
How Sound and Fury Festival continues to thrive on the bleeding edge of hardcore's evolution
But over the last five to 10 years, the latest generation of musicians from punk rock's slightly more aggressive cousin has expanded into new sonic territory. Bands like Baltimore's Turnstile, Kentucky's Knocked Loose and Santa Cruz's Scowl have pushed the genre in new directions — gaining acclaim and popularity outside the hardcore scene, sometimes at the expense of its die-hard fans.
'It's very awesome to be a part of that wave,' Knocked Loose vocalist Bryan Garris says. 'I think there are a lot of bands that are bringing in new things and opening a lot of doors for everybody else. It's like the generic saying, 'A rising tide raises all ships.' I truly believe there's room for everybody to win, so it feels really good that all these brand-new opportunities are opening for everyone. You see younger hardcore bands really going for it right off the bat, and we're very fortunate to be a part of the era that's taking it to new heights.'
That's why it's only fitting for Knocked Loose to be headlining this weekend's Sound and Fury Festival, bringing two full days of the best modern hardcore to Exposition Park. Since its inception in 2006, Sound and Fury quickly established itself as the event for hardcore and hardcore-adjacent music (from the heavier side of emo bands like Anxious to more extreme, metal-leaning acts) first in Los Angeles and then across the country. Just as the festival's lineup and footprint has expanded both in size and musical variety over the years, Knocked Loose has seen its own popularity skyrocket as the band has continued to push the boundaries of what hardcore could be.
'From a sonic perspective, all these bands bringing in new influences to hardcore was pretty polarizing at first,' Garris says. 'You had all these bands that toured and participated in the hardcore world but didn't sound like a traditional hardcore band — and people really made that extremely controversial for an annoying amount of time. Once that barrier was broken, it allowed for so many unique artists and bands to bring new things to the table. Bills and touring packages became more diverse, and I think the coolest thing is when you put a tour package together that makes sense on paper but sonically makes no sense at all. It keeps things interesting and doesn't create such a monotonous atmosphere at a show.'
For Knocked Loose, one of the biggest steps outside of 'traditional hardcore' it could possibly take was collaborating with pop-turned-metal artist Poppy on last year's 'Suffocate' — a gamble that paid off handsomely, introducing the band to a whole new audience and earning the group its highest-charting single and a Grammy nomination for metal performance. It's a track that Garris still considers 'definitely one of [his] favorite songs' while also allowing the band to get 'weirder' and experiment in ways it might not normally consider.
While the band is already considering how it can continue to push the envelope even further without losing what makes Knocked Loose work at its core, the group is mindful of its history in the hardcore scene both as fans and artists. No scene is quicker to disown an act for its commercial success, and Garris (along with guitarists Isaac Hale and Nicko Calderon, bassist Kevin Otten and drummer Kevin Kaine) is fully aware of the line the band walks.
'We've never been writing a song and felt like we had to check in with how [hardcore fans] would feel about it, but when it comes to how we present the band, that's where we keep hardcore in mind,' Garris says. 'That's where we come from and what we're used to. Even though we know the band is obviously not going to be playing crazy small DIY, no-barricade hardcore shows anymore, it allowed us to create an experience on a much bigger stage. Then we do things like play Sound and Fury or put hardcore bands that we like on our bills because we still feel very passionately about these things. We're very fortunate to be able to play these massive shows and have conversations about [pyrotechnics] and lights, but we're still hardcore fans and that's never changed.'
With acts like Knocked Loose, Scowl and England's Basement on the bill this year, Sound and Fury continues to show why it's arguably America's preeminent hardcore festival, bringing together dozens of rising bands with just enough nostalgia acts (such as this year's Forced Order reunion and Poison the Well) to remind the younger generations of those who came before. It's a lineup you won't see anywhere else, with a DIY hardcore vibe that fit just as well when hardcore fans and artists Sean Riley, Robert Shedd and Todd Jones held their initial event at the Alpine in Ventura 19 years ago.
'There are a lot of festivals in the mainstream rock atmosphere where the lineups are essentially the same,' Garris says. 'For example, two years ago or so, every major rock fest in America was headlined by Metallica. That's no diss at all, but Sound and Fury is such a different thing and the lineups feel so organic and exciting. They're very good about scratching an itch that you didn't know you had.'
'I think [hardcore fans] are seeking more context than what they're getting from the mainstream — and since most of the people here arrive through that filter, it makes for a very open and welcoming space,' Riley adds. 'So whether it's being straightedge and eschewing drugs and alcohol, or whether you are someone who likes wearing corpse paint in public, or you're a person who likes to dance at shows, this is a place you can come and be yourself without judgment. Combine that with hardcore shows being, in my opinion, the rawest form of live-music experiences you can find, it's a freeing experience.'
Although Riley is the only one of the three original founders still working on Sound and Fury — currently teamed with Martin Stewart and Madison Woodward — he's made sure to keep it as true to the hardcore ethos as possible year after year. Despite numerous venue changes and growth that many corporate festivals could only wish to have, Sound and Fury today is as instrumental to and beloved by the hardcore scene in Los Angeles and beyond as it's ever been. It's found a way to speak to multiple generations of hardcore kids (and adults), and now some of its biggest fans are the ones onstage.
'[Sound and Fury] has never been our 'day job,' but more of something we do in our off time that can hopefully inspire people — knowing how empowering and meaningful this DIY world has been for us and our lives outside of this music scene,' Riley says. 'We've seen attendees start bands that play the fest, put out zines that they sell at the fest, start businesses or become food vendors that operate at the fest, and even people who now help us run the fest and have actual ownership stakes in the festival. Seeing it grow year after year in a very organic way really validates our approach and hopefully means it's serving its purpose.'
'When we were preparing our year, [Sound and Fury] was one of my most anticipated shows of the year because I am such a fan of the festival,' Garris adds. 'I've gotten to watch the festival grow from a fan's perspective, and I remember going to the fest when it was like 1,000 people total. To see what it is now is amazing. It's setting the bar for hardcore every single year and taking it to new places, because it was never supposed to be that big. The people that put it together care so much to protect the festival and to scale it to these unimaginable places — all while keeping it feeling DIY and like a hardcore festival. We're just so excited to be a part of it.'
Or, as Scowl vocalist Kat Moss put it, 'I would argue Sound and Fury is the best hardcore festival ever.'
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Los Angeles Times
11-07-2025
- Los Angeles Times
How Sound and Fury Festival continues to thrive on the bleeding edge of hardcore's evolution
For much of the first 30-plus years of its existence, hardcore music was, for the most part, predictable. While there were outliers such as Bad Brains and Orange 9mm, many acts never veeredfar from the sound set in place by bands like Minor Threat in the early 1980s. Subgenres like metalcore (and other styles of music with 'core' added) blossomed into their own scenes and sounds, but the central tenets of hardcore remained fairly constant — often with hordes of angry fans deriding anything that stepped too far in one way or another. But over the last five to 10 years, the latest generation of musicians from punk rock's slightly more aggressive cousin has expanded into new sonic territory. Bands like Baltimore's Turnstile, Kentucky's Knocked Loose and Santa Cruz's Scowl have pushed the genre in new directions — gaining acclaim and popularity outside the hardcore scene, sometimes at the expense of its die-hard fans. 'It's very awesome to be a part of that wave,' Knocked Loose vocalist Bryan Garris says. 'I think there are a lot of bands that are bringing in new things and opening a lot of doors for everybody else. It's like the generic saying, 'A rising tide raises all ships.' I truly believe there's room for everybody to win, so it feels really good that all these brand-new opportunities are opening for everyone. You see younger hardcore bands really going for it right off the bat, and we're very fortunate to be a part of the era that's taking it to new heights.' That's why it's only fitting for Knocked Loose to be headlining this weekend's Sound and Fury Festival, bringing two full days of the best modern hardcore to Exposition Park. Since its inception in 2006, Sound and Fury quickly established itself as the event for hardcore and hardcore-adjacent music (from the heavier side of emo bands like Anxious to more extreme, metal-leaning acts) first in Los Angeles and then across the country. Just as the festival's lineup and footprint has expanded both in size and musical variety over the years, Knocked Loose has seen its own popularity skyrocket as the band has continued to push the boundaries of what hardcore could be. 'From a sonic perspective, all these bands bringing in new influences to hardcore was pretty polarizing at first,' Garris says. 'You had all these bands that toured and participated in the hardcore world but didn't sound like a traditional hardcore band — and people really made that extremely controversial for an annoying amount of time. Once that barrier was broken, it allowed for so many unique artists and bands to bring new things to the table. Bills and touring packages became more diverse, and I think the coolest thing is when you put a tour package together that makes sense on paper but sonically makes no sense at all. It keeps things interesting and doesn't create such a monotonous atmosphere at a show.' For Knocked Loose, one of the biggest steps outside of 'traditional hardcore' it could possibly take was collaborating with pop-turned-metal artist Poppy on last year's 'Suffocate' — a gamble that paid off handsomely, introducing the band to a whole new audience and earning the group its highest-charting single and a Grammy nomination for metal performance. It's a track that Garris still considers 'definitely one of [his] favorite songs' while also allowing the band to get 'weirder' and experiment in ways it might not normally consider. While the band is already considering how it can continue to push the envelope even further without losing what makes Knocked Loose work at its core, the group is mindful of its history in the hardcore scene both as fans and artists. No scene is quicker to disown an act for its commercial success, and Garris (along with guitarists Isaac Hale and Nicko Calderon, bassist Kevin Otten and drummer Kevin Kaine) is fully aware of the line the band walks. 'We've never been writing a song and felt like we had to check in with how [hardcore fans] would feel about it, but when it comes to how we present the band, that's where we keep hardcore in mind,' Garris says. 'That's where we come from and what we're used to. Even though we know the band is obviously not going to be playing crazy small DIY, no-barricade hardcore shows anymore, it allowed us to create an experience on a much bigger stage. Then we do things like play Sound and Fury or put hardcore bands that we like on our bills because we still feel very passionately about these things. We're very fortunate to be able to play these massive shows and have conversations about [pyrotechnics] and lights, but we're still hardcore fans and that's never changed.' With acts like Knocked Loose, Scowl and England's Basement on the bill this year, Sound and Fury continues to show why it's arguably America's preeminent hardcore festival, bringing together dozens of rising bands with just enough nostalgia acts (such as this year's Forced Order reunion and Poison the Well) to remind the younger generations of those who came before. It's a lineup you won't see anywhere else, with a DIY hardcore vibe that fit just as well when hardcore fans and artists Sean Riley, Robert Shedd and Todd Jones held their initial event at the Alpine in Ventura 19 years ago. 'There are a lot of festivals in the mainstream rock atmosphere where the lineups are essentially the same,' Garris says. 'For example, two years ago or so, every major rock fest in America was headlined by Metallica. That's no diss at all, but Sound and Fury is such a different thing and the lineups feel so organic and exciting. They're very good about scratching an itch that you didn't know you had.' 'I think [hardcore fans] are seeking more context than what they're getting from the mainstream — and since most of the people here arrive through that filter, it makes for a very open and welcoming space,' Riley adds. 'So whether it's being straightedge and eschewing drugs and alcohol, or whether you are someone who likes wearing corpse paint in public, or you're a person who likes to dance at shows, this is a place you can come and be yourself without judgment. Combine that with hardcore shows being, in my opinion, the rawest form of live-music experiences you can find, it's a freeing experience.' Although Riley is the only one of the three original founders still working on Sound and Fury — currently teamed with Martin Stewart and Madison Woodward — he's made sure to keep it as true to the hardcore ethos as possible year after year. Despite numerous venue changes and growth that many corporate festivals could only wish to have, Sound and Fury today is as instrumental to and beloved by the hardcore scene in Los Angeles and beyond as it's ever been. It's found a way to speak to multiple generations of hardcore kids (and adults), and now some of its biggest fans are the ones onstage. '[Sound and Fury] has never been our 'day job,' but more of something we do in our off time that can hopefully inspire people — knowing how empowering and meaningful this DIY world has been for us and our lives outside of this music scene,' Riley says. 'We've seen attendees start bands that play the fest, put out zines that they sell at the fest, start businesses or become food vendors that operate at the fest, and even people who now help us run the fest and have actual ownership stakes in the festival. Seeing it grow year after year in a very organic way really validates our approach and hopefully means it's serving its purpose.' 'When we were preparing our year, [Sound and Fury] was one of my most anticipated shows of the year because I am such a fan of the festival,' Garris adds. 'I've gotten to watch the festival grow from a fan's perspective, and I remember going to the fest when it was like 1,000 people total. To see what it is now is amazing. It's setting the bar for hardcore every single year and taking it to new places, because it was never supposed to be that big. The people that put it together care so much to protect the festival and to scale it to these unimaginable places — all while keeping it feeling DIY and like a hardcore festival. We're just so excited to be a part of it.' Or, as Scowl vocalist Kat Moss put it, 'I would argue Sound and Fury is the best hardcore festival ever.'


Washington Post
06-06-2025
- Washington Post
Turnstile's new album sounds awesome, empty and irrationally inspiring
Flex your head and this new Turnstile album will feel vacuous. Here goes the reigning band in contemporary hardcore punk, refusing to articulate what they stand for or against, delivering empty gestures with tidal force. But once you get your body involved, the Baltimore quintet's fourth full-length, 'Never Enough,' becomes undeniable. This music is all rush, all urgency, a crushing avalanche of sensation, ballistic and beautiful. Why resist that? Life is short, pleasure is irrational, and if there are any mosh-like reflexes encoded in your physiology, these songs can quite literally remind you how to move through life itself. Yet, as the pit churns, peripheral clumps of lookie-loos continue to ignore this Cartesian riptide, preferring to blab on social media about the scalability of punk, the laws of gatekeeping in a digital age and whether a hardcore band should be allowed to make us feel happy the same way an Incubus song might. Does the material success of Turnstile still bum out hardcore purists? Or have hardcore's purest been quietly rooting for them all along? And what are we really gaining from this endless, tail-chasing talk about popularity and reach? Wondering whether Turnstile is bigger than Bad Brains, Black Flag or Minor Threat feels as exciting as comparing TikTok to fire, stone tools and the wheel. What's most exciting about 'Never Enough' is that it's a massive-sounding album about what isn't there. The opening title track is a vague meditation on feelings of inadequacy, somehow sung with an ardency that should instantly make anyone within earshot feel 10 feet taller. Then everything melts into homework-playlist synth ambiance, foreshadowing the dreamy confusion that lingers for the rest of the ride. On the very next track, the breakneck 'Sole,' bandleader Brendan Yates sings about feeling 'so high, there's nowhere left to lean, when everything is out of your control.' What does he mean? Unclear. But he sounds like he means it with the entirety of his being. This has to be the closest hardcore gets to skydiving, right? Massive thrills in a big emptiness. So with the help of drummer Daniel Fang, bassist Franz Lyon, and guitarists Pat McCrory and Meg Mills, the intensity and meaninglessness continue to accrue as 'Never Enough' unfolds — with much of the credit/blame falling on Yates as he makes his lyrics more aerodynamic, minimizing his consonants, going full-throttle on the vowels. It's easy to get a sense that words — or even worse, the ideas that words tend to contain — might clog up the sonic catharsis, leaving every lyric to aspire to the power of 'whoa.' Incredible singer, though. Yates can move a melody like Sting, then scream in a blazing monotone like Zack de la Rocha, toggling between modes as if redirecting the part in his hair. His sense of melody feels increasingly colorful, economical and fingerprinty in the wake of Turnstile's terrific 2021 album 'Glow On,' and he loves delivering his rainbow notes in groups of five. 'Slow Dive' has a refrain of 'oh-oh-oh-oh-oh'; on 'Dreaming,' the word 'know' grows into 'know-oh-oh-oh-oh'; throughout 'Time Is Happening,' each line lasts five syllables — and while that titular phrase is almost comically vapid, Yates makes it feel as heavy as life and death. There's a profound yearning to be felt every time he opens his throat, and if anything tethers Turnstile to the greater ideology of hardcore, maybe it's that. Or, if not, should all of this band's gorgeous nothingness be parsed as a new iteration of punk nihilism? From the Sex Pistols on down, punk's rage against our doomed future has always been underscored by a latent yearning for peace and justice. Where does Turnstile currently stand in that continuum? Who knows? But at a moment when plenty of punks are out in the street protesting rising authoritarianism and senseless war, it feels baffling for the most celebrated band in all of hardcore to be this politically inert. Regardless, the musical zeal of 'Never Enough' at least earns it Rorschach-blot status. Listen closely to these songs, then to yourself. Maybe you hear loud, friendly, exhilarating 21st-century rock music that's easy to feel, easy to feel a part of. Or maybe you hear Turnstile's blank-slated spaciousness as a gesture of possibility, inspiration and empowerment. To do what? That's on you. But whether it's out of an airplane, into a mosh pit or into the streets, this music will push you if you don't jump.
Yahoo
26-02-2025
- Yahoo
Louder Than Life 2025: Marilyn Manson, Evanescence, more to play rock festival
Louder Than Life is roaring back this fall with the largest lineup in the history of the rock and metal festival. Featuring more than 160 bands spread across four days and on six stages, the festival's 2025 lineup will include top rock acts such as Rob Zombie, Marilyn Manson, Avenged Sevenfold, Breaking Benjamin and Evanescence. Held at the Highland Festival Grounds in Louisville, Kentucky, the event will feature other performances from the likes of Knocked Loose, Three Days Grace, Lamb of God, Mudvayne, I Prevail, Spiritbox, All Time Low, Dream Theater, Stone Temple Pilots, Motionless in White, Cypress Hill, Acid Bath, Down, Lorna Shore, Bruce Dickinson and many more. "Louder Than Life has always been about showcasing the future of rock and heavy music while honoring the legends who paved the way," Danny Wimmer of Danny Wimmer Presents said in a news release. "Bands like Bring Me the Horizon, Sleep Token, Bad Omens, $uicideboy$, Motionless in White, Spiritbox, I Prevail, Slaughter to Prevail, Lorna Shore, Wage War, Dayseeker and Knocked Loose aren't just performing — they're defining the next generation of headliners. "At the same time, pioneers like Slayer, Deftones, A Perfect Circle and Avenged Sevenfold have set the standard, proving that this music is always evolving. This is where the past, present and future of heavy music collide." Now in its 11th year, Louder Than Life attracts fans from all 50 states and across the globe. More than 190,000 people were expected to attend Louder Than Life in 2024. The festival should rack up similar numbers this year thanks to its heavyweight headliners, and those bands are only part of the story. Here's what you need to know about the 2025 Louder Than Life festival: Louder Than Life 2024: Slayer, Mötley Crüe, Judas Priest, Slipknot, more The 2025 Louder Than Life festival will be held Sept. 18-21. The four-day music festival is held at the Highland Festival Grounds at the Kentucky Exposition Center, 937 Phillips Lane in Louisville. The festival is not free. Tickets are available for sale on the official Louder Than Life website. General admission and VIP passes are now on sale. Prices typically increase closer to the festival date. There are differing ticket levels for those planning to attend, all of which have additional fees: Four-day general admission: starts at $319.99 plus fees Four-day general admission four-pack: starts at 1,239.96 plus fees Four-day exact pass: starts at $550 plus fees Four-day VIP: starts at $699.99 plus fees Four-day Angel's Envy Top Shelf VIP: starts at $2,199.99 plus fees Four-day VIP passes include access to all general admission areas, including the Kroger Big Bourbon Bar and The Hunter's Club, plus dedicated festival entry lanes, a commemorative laminate and exclusive VIP perks such as shaded lounge with comfortable seating and live audio and video streams of the main stages, dedicated bars with full beverage options, outdoor seating with views of the main stages, premium food offerings, air-conditioned flushable restrooms and dedicated festival merch stand and locker rental with charging capabilities. Four-day Angel's Envy VIP passes include access to all general admission and all VIP areas, express festival VIP entry lanes, commemorative laminate and exclusive Top Shelf VIP perks such as access to the Top Shelf Skybox, dedicated Top Shelf VIP viewing area at a main stage, air-conditioned lounge, comfortable seating, audio and video streams of main stages, shaded viewing platform with an elevated view of both main stages, all-inclusive beverages at all bars throughout the Top Shelf area, complimentary hors d'oeuvres and curated bites from Anthony Lamas of Seviche during lunch and dinner hours, complimentary Wi-Fi and more. Stay close to the action with on-site camping at the Highland Festival Grounds at the Kentucky Expo Center. Choose from a range of camping options, from Car + Tent Camping to RV luxurious Glamping Packages. Below are the current camping prices for the four-day festival, all of which include additional fees: RV Camping: starting at $465 (waitlist only) RV Camping with power: starting at $899 Premium RV Camping with power: starting at $899 (waitlist only) Overnight camping vehicle pass (add-on): Sold Out Glamping packages are also available for purchase including a two-person Bass Tent glamping package starting at $2,499, a four-person Bass Tent glamping package for $2,999 and a Home Bass RV glamping package beginning at $5,500. The prices listed here exclude additional fees like refundable security deposits. The lineup for Louder Than Life 2025 is as follows: Slayer Rob Zombie Marilyn Manson Lamb of God Down Lorna Shore The Story So Far Cannibal Corpse Cavalera Neck Deep Kublai Khan TX Exodus State Champs Drain From Ashes to New Atreyu Carcass Municipal Waste The Black Dahlia Murder Fear Factory Scowl Set It Off Winds of Plague Landmvrks Brand of Sacrifice Catch Your Breath Sanguisugabogg Full of Hell Gideon Left to Suffer Guilt Trip If Not for Me Colorblind Fulci Not Enough Space Peelingflesh Mug Shot Snuffed On Sight Big Ass Truck Imperial Tide Sicksense Avenged Sevenfold Sleep Token Breaking Benjamin Mudvayne Spiritbox All Time Low Dream Theater Hollywood Undead Insane Clown Posse Day Seeker Powerwolf Pvris Story of the Year Static-X Hatefreed Imminence Dragonforce Alestorm Whitechapel Suicide Silence Dope Violent Vira Hot Milk Demon Hunter Northlake Gloryhammer Of Mice & Men Magnolia Park The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus Miss May I Thrown Nonpoint Walls of Jericho Thornhill Liliac Ded Islander Aurorawave Savage Hands Uncured XCOMM Deftones Bad Omens Black Veil Brides Attack Attack! Woe, Is Me Disembodies Tyrant A Perfect Circle I Prevail Acid Bath Stone Temple Pilots Cypress Hill Trivium Glassjaw August Burns Red Superheaven Fleshwater Kittie Blessthefall Failure Devildriver Stabbing Westward Spineshank Hawthorne Heights From First to Last Snot Quannic The Funeral Portrait The Union Underground Spiritworld RA Return To Dust Small Town Titans Smile Empty Soul Halocene No Resolve Versus Me Bring Me the Horizon $uicideboy$ Motionless in White Evanescence Knocked Loose Three Days Grace Bruce Dickinson Slaughter to Prevail Wage War Flyleaf with Lacey Sturm Testament Tech N9ne Crossfade Queensryche Sebastian Bach Bilmuri Rev Theory Accept Hinder Counterparts Yngwie Malmsteen Memphis May Fire The Plot in You Escape The Fate 10 Years 12 Stones Dying Wish Sleep Theory Norma Jean It Dies Today Chained Saint Gates to Hell Wargasm Amira Elfeky The Haunt Kami Kehoe Picturesque Enmy 12 Stones (Reunion) Accept (50th anniversary set) Acid Bath (Reunion) Avenged Sevenfold (Only U.S. headlining show of the year) Cavalera (Playing the brothers' iconic Sepultura record, Chaos A.D., in full) Chimaira (Reunion) Chiodos (Reunion) Crossfade (Reunion) Dope (25th anniversary set) Down (30th anniversary set) Dream Theater (40th anniversary set) Fear Factory (30th anniversary set) From First to Last (Reunion) Gates To Hell (Hometown show from Louisville natives) Insane Clown Posse (Farewell set) It Dies Today (Reunion) Kittie (25th anniversary set) Knocked Loose (Hometown show from the Louisville natives) Letlive (Reunion) Picturesque (Home state show from Lexington natives) RA (One of the band's final shows) Rev Theory (Reunion and 20th anniversary set) Rob Zombie (30th anniversary set) Slayer (Reunion) Snot (Reunion) Spineshank (Reunion) The Union Underground (25th anniversary set) Trivium (20th anniversary set) Winds of Plague (Reunion) This article originally appeared on Louisville Courier Journal: Louder Than Life 2025: Lineup, dates, how to get tickets