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.
It's officially fall, September is a wrap, and it was a very busy month in the punk world. There were some major punk-centric fests -- I attended Riot Fest, where I caught the My Chemical Romance reunion, the live debut of L.S. Dunes (members of My Chem, Circa Survive, Thursday, and Coheed), Misfits playing Walk Among Us, and much more, and I sadly missed Furnace Fest, but judging by videos, it looked awesome. Riot Fest was also just one stop of My Chemical Romance's ongoing, very eventful reunion tour -- we also caught them in Brooklyn and I have tons of FOMO about missing their first NJ show back that saw Gerard Way singing "Jet Black New Year" with Thursday, Geoff Rickly singing "This Is The Best Day Ever" with MCR, and other surprises.
September also brought the news that NOFX are breaking up in 2023 (and releasing a new album), and here are some other punk-related features we ran this past month:
* The Wonder Years on fatherhood, Mark Hoppus, and making a record that's RIYL The Wonder Years
* Title Fight's Floral Green at 10 -- the story behind a landmark of modern punk & hardcore, featuring interviews with Ned Russin and Will Yip
* Jimmy Eat World's 10 best deep cuts
* 10 hardcore releases not to miss from summer 2022
* Descendents' insanely classic Milo Goes to College turns 40
* Sugar's perfect Copper Blue turns 30
* A look back on AJJ's People Who Can Eat People… for its 15th anniversary
* Buck-O-Nine's Jon Pebsworth on how Buddhism and music helped him recover from a heart attack
* Regulate on how their new LP was inspired by James Brown, Bloc Party, Bad Brains, Santana & more
We've also got new podcast episodes up with David Knudson (Botch, Minus The Bear), John Nolan (Taking Back Sunday, Straylight Run), and Dan Campbell (The Wonder Years).
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September album reviews: The Wonder Years, City of Caterpillar, The Callous Daoboys, Mindforce, The Mars Volta, Death Cab For Cutie, Regulate, OFF!, High Vis, Hippie Trim, No Devotion, Holy Fawn, Excide, The UpFux/Noise Complaint, and 156/Silence.
We've also got an exclusive Furnace Fest vinyl collection with limited variants of Drug Church, Fiddlehead, Spiritbox, The Acacia Strain, and Stretch Arm Strong. Other newly-added titles to the punk section of our online vinyl shop include the expanded 20th anniversary edition of Thrice's The Illusion of Safety (exclusive splatter vinyl), the 25th anniversary edition of The Get Up Kids' Four Minute Mile (exclusive "dreamsicle" vinyl), the 10th anniversary edition of Basement's Colourmeinkindness (on exclusive black/purple swirl), the new Tigers Jaw 7" (exclusive coke bottle clear), the 20th anniversary edition of Taking Back Sunday's Tell All Your Friends (silver vinyl), the 10th anniversary edition of Anti-Flag's The General Strike (red vinyl), the 25th anniversary edition of The Promise Ring's Nothing Feels Good (blue & white vinyl), Home Is Where's I Became Birds (tangerine/blue splatter), Mustard Plug's Evildoers Beware (25th anniversary silver vinyl), and much more.
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Read on for my picks of the best songs of September that fall somewhere under the punk umbrella, in no particular order...
Paramore - "This Is Why"
The lineup (and title) of the upcoming My Chemical Romance and Paramore-headlined When We Were Young has caused multiple people to refer to it as an "emo nostalgia" festival, but nostalgia be damned, both headliners have released some of the best music of their career this year. My Chem were in this column back in May for their killer new song "The Foundations of Decay," and now here's Paramore with the first single and title track off their highly-anticipated new album. "This Is Why" is the first taste of new music from Paramore we've heard since 2017's After Laughter, which reinvented Paramore as a sharp, spiky new wave band, and which was not just one of their best albums yet but also one of the best albums of the 2010s. "This Is Why" picks up where those new wavey vibes left off -- I've seen it compared to anything from Can to Talking Heads to Bloc Party, and all feel apt -- but it also brings back some of the angst of early Paramore, as Hayley Williams sneers about conspiracy theorists and bigots who just have to publicly voice their opinions instead of showing an ounce of empathy. It gives that "they're back!" feeling that you crave whenever a band's taken as long a break as Paramore has, and it also feels like a step forward. This is unmistakably the work of Hayley Williams, Taylor York, and Zac Farro, but it also covers entirely new ground for them. Based on recent interviews, it sounds like "This Is Why" is just a small taste of all that the new album will have to offer, and I can't wait to hear what other directions the record will go in, but for now, this song alone feels momentous.
Pre-order the new Paramore album on clear or standard black vinyl.
Jivebomb - "Primitive Desires"
There's something in the Baltimore hardcore scene's water, and local label Flatspot Records has long been on top of it. One of the label's latest signings is Jivebomb, and their upcoming EP Primitive Desires looks like it'll be yet another great addition to this amazing year for hardcore. It was was recorded with J Robbins collaborator Matt Redenbo and mixed and mastered by Jon Markson (Drug Church, Regulate, etc), and Jivebomb are one of the bands tapped to open the upcoming Scowl tour, alongside other names that recently graced this column like Anklebiter and Strange Joy. And if you like all of those bands, I think you'll like Jivebomb. Like Scowl, Jivebomb pull from the punk side of hardcore -- it's easy to see why they've been compared to classic bands like Negative Approach as well. Primitive Desires' title track is a 64-second ripper with no fat at all; just thick power chords, driving rhythms, and a ferociously pessimistic bark from vocalist Kat.