main albums, so what else is there? Well what better than paying homage to the Godfathers of street punk/Oi the mighty Cock SParrer, one of my favourite bands of all time with not one but two brilliant cover versions both from the legendary Shock Troops album, first there’s a slow drum beat in the guitar kicks in and it’s ’Out on an Island’ which I will admit the hairs on the back of my neck stood up, an emotional moment right there after that there’s time for one more SParrer classic and it’s ’We’re Coming Back’ which gets a ridiculous reaction and the loudest singalong of the evening, what a superb gig this has been. Hopefully, this will spark more UK dates later in the year, and if so, I certainly will be coming back!!! 

Facebook

Author: Christian Davies