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. Here are The Genre’s best songs from January.
The first month of 2021 is a wrap, and there's already so much cool stuff happening within the punk universe. Here are the features we ran this month:
* 18 landmark emo & post-hardcore albums that turn 25 this year
* An interview with The Best of the Worst on their long-awaited full-length, revitalization of ska-punk & more
* An interview with Flying Raccoon Suit on the genre-defying ska of their anticipated new album
* Shin Guard are now Hazing Over, talk name change, new sound & new EP
* Ship Thieves (mem Hot Water Music, Quit) & Reconciler (ex-Less Than Jake, Gunmoll) interviewed each other and released a split
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January album reviews: Portrayal of Guilt, The Sonder Bombs, Lande Hekt, Five Iron Frenzy, Terminal Bliss (ex-pg.99/City of Caterpillar), Eyelet.
Also, all 80 issues of Punk Planet are now available for free online.
Read on for my picks of the best songs of January 2021 that fall somewhere under the punk umbrella, in no particular order...
Calyx - "Leslie Plain and Strong"
Calyx have spent the past few years building up a reputation as one of the most beloved bands in the Pittsburgh punk scene, but their recordings never totally captured the power of their live show. That changed immediately with the release of "Leslie Plain and Strong," the first single off their upcoming debut full-length Stay Gone. The song starts with just Caitlin Bender's voice and guitar, and it's just an instant hook. Three seconds into "Leslie was born in the place she wants to die-iiie," you just know you're hearing a song that's gonna stick with you, and it only gets better from there. The song gets kicked up a notch when Jon Ahn and Garett Cassidy's muscular rhythm kicks in and Caitlin raises her voice to a roar, and by the time they introduce the gang vocals -- with help from Chris Diehm (Thin Lips, 1994!, etc) and Melissa Brain (Amanda X, Bad Heaven Ltd) -- it just explodes.