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.
April was slightly lighter for us with punk features, but perhaps the most stacked month of the year in terms of new punk music. Below, I highlight my 15 favorite songs of the month across punk, emo, hardcore, post-hardcore, ska-punk, metalcore, screamo, and other related subgenres, but first, here are a few other things to catch up on:
* Prince Daddy & the Hyena break down every track on their new self-titled album
* Tim Kasher talks influences behind new LP Middling Age
* Perennial break down every track on their new LP In the Midnight Hour
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April album reviews: The Linda Lindas, Prince Daddy & the Hyena, the Home Is Where/Record Setter split, Hey, ily!, Greyhaven, The Slackers, A Wilhelm Scream, Oceanator, Overo, ASkySoBlack, No/Más, Heriot, and Squint.
You can also get color vinyl variants of The Linda Lindas (clear w/ blue pink vinyl), Prince Daddy & the Hyena (blue/white splatter), The Slackers (orange/yellow galaxy), and Oceanator (pink) records in our store. We also have some new These Arms Are Snakes variants, the new Integrity reissues, and the new Dance Gavin Dance album (lavender marble vinyl), and other new additions to our shop include Refused's Songs to Fan the Flames of Discontent (blue vinyl), Millencolin's For Monkeys (yellow vinyl), Pennywise's Full Circle (silver/black splatter), The Get Up Kids' Guilt Show (coke bottle clear/red splatter), Shelter's The Purpose, The Passion (oxblood), Bad Brains' Quickness (silver), Modern Baseball's The Perfect Cast (splatter), Black Flag, Husker Du, and more.
Read on for my picks of the 15 best songs of April that fall somewhere under the punk umbrella, in no particular order...
The Wonder Years - "Oldest Daughter"
At this point, there's no band in existence like The Wonder Years. They hit their stride in the early 2010s with a string of pop punk albums that increasingly transcended the genre before breaking from it entirely with the hard-to-pin-down alternative rock of 2018's Sister Cities. Even in the early days, The Wonder Years appealed to people beyond niche pop punk circles because their songwriting is so universally strong, regardless of genre, and that's as true as its ever been on new single "Oldest Daughter," their first in four years. It simultaneously embraces the maturity of Sister Cities and the unbridled catharsis of The Greatest Generation and No Closer to Heaven, simultaneously bringing back the familiarity of their beloved mid '10s era and pushing forward. "Oldest Daughter" also reunites them with longtime producer Steve Evetts and contains a callback to The Greatest Generation by reprising the titular character of "Madelyn," and Dan Campbell's songwriting and delivery is at its strongest, with a mix of Springsteenian storytelling and emo introspection, delivered with the kind of top-of-your-lungs hooks that made this band such a force in the first place.
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Joyce Manor - "Gotta Let It Go"
In the four years since Joyce Manor's last album, they celebrated the 10th anniversary of their debut, released a rarities comp, and debated taking a short hiatus from music, but now they're about to return with new album 40 oz. to Fresno and lead single "Gotta Let It Go" is about as classic Joyce Manor as it gets. Produced by Cody collaborator Rob Schnapf and featuring Motion City Soundtrack's Tony Thaxton on drums, it's an under-two-minute nugget that spends a mere 10 seconds on the intro before diving headfirst into the kind of hooky indie-punk that Joyce Manor perfected over a decade ago. No fat, no frills, just great songwriting from one of the most distinct-sounding punk bands of their generation.
Pre-order Joyce Manor's new album on opaque pink vinyl.