Wow, kind of weird to be talking about gigs and looking at the schedule it seems like bands are starting to travel. Hopefully this is the road we stay on but let's not divide and we can look forward to getting back out there into packed rooms when we are happy to be out there in packed rooms
Book of the week takes us to the road to California
This is a tale of bullying, loneliness, struggle, heartbreak and love. A book I couldn’t put down wanting to know what was going to happen through each printed page
Book of the week – the prodigal Rogerson
A perfect concise piece of punk rock history about one time Circle Jerk Roger Rogerson
The world keeps turning
We are all citizens, nothing more, nothing less but let’s make this a society that values all its citizens and cherishes them all equally.
Book of the week – the forgotten world cup
A book about footballing nations, many sound like amusement parks , Szekely Land or Sealand. However this book is more than just a geography lesson. It’s a tale of inspiration and love.
May 2022 bring you many Happy Days
So is there anything new in a new year The pain of 2020 subsided into the reality that was a bizarre 2021 but for us in the west we are lucky. Hard to think of it as luck when it seems that life’s freedoms are being eroded to save lives but the sense of place … Continue reading May 2022 bring you many Happy Days
Play of the day is very Partisan
It’s easy to know 40 years later how relevant something really was when the needle hits the record and you are brought back in a time capsule.
Book of the week has some old bones to pick
By halfway I’m hooked, wanting to know what’s going on and how it will all stitch together. A Really enjoyable experience trying to figure it all out.
Play of the day is down by the Canal
There is a lot of Chicago punk rock DNA in here manifesting itself as aggression draped in burning, melancholic guitar leads and an unpredictable hazy melodic wash.
Play of the day is not Toxic
Toxic Waste wore their hearts in their sleeves and warzone eventually ended. So did the open conflict but the underlying reasons haven’t changed that much. The streets of Dublin and Belfast have more colours now. Things have progressed but still we look to Capital for direction when maybe there could be a better way.