In Defense of the Genre is a column on BrooklynVegan about punk, pop punk, emo, post-hardcore, ska-punk, and more, including and often especially the bands and albums and subgenres that weren’t always taken so seriously.
March birthed a wealth of great songs that fall somewhere under the punk umbrella. I picked 11 to highlight, but first, here are all the punk-related features we ran in the past month:
* Taking Back Sunday's Tell All Your Friends turns 20
* Every Time I Die album guide
* Soul Glo are paving the path to punk's future
* THE UNRAVELING OF PUPTHEBAND - how PUP reinvented themselves in the most PUP way possible
* What is hyperska? Eichlers shares 10 songs that inspired the new subgenre
--
March album reviews: Soul Glo, Oso Oso, Vein.fm, Drug Church, Riverby, Glacier Veins, Hot Water Music, Kevin Devine, Caracara, Camp Cope, Carly Cosgrove, PLOSIVS (Pinback, Hot Snakes, etc), Proper., Machine Gun Kelly, and the Kill Your Idols/Rule Them All split.
Newly added to our store: two new color vinyl pressings of blink-182's Buddha, the new 20th anniversary edition of Taking Back Sunday's Tell All Your Friends, the new 30th anniversary repress of The Offspring's Ignition (limited marigold vinyl), the new Terror album (limited color vinyl), the new Prince Daddy & the Hyena album (limited splatter vinyl), the new Eichlers album (limited electric blue vinyl), and much more.
Read on for my picks of the 11 best songs of March 2022 that fall somewhere under the punk umbrella, in no particular order...
Koyo - "Ten Digits Away"
What seemingly started as a side project for members of Hangman, Rain of Salvation, Typecaste, and other hardcore bands to embrace their love of Long Island emo has turned into the members' most prevalent and fastest-growing band. Having just signed to Pure Noise (Knocked Loose, SeeYouSpaceCowboy, Terror, etc), Koyo released their biggest and most distinct sounding single yet. You can still spot the influence of classic Long Island bands like Silent Majority and The Movielife on "Ten Digits Away," but it sounds less like a love letter to their influences and more like a promising new band coming into their own. It's as noticeable a step-up from last year's great Drives Out East EP as that was from the previous year's Painting Words Into Lines EP. If they keep progressing at this rate, it won't be long before Koyo do for the next generation of LIHC kids what their heroes did for them.
--
Hey, ily! - "Intrusive Thoughts Always"
Hey, ily! put out one of the best punk releases of 2021 with the Internet Breath EP, and new single "Intrusive Thoughts Always" suggests that their upcoming debut full-length Psychokinetic Love Songs is gonna be even better. What started as the solo project of Caleb Haynes is now a full band, and "Intrusive Thoughts Always" proves that they can pull off even more as a five-piece. Internet Breath was already some of the most genre-defying emo around, and "Intrusive Thoughts Always" takes that to new heights, bridging the gap between anthemic emo-punk, synthy bedroom pop, and real-deal thrash metal in a way that should not work as well as it does. The bigger/cleaner production and Conner Haman's batshit live drums add a lot, and Caleb's own songwriting is getting bolder, catchier, and weirder all at once.