Who needs another 2020 Top Ten?

…no-one, but here’s one anyway


2020, a year of extremes. Johnson. Trump. Pandemic. On a much less significant but positive note, Personal Punk had the privilege of hearing and writing about some incredible music, so I couldn’t resist the pull of a year-end Top Ten.

10: SEX DREAM‘s enjoyably breezy Candle On My Skin mini album caught me by surprise, a sweet kind of pop punk facing the real and present danger of sugar overload. They pull it off with Maria Surfinbird’s laid back vocal style, some unexpected guitar work and strong tunes. Full review here

9: Refreshing to hear some lo-fi garage punk this year, provided by the unhinged FROGGY & THE RINGES on their Soft ‘G’ EP. Themed, self-styled ‘pond-core’ by mysterious types, it crash-bashes its way gleefully into your heart over the course of it’s 60’s trash meets ’77 punk delirium. Full review here

8: 6402 completed their Dump Trump Trilogy‘ in 2020. Previous work showed no signs of political slant so it speaks volumes that they felt compelled to create not one, but three tracks themed around the American carnage that was the Trump Presidency. It may be the lightest material I have reviewed so far but the judicious use of soundbites lend weight to these post-punk protest experiments. Should have been a 7″ vinyl EP. Full review here

7: NO MURDER NO MOUSTACHE released their Hold My Beer EP on the ever-eclectic Smash Mouse Records. Tory-bashing folk punk with a sense of humour is served up on this five track stormer and, following Halloween and Christmas specials, I look forward to seeing what comes next. Full review here

6: SLACKRRThe Current single, download/streaming. I’m giving this band the benefit of the doubt here as polished pop punk isn’t my favourite sub-genre but damn, if I can’t stop playing this catchy and uplifting song. Those additional female vocals. That anthemic chorus. If their upcoming album is chock full of these, I’m in. Full review here

5: 2020 saw Sweden’s Cimex Records unleash it’s first two stand-alone releases. It was hard to decide whether to put the GBH/MOTORHEAD swagger of KNIFE FOR AN EYE in here or the simple-minded fun punk of THE PROFESSIONAL AGAINSTERS. I went for the latter because, despite the (tongue-in-cheek) jaw-droppingly dumb lyrics, the devil has all the best tunes. Full review here

4: PI$$ER unleashed the mini album Crushed Down To Paste in July. A sax-fuelled d-beat odyssey with hints of dirty soul, it proved, if proof were needed, that the DIY punk scene still has some suprises up its sleeve. Full review here

3: Lockdown madness struck the Smash Mouse camp as they put together a tribute album to the Tony Hawk’s pro-skater 1 & 2 soundtracks. Comfort blanket promptly shaken, it was a joy to find the two least punk tracks on here were my favourites: FAKE FRIENDS‘ oddball electronic take on MILENCOLIN, and the beautifully overwrought piano dramatics of NO MURDER NO MOUSTACHE’s Blood Brothers by PAPA ROACH. This album has a fun vibe throughout and makes me feel good, something special in these dark times. Full review here

2: THE DOMESTICS/PIZZATRAMP No Life/This Is Your Life. It was a close call. This split 12″ saw a welcome return to taking a vinyl release seriously. A carefully crafted, conceptual piece of work as opposed to throwing your latest tracks down. These two bands are among the best the UK has to offer right now but they surpassed themselves with these 11 minute long songs, channeling, in spirit at least, SUBHUMANS’ (UK) From The Cradle To The Grave. Gob-smacking. Full review here

1: Danish skiffle-core pioneers STOJ SNAK took on no less than the Meaning of Life with the incredible Life, Death & Everything In Between album. As with the above, it feels like an event, a piece of earth-rich punk rock art, from the eye-catching cover design to the powerful punk-roots maturity of the music within. An enduring classic. Full review here

honorable mention

Honourable mention goes to Poland’s inexplicably named AM, who may have made it impossible to find them on the internet but their 2010 album BA finally made it to vinyl. I described it as a FLAG OF DEMOCRACY/CRAVATS swirl. Inventive, passionate and progressive hardcore punk that deserves to be discovered. Full review here


This was just some of the music submitted to Personal Punk for review. It’s been a shitty year all round for everyone, one way or another, and writing this stuff has been my therapy. I just want to give a heartfelt thanks to those who submitted their work and to anyone who has taken the time to read any of my babbling. It means a lot, seriously. Here’s to better times.

Personal Punk

THE SCENE THAT WOULD NOT DIE: Twenty Years of Post-Millennial Punk in the UK – Ian Glasper (Earth Island Publishing)

punk journalist passes the baton with fifth & final book


I think punk is people. Punk is community. Punk is like-minded people working together as one. And for as long as there are communities, there will be punk.

Ben, DISJOY

The fifth and final book in Ian Glasper’s heroic attempt to document the UK punk scene from the early eighties to the present day, weighs in at a hefty 650 pages. Previous volumes covered smaller time periods – Burning Britain focused on 1980-’85, Trapped In A Scene ’85-90, The Day The Country Died, the anarcho-punk off-shoot of the late 70’s and 80’s and Armed With Anger took on the 90’s. As in mainstream pop culture, there is a vaguely definable line between these periods, a measurable development and a loose ‘beginning and end’. Any attempt at carving up the last twenty years in such a way would inevitably prove futile, and with good reason: the internet, and subsequently social media, changed everything for everyone and the DIY punk scene wasn’t immune to its divisive charms. In-depth analysis of this is best left in the more capable hands of Sociology students and the Punk Scholars Network but suffice to say, it explains why the author had little choice but to cover a twenty year period in a single volume.

Of course, it’s impossible to be definitive. The underground punk scene of the last two decades is a multi-tentacled leviathan, with countless sub-genres and micro-scenes existing alongside, and often without knowledge of each others existence. Ironically, the infinite connections made possible by the ‘net resulted in a more fragmented scene than in say, 1985-1990, with that era’s community-building utilisation of the mail system via stamp-soaping, flyers, fanzines and word of mouth. With such a seismic shift, how does one begin to capture this, the hardiest of scenes, in a single volume?

The authors modus operandi remains the same: let the bands do the talking. There are 111 music biz-shunning punk and hardcore bands the length and breadth of the British Isles here with a good cross-section of styles: UK82, anarcho, crust, d-beat, thrash, hardcore, riot grrrl, ukecore… (I made that last one up but THE PUKES are featured). The emphasis is on each bands individual stories, with the impact of the internet, social media, Covid-19 and Brexit delivering the coda. Many bands have members who were active during pre-‘net decades, so have perspective of ‘before and after’ and this once again raises a perennial question: does the UK punk scene have enough new blood coming through to ensure it’s survival? This is an insecurity that recurs through the years and the answer, so far, has always been ‘yes, at least enough to secure continuity through the fallow times’.

“DIY grass-roots punk rock is doing very well. It’s like Doctor Who – it regenerates every few years. There will always be a healthy turnover of bands and people, all very enthusiastic about making music, organising gigs, doing zines and record labels. And one of the things I love most about that is that the next generations usually aren’t quite so deferential to the bands that came before them. That’s exactly how it should be.”

Dave, NATTERERS

The long-standing scratching post of punk nostalgia and the Rebellion festival gets a regular airing. The punks of the late 70’s and early 80’s ridiculed teddy boys for their refusal to let go of their own musical youth and a sizeable element of the punk scene has followed that same path, right down to Butlins Punk Specials. Fierce debate remains between the purists who believe it to be a sad spectacle of a once radical spirit and those who see it as a harmless social gathering, though the latter seem to be slowly grinding down the former as Rebellion increases its inclusion of current bands.

Ian Glasper

There were always going to be omissions. The likes of FIG. 4.0, DAUNTLESS ELITE, THE MAGNIFICENT, DOWN AND OUTS, ARTERIES, MILLOY, JETS VS SHARKS et al, are conspicuous by their absence but there is alot of material here. Big hitters like skate-thrash japesters PIZZATRAMP, the oddball social-commentary-pop of WONK UNIT, anarcho-noise merchants BAD BREEDING and brutal hardcore heroes THE DOMESTICS and GRAND COLLAPSE share the stage with SALEM RAGES’ death rock, THE MIGRAINES’ skatecore and the lo-fi rants of THE MENSTRUAL CRAMPS. The latter in particular, bring refreshing confrontation to a scene that, at least in the Rebellion-Nostalgia element, still holds to some pretty dispiriting sexist attitudes. So then, these are first-hand reports of a wildly varied scene, lovingly detailed, individual voices describing very different experiences but with a passion for a DIY punk community as common denominator.

A section on grass-roots record labels would have made for the perfect addendum but alas, it has to end somewhere. Still, the book is crawling with crystal clear band photos, live shots and gig posters, another example of advancing technology aiding the documentation of this period.

The Scene That Would Not Die reports on a DIY punk scene that has proven itself to be the hardiest of street-fighters: shifting, rolling with the punches and swatting aside any and all threats to its survival. Arguably, it’s biggest obstacles are just around the corner but if the past is to teach us anything, it should be that you just can’t kill the spirit. Hopefully, there will be DIY journalists as dedicated as Glasper along the way to document it.

Available to pre-order now from Earth Island Publishing, publication date is 7th December 2020.

Here’s to all that help out to keep the scene alive
Putting in for nothing back because of you we thrive
The punx, promoters, bands, the zinesters
Non-profit labels and everyone involved! DIY, DIY or die

Book your own shows
Make your own label
Zines, records, flyers
Do it yourself

DIY or die

from lyrics to ‘DIY or DIE’, CASUAL NAUSEA

KAYLEIGH MORGAN – ‘Innocence’ digital download (Smash Mouse)

bittersweet melancholy


Having only encountered Welsh singer/songwriter Kayleigh Morgan via her punk band IGNITEMARES, this solo acoustic effort is something of a revelation. While the vocals Kayleigh offers up with that band are hardly EXTREME NOISE TERROR, here they walk the line between delicacy and strength with consummate ease. Innocence is a thing of beauty, despite its subject matter of childhood virtue under siege from a virulent society.

This is song-writing at its most stripped back*: a simple acoustic guitar melody accompanying natural vocals, to convey a powerful message. It leaves me with the bittersweet, melancholy feeling I get after listening to Colin Meloy of THE DECEMBERISTS. Just lovely.

Available for pre-order now from Smash Mouse, released on 4th December 2020.

*in solidarity, this is reviewing at its most stripped back.