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New Video: Aussie Punks Mini Skirt Share Bruising "Squeeze Down" @DivisionPR @BadVibesUK
New Video: Aussie Punks Mini Skirt Share Bruising “Squeeze Down”
Bryon Bay, Australia-based punks Mini Skirt -- Jesse Pumphrey (bass), Jacob Pumphrey (drums), Jacob Boylan (vocals) and Cam Campbell (guitar) -- have received attention both nationally and internationally for a rough and tumble take on pub rock that capture the climate of present-day Australia. Their work focuses on the fact that things aren't picturesque and idyllic; the vocals express frustration and urgency while their arrangements are melodic yet raw. But at its core, they paint a picture of hope through struggle. The Aussie punks full-length debut, 2020's Casino grabbed the attention of the global punk scene. Their long-awaited and highly-anticipated sophomore album, All That We Know is slated for a November 14, 2025 self-release in their native Australia and through Bad Vibrations outside of Australia. Continuing a run of gritty, bruising punk, the album's material is underlined by Boylan's lyrics, which paint a picture of the modern social climate. Every verse and chorus is a well-crafted and concise assessment that ensures that the listener replays each line to make sure they didn't miss a word. All That We Know's latest single "Squeeze Down" is a bruising, mosh pit friendly ripper featuring scuzzy and wiry bursts of guitar, thunderous drumming and a chugging bass line paired with Boylan's punchy delivery expressing pent up frustration, confusion and unease that feels sweaty, claustrophobic and inescapable in a way that reminds me a bit of Ex-Cult's 2014 effort Midnight Passenger. "This track was written after our first EU/UK tour back in 2022,” Mini Skirt's Jacob Boylan recalls. "“The lyrics are about the unshakeable sense I had of feeling isolated, misunderstood and defensive about my identity. It was the first time I realised who I am is so deeply rooted in where I am from. Cam had put the riff together for his other band Chrome Cell Torture, but they had decided it wasn't tough enough for them, so us big whimps took it and ran with it." C.O.F.F.I.N.'s Ben Portnoy created the accompanying video for "Squeeze Down." Shot on grainy VHS video, the video features live footage of the band playing in a shitty club that captures the sweaty intensity of their live performance and of their fans.
joyofviolentmovement.com
October 15, 2025 at 3:00 PM
May 22, 2025 at 3:46 PM
@floralimageband.bsky.social www.whisperinandhollerin.com/reviews/revi... Here's my review of Gone Down Meadowland the debut album by East Coast psychedelicists Floral Image #FuzzClubRecords #JamesSherry #Divisionpr
May 14, 2025 at 3:45 PM
www.whisperinandhollerin.com/reviews/revi... Here's my review of This Much remains the first new album by Conflict in 22 years!! #Conflict #Mortarhate #CadizMusic #JamesSherry #DivisionPR
April 25, 2025 at 4:23 PM
New Video: Floral Image Shares Mind-Bending Visual for "Burning 305" @FuzzClub @DivisionPR
New Video: Floral Image Shares Mind-Bending Visual for “Burning 305”
Norwich, UK-based psych outfit Floral Image -- Fergus Nolan (vocals, guitar), Jack Warner (vocals, keys), Matt Kennedy (bass guitar), Mitch Forsyth (drums, visuals), and Phil Whitton (guitar, visuals) -- will be releasing their highly-anticipated full-length debut Gone Down Meadowland on April 25, 2025 through Fuzz Club. After an extensive touring schedule throughout the course of 2023, the rising British quintet spent the following winter looking both inward and outward to the wide-skied rural landscape of their immediate environs with the aim of distilling their wide pool of influences. As it turned out, once the gigs started to expand outside of Norwich, a fear of musical inertia had left the band asking themselves what their own sound even was. The long nights of their touring break were used to reassess and reconnect with a sense of play that had disappeared while spending hours driving around in a tour van. During Friday night jam sessions, with the band wrapped in coats and warmed by homemade cocktails, Phil Whitton's freezing living room wound up providing the cultivation for the begging of a new musical shape for the band -- a sound not just intending to be big and formidable live, but one that provides a softer, more subtle recorded companion for drunken hijinks with pals and unleashed self-introspection. More than ever, the quintet wanted to produce a brand of East Coast psychedelia that reflected the lushness of their natural surroundings and the solitude of their immediate surroundings. Over 30 songs were written, considered and arranged before the band whittled that down to 10 songs that they felt truly epitomized what they do best -- vivid hued colors and harnessed live energy and power woven together with fluid, lyrical harmonies inspired by Woods, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard, Stereolab and others. Written and recorded over across a string of at-home recording sessions during a six week period of last summer, Gone Down Meadowland's material is anchored around a sense of mischief and dreaminess, informed by the band member's own playful and loving friendship. Sonically, the material bends, grows and shifts between light, dark, malaise and excitement. There are moments of head-down ferocity, punctuated by moments of pulsing awe and wonder. “Barns, basements and boxrooms across Norfolk were all utilised to unearth the songs from the soil of our collective minds. We practically lived with each other and buried ourselves in the music for what was almost a whole half year," Floral Image explains. "We would cook for each other, learn from each other and laugh like we never could elsewhere. Even ‘that’ tricky period of cutting songs off went by with all of us in complete faith that the album's needs seemed greater than our own. If it wasn’t for the fact that recording had almost become secondary to getting actually quite good at Frisbee, we might have been able to release a double LP.” "A lot of themes are anti-establishment commentaries on the state of the modern world," the band adds. It can feel isolating being bystanders of global concern in sleepy Norfolk, even though it’s easy to slip into a false comfort when you’re surrounded by vast space, natural beauty and friendly folks down the market. Gone Down Meadowland is that egoless escapist fantasy that still can't escape the world caving in on itself; Norfolk isolationism." "Burning 305," Gone Down Meadowland's latest single is a is a trippy and hook-driven mesh of 60s and 70s psych rock, krautrock and shoegaze, featuring a relentless motorik groove, swirling and painterly guitar textures paired with dreamy falsetto melodies and an arena rock friendly sense of bombast. Directed and featuring animation by M. Forsyth and live-action camera operation from Alistair Nicholls, the accompanying video for "Burning 305" follows a bored janitor, listening to music on his phone while on the late night shift, when he encounters a discarded virtual reality headset. Once he puts the headset on, he's transported to a mind-bending, surrealistic, psilocybin-fueled virtual reality world that's first bright and sunny before quickly turning hellish.
joyofviolentmovement.com
March 27, 2025 at 4:00 AM
New Video: Pelican Shares Swaggering and Expansive "Indelible" @pelicansong @rfcrecords @DivisionPR
New Video: Pelican Shares Swaggering and Expansive “Indelible”
Flickering Resonance is the Chicago-based outfit Pelican‘s first full-length album in six years. Slated for a May 16, 2025 release through Run for Cover, the album sees the return of founding guitarist Laurent Schroeder-Lebec, who makes his first appearance on a Pelican album since 2009’s What We All Come To Need. The forthcoming eight-song album also reportedly taps into the spirit of the band’s formative era when Schroder-Lebec along with Trevor Shelley de Brauw (guitar) and siblings Bryan (bass) and Larry Herweg (drums) played shows during the heyday of Chicago’s all-ages club Fireside Bowl. Fireside Bowl’s booking would often result in post-hardcore, space rock, indie, metal and emo bands sharing bills, which also unwittingly provided a vast array of influences for the then-young band. “A lot of people didn’t hear it at first,” says Schroeder-Lebec of the band’s roots in a panoply of punk-related subgenres. “I was like, well, I guess the metal world is where we fit. But now we’re more willing to acknowledge all the suits we’re wearing.” Recorded by longtime collaborator Sanford Parker, Flickering Resonance sees the band’s long-known thick sonic backbone remaining intact, but while demonstrating a more humanistic side for the band.  “When Laurent left and we were able to carry it through, there became a real sense of gratitude for the fact we still have this artistic outlet and a community of people who want to support it,” the band’s Shelley de Brauw says of Schroeder-Lebec’s ten year sabbatical from the group. Fittingly, that feeling of deep, grounded appreciation doesn’t just reside within the band’s members, it’s expressed on every track of the album.  Last month, I wrote about "Cascading Crescent," a forceful, cinematic yet soulful ripper that recalls The Sword and others, while anchored around some scorching riffage and thunderous drumming.  "Indelible," Flickering Resonance's latest single continues a run of expansive, cinematic rippers that seemingly draws from desert and stoner rock, psych rock, Hawkwind and others, anchored around forcefully scorching and swaggering riffage paired with thunderous drumming and big hooks and choruses. Much like its predecessor, "Indelible" is accompanying with a mind-bending psychedelic visual by multidisciplinary artist Joshua Ford that features geometric shapes and seemingly supernatural and natural phenomena.
joyofviolentmovement.com
March 19, 2025 at 1:00 AM
NEWS: Conflict’s First New Album in Over 20 Years, “This Much Remains” is Coming Soon, by @BigPaulSloDragn (@divisionpr) ghostcultmag.com/conflicts-ne...
Conflict’s First New Album in Over 20 Years, “This Much Remains” is Coming Soon - Ghost Cult Magazine
Punk legends, Conflict, are clearing the decks for This Much Remains, their first album in more than twenty years. It arrives on April 25th, 2025th on CD,
ghostcultmag.com
February 17, 2025 at 11:23 PM
New Audio: Chicago's Pelican Shares Cinematic and Expansive "Cascading Crescent" @pelicansong @rfcrecords @DivisionPR
New Audio: Chicago’s Pelican Shares Cinematic and Expansive “Cascading Crescent”
Flickering Resonance is the Chicago-based outfit Pelican's first full-length album in six years. Slated for a May 16, 2025 release through Run for Cover, the album sees the return of founding guitarist Laurent Schroeder-Lebec, who makes his first appearance on a Pelican album since 2009's What We All Come To Need. The eight-song album also reportedly taps into the spirit of the band's formative era when Schroder-Lebec along with Trevor Shelley de Brauw (guitar) and siblings Bryan (bass) and Larry Herweg (drums) played shows during the heyday of Chicago's all-ages club Fireside Bowl. Fireside Bowl's booking would often result in post-hardcore, space rock, indie, metal and emo bands sharing bills, which also unwittingly provided a vast array of influences for the then-young band. "A lot of people didn’t hear it at first,” says Schroeder-Lebec of the band’s roots in a panoply of punk-related subgenres. “I was like, well, I guess the metal world is where we fit. But now we're more willing to acknowledge all the suits we’re wearing.” Recorded by longtime collaborator Sanford Parker, Flickering Resonance sees the band's long-known thick sonic backbone remaining intact, but while demonstrating a more humanistic side for the band. “When Laurent left and we were able to carry it through, there became a real sense of gratitude for the fact we still have this artistic outlet and a community of people who want to support it,” the band's Shelley de Brauw says of Schroeder-Lebec's ten year sabbatical from the group. Fittingly, that feeling o deep, grounded appreciation doesn't just reside within the band's members, it's expressed on every track of the album. The album's latest single "Cascading Crescent" is a forceful, cinematic and yet soulful ripper that reminds me a bit of The Sword and others, anchored around some scorching riffage and thunderous drumming.  The members of the Chicago-based band will be embarking on a lengthy touring schedule to support the album that includes a July 20, 2025 stop at The Meadows. Check out the rest of the tour dates below.
joyofviolentmovement.com
February 13, 2025 at 4:30 AM
New Video: Brighton's Split Dogs Share Bruising "Lafayette" @VennRecords @DivisionPR
New Video: Brighton’s Split Dogs Share Bruising “Lafayette”
Deriving their name from the classic zombie film Return of the Living Dead, Brighton, UK-based punks Split Dogs -- founding members Harry Atkins (vocals) (they/them) and Mil Martinez (guitar) (he/him), along with Chris Hugall (drums) (he/him) and Suez Boyle (bass) (she/her) -- can trace their origins back to around 2015 when its founding members had the idea to start a band and is fueled by its founders frustration over music seen as a soulless and commodified product made to sell more useless shit. As a youngster in South London, Mil Martinez would hear Status Quo, Bachman-Turner Overdrive and Dire Straits on the car radio while his father drove him to school. At home, he would invade his older brother's record collection, which leaned towards punk and heavy metal. In the UK's Black Country, Harry Atkins' mother instilled a love of Northern Soul, Slade and rock 'n roll, with stories of nights out at Club Lafayette and family singalongs at home. According to Martinez, “Our sound is a culmination of all those early influences and, to be honest, it really shows.” Split Dogs officially appeared on the scene in 2022. Suez Boyle, a prominent figure in the queer punk scene, best known for her work with The Walking Abortions joined the band in 2023. Up until that point, Chris Hugall, an old friend of Martinez and a former member of ska punks Mouthwash, an act that was once signed on Rancid's Hellcat Records, helped design the band's artwork. Hugall joined the band full-time last year, cementing the band's current lineup. The quartet quickly won over Bristol's accepting and tolerant punk scene, a scene that has always welcomed LGBQT+ folks and marginalized people, with raucous live shows featuring infectious lyrics. As word spread, the gigs increased and in short order, the Brighton-based punk outfit was playing sold-out rooms across the European Union, which caught the attention of British label Venn Records. Split Dogs' highly-anticipated full-length debut, the Peter Miles-produced Here to Destroy is slated for a February 28, 2025 release through Venn Records. Recorded over a three-day burst at Middle Farm Studios, the album was laid straight to a 16-track reel-to-reel tape machine without autotune, effects pedals, and computers. Adding to the authenticity of the proceedings, the album's material was recorded live with Atkins singing along in a vocal booth. So no cutting and pasting; but everyone had to nail their takes. "It was a blast!" Split Dogs' Martinez says. "We fully immersed ourselves, sleeping in a small apartment below the studio, cooking meals and listening to Pete’s extensive record collection." While the album title makes clear that the Brighton-based punks are here to destroy, they firmly believe that they're also here to rebuild and remind the listener of music's vital essence. “We’re not beholden to the digital age, we don’t want to get famous on social media, we just want to show the world that rock’n’roll is alive and well," the band says. Here to Destroy's latest single "Lafayette" is a bruising, gritty and anthemic bit of pub rock that brings back memories of Highway to Hell-era AC/DC and JOVM mainstays Amyl and the Sniffers with the song being featuring enormous power chords, a thunderous backbeat paired with Atkins' feral, booze and cigarette-soaked delivery. The band's Mil Martinez explains that the song is “a love letter to our families and the influence they’ve had on our love for music. At a glance it tells the story of (singer) Harry’s mother growing up in Wolverhampton during the height of the 1970s/80s northern soul scene and the characters she encountered. It also tips a hat to my older brother that passed away in 2023, he played a major role in my song writing growing up.” Shot by the band's Chris Hugall, the video follows Harry Atkins through Wolverhampton's cobbled streets, pubs and clubs while lovingly introducing the viewer to the town's characters, desperate for a night out after a long week slaving away for the man. Hugall admits that on the actual day of filming, they had no plan as all of their other ideas had fallen through, but they worked on the fly and the end result compliments the song perfectly. “It takes you on a journey through the cobbled streets and back bars of the Black Country, Harry’s hometown Wolverhampton,” the band's Martinez explains. “From Chewing gum-stained carpets and pints of mild to stone faced locals and tar-stained fingertips. If you fancy a dance? Come out to the club and feel alive!”    Heads down, see you at the end.   
joyofviolentmovement.com
January 23, 2025 at 8:30 PM
The Chris Merriman Daily is out! ▸ Top stories today via @DivisionPR @themonsterist
November 20, 2024 at 2:17 PM
Gaslight Anthem Magic 4 yr Fri RT @DivisionPR
Well this rules. @gaslight_anthem covering @fakeproblems FREE DOWNLOAD! http://bit.ly/aju2KY
November 20, 2024 at 12:43 AM