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Monday Motivation: Knuckle Puck

If you’re anything like me, you probably started the day by recognizing that the start of a new work week had indeed arrived and then immediately began shaking your fists at the sky in anger. Monday is rarely anyone’s favorite day, and from what I have seen firsthand it feels safe to say it’s the one day of the week some people outright hate. I guess to them the arrival of the work week symbolizes the end of their quote/unquote freedom, and as a result they head into the office/factory/restaurant/store with a negative outlook already on their mind. This leads to bad attitudes, which only makes the experience of being at work worse, and for some reason it also seems to make time slow to a crawl. We’re not about that life, and we hope this post can do the same you that the song contained within it did for us.

Pop-punk has been the dominating force in alternative music and youth culture for the better part of half a decade at this point, and it doesn’t take close inspection to realize signs of aging are starting to show. The generation that ushered this sound to forefront has begun to mature, as have their interests, and the time has come for the bands who want to make music their longterm career to evolve right along with them. Not everyone is up to the challenge, or at least the seems to be the case given the material released by the scene in 2015, but every so often a band comes along that isn’t afraid to embrace the constant evolution of life and depict in the music. In 2015, there may be no better example of this than Chicago’s own pop-punk heroes, Knuckle Puck.

This week, Knuckle Puck will release their new full-length album through Rise Records. The record speaks of growing up, seeing the world, and spending a little too much time in one’s own head. It’s not about hating yourself and learning to make change, or even apologizing for the times you’ve been wrong. Instead, ‘Copacetic’ deals with accepting the fact that growth is a constant work in progress, and it’s defined by small steps rather than giant leaps. It’s about learning to be patient without losing your drive to do whatever you are able to create the life you want, and it’s a message the entire alternative scene needs at this moment.

I could pick any song on this record and find a reason for the entire album to be chosen for today’s Monday Motivation post, but for me it’s “Evergreen” that seals this record as one everyone should hear. This particular segment has been bowling me over for weeks:

“As I exhale this breath of fresh air, I feel the distance tear the space between us. Cause we’re always climbing toward the sun, but the cabin pressure gets to me. And there’s so much more than we think there is to see.”

There is something about working in music that makes everyone who partakes blind to the world around them. Phone calls home become more infrequent, friends whose careers reside in more common fields become increasingly distant, and try as you might to learn how to settle down with age your thirst for adventure, or simply to always be seeking something new, only continues to grow in time. While there are certainly perks to seeing the world from this perspective it always has drawbacks, including the loneliness the freedom of expression can create. Freedom, like life, is only ideal when it can be enjoyed with others you care for, and throughout Copacetic there is a fervent belief there is more to life than shows, chords, and tours. That is something everyone in music needs to remember, as well as the fact it’s not wrong to take time to enjoy that side of life. We all need a release. Copacetic finds Knuckle Puck seeking their escape while still wanting nothing more than to be the source of comfort their fans love, and through sharing their struggle we too realize our need for a bit of peace amidst the chaos of existence.


James Shotwell is the Marketing Coordinator for Haulix. He is also a professional entertainment critic, covering both film and music, as well as the co-founder of Antique Records. Feel free to tell him you love or hate the article above by connecting with him on Twitter. Bonus points if you introduce yourself by sharing your favorite Simpsons character.

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Inside Music Podcast #32 – Brandon Stasi (Sudden Suspension)

Hey there! Welcome to our blog. We thank you for finding time in you busy schedule to spend a few minutes on our site. The post you’re about to enjoy is the latest installment in our popular podcast series, Inside Music. If you like what you hear, the entire catalog of episodes can be found and enjoyed through iTunes. Subscriptions and reviews are always appreciated.

This site exists to promote the future of the entertainment industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your entertainment-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found onTwitter and Facebook.

On this episode of INSIDE MUSIC, host James Shotwell calls Sudden Suspension vocalist Brandon Stasi to discuss his band’s promising and fast-moving career in music. Sudden Suspension recently announced their decision to sign with Bad Timing Records, and James asks Brandon a number of questions related to the band’s decision to sign, as well as what they have planned in the months and years ahead. If you love pop punk, or if you just want to learn a bit about how a label can impact a band life in a positive way, make sure not to miss this conversation.

The music you hear in the intro to ‘Inside Music’ this week is “Past Tense” from Sudden Suspension. You can learn more about that song, as well as the album it hails from, on Bandcamp.

You may already know this, but ‘Inside Music’ is now available on iTunes! Click here to subscribe.

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Breaking Down Pop-Punk’s Heteronormativity

The only thing we love as much as great music is great music writing, and from time to time we like to highlight some of our favorite pieces by sharing them here on our blog. The following piece was originally featured on the official home of Punk Out!, a great organization you can learn about in this feature we ran back in December. Be sure to support their efforts to encourage equality and acceptance in music whenever possible.

In 2001 we – along with blink-182 bassist Mark Hoppus – fell in love with the girl at the rock show; before that The Dead Milkmen had us jumping on tables at pizza joints and stealing cars for that special punk rock girl, while Descendents had us bemoaning the mystique of that black haired, fair skinned kabuki girl.  All of these seminal pop-punk songs offer classic boy-meets-girl-meets-heartache-meets-angst stories and we all love them for it – they’re cathartic and give us the feeling that someone else goes through the same romantic pitfalls as us.

But what if they don’t? Notice that boy-meets-girl trope? It’s pretty common to pop-punk and it’s also incredibly heteronormative.  It’s easy to just write this off as a result of the fact that most pop-punk bands consist of heterosexual guys still navigating the maze of early adulthood.  As a cis-gendered, heterosexual male I can attest to the ease of this assumption, but it’s wrong.

This assumption stems from both the pop-punk scene and our greater society.  Pop-punk – much like the patriarchal and heteronormative society it evolved inside of – is a boys club.  All the biggest pop-punk bands are dominated by men who identify as straight and we cannot fault them for their sexuality, but we can question how this genre became so heteronormative, and more importantly, how we can work to reclaim it as a safe space for the LGBTQ community.

Anyone remotely sensitive to LGBTQ issues understands the importance of pronouns.  They are a subtle, yet crucial, syntactical tool that speaks to our identities and how we see ourselves.  For example, to mis-gender a Trans person by using incorrect pronouns immediately invalidates their existence.  Similarly, to consistently listen to a slew of pop-punk songs that you might identify with musically, only to hear tales of “he loves her,” is disheartening for those, young and old, in the LGBTQ community.  

LGBTQ music lovers, like all music lovers, want something they can identify with, which begs the question: why must heterosexual pop-punk bands rely so heavily on gendered pronouns?  Is this just another way of exclaiming “no homo!” or is it simple ignorance?  The optimist in me hopes it’s the latter, which opens up the possibility of educating and encouraging our favorite artists to adopt gender neutral pronouns, because after all the words “I love you” do not have a sexuality and act outside of our socially constructed gender norms.

However, making pop-punk more LGBTQ friendly is not just about leveling the playing field and creating egalitarian songs that everyone can identify with, but also pushing those pop-punk musicians who identify as queer to the forefront.  While using gender neutral pronouns might make straight pop-punk bands more accessible to the LGBTQ community, it is also important to let that same community have something that is unequivocally theirs, which is why we ought to encourage LGBTQ pop-punk bands (and all bands) to sing the lyrics that represent their lives best.  

The punk community was (supposedly) founded on the premise of inclusion for the misfits of society and so often we fail that guiding principle in regard to anything from race to sexuality.  The pop-punk scene needs to make a stand and support pop-punk bands that openly identify as LGBTQ and whose songs give the LGBTQ community something to identify with.  The LGBTQ community needs to hear Jordan Black from Like Pacific scream about his failed relationships, they need to hear Against Me’s Laura Jane Grace sing about the harsh realities of being Trans in America, and they need their own Soupy.

As fellow Punk Out content developer Kat Hamilton noted in her recent article about notable queer, male musicians, the genre of queercore may exist, but it significantly lacks the same popularity as mainstream genres like pop-punk.  This relegation of LGBTQ friendly music to the obscure, niche realms of punk is a shame and contributes to the heteronormativity so prevalent in pop-punk.  This problem is not a question of there being too few LGBTQ pop-punk bands, but rather there being too little support for them in the scene.  

It is important that those bands exist, but in order for them to burst pop-punk’s heteronormative bubble they must both feel that their scene is willing to welcome them and also to support them.  It is easy to proclaim one’s willingness to let LGBTQ bands and fans take a more prominent place in the pop-punk scene, but it is another thing to make their existence financially viable.  The existence of every band ultimately comes down to dollars and cents – if it doesn’t make dollars, it doesn’t make sense.  On top of making the pop-punk scene a safe space for these artists, we also need to buy their merchandise, go to their shows, and buy their music so they can continue to break the heteronormative fetters that have confined pop-punk’s accessibility for so long.

As someone who has benefited from the privilege of being a white, cis-gendered, heterosexual pop-punk fan for most of my life, I cannot help but advocate that we all break down the overtly heteronormative barriers of entry so entrenched into pop-punk culture.  Music ought to confront, not perpetuate, these systems of exclusionary power – it is an art form for everyone and I think it’s about time that the LGBTQ community take their rightful place at the front of the stage so they can sing, scream, and angry finger point along to their own anthems.

Written by: Zac Lomas

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Inside Music Podcast #19 – Brandon Pagano (Handguns)

Hey there, everyone! Welcome to our blog. We thank you for finding time in you busy schedule to spend a few minutes on our site. The post you’re about to enjoy is the latest installment in our popular podcast series, Inside Music. If you like what you hear, the entire catalog of episodes can be found and enjoyed through iTunes. Subscriptions and reviews are always appreciated.

This site exists to promote the future of the entertainment industry, and to do that we need input from people like you and your entertainment-loving friends. If you have any questions about the content in this article, or if you have an artist you would like to see featured on this blog, please contact james@haulix.com. We can also be found on Twitter and Facebook.

On this episode of INSIDE MUSIC, host James Shotwell calls Brandon Pagano of Handguns and the two spend an hour talking about Brandon’s life in music. They start with current events, but quickly work their way back to the Pagano family’s move from NYC to Albany. From there, Brandon shares stories about his first band, his work on solo material, and the times he has spent with Handguns. He also discuss the future and everything the band hopes to accomplish moving forward.

The music you hear in the intro to ‘Inside Music’ this week is “I Can Relate” from Handguns. You can learn more about that song, as well as the album it hails from, on Handguns’ official website.

You may already know this, but ‘Inside Music’ is now available on iTunes! Click here to subscribe.

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