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.
June is a wrap, summer is here, and it's time to look back on the many great songs that came out under the punk umbrella this past week. I highlight 11 favorites below, but first, some features we ran in June:
* 2002’s 10 most unavoidable pop punk hits, ranked from worst to best
* How a ‘Never Hungover Again’ outtake and a text about Sublime led to Joyce Manor’s new LP (interview/review)
* Japandroids' Celebration Rock turns 10
* Go see a ska show!!! (Kill Lincoln, JER & The Best of the Worst pics & review)
* Grumpster discuss the influences behind new album 'Fever Dream'
* 6 songs that influenced Fairweather's Deluge EP
* We Are The Union & Rae Mystic talk new photobook, one year of 'Ordinary Life' & more
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June album reviews: Joyce Manor, Alexisonfire, Fairweather, Candy, Stay Inside, Grumpster, No Pressure, onelinedrawing, Cold Mega (Justice Tripp of Angel Du$t/Trapped Under Ice), and the For Your Health/awakebutstillinbed split.
For even more on Joyce Manor, BrooklynVegan launched a podcast this past month and our first episode is with Barry Johnson of Joyce Manor. You can also pick up their new album on opaque pink vinyl.
More punk vinyl: Poison The Well's Tear from the Red (limited 20th anniversary splatter vinyl), Citizen's Youth (limited white/yellow splatter), The Locust's Safety Second, Body Last (limited white vinyl), Soul Glo's Diaspora Problems (gold vinyl), Gulch's Impenetrable Cerebral Fortress (multi-color vinyl), Anti-Flag's 17 Song Demo (red/silver vinyl), The Distillers' Coral Fang (import), PUP's The Unraveling Of PUPTHEBAND (neon coral & black smush vinyl), and much more.
Read on for my picks of the 11 best songs of June that fall somewhere under the punk umbrella, in no particular order...
Pinkshift - "nothing (in my head)"
It was clear that Pinkshift were one of the most promising new punk bands around even before they released their 2021 debut EP Saccharine and started winning over crowds on tour, so it's no surprise that they've now inked a deal with one of the biggest punk labels around: Hopeless Records. Their first song for the label is even better than anything on Saccharine; the band is tighter, the production is bigger, and Pinkshift are continuing to find their own voice. The "My Chemical Romance meets Paramore" descriptor that has been following them around is still there, but there are clearly a lot of other ingredients in this song too, and really the band it sounds most like is Pinkshift themselves.