London’s punk underground has long been a seething crucible of chaos, wit, and protest, and with their self-titled debut album, Panic Shack emerge as a siren call for the next generation of disaffected, loud-mouthed, brilliantly self-aware misfits. Across eleven tightly wound, gloriously scrappy tracks, this band twists, slaps it, laughs at punk rock legacy, and […]


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