The Overbites Release “Face With No Name” Single & Video
Scotland’s The Overbites have released Face With No Name via streaming platforms and as a name your price download via Bandcamp. The…
Sludgeworth, the Chicago punk band who came of age alongside Naked Raygun, Steve Albini, and Ministry in the city’s legendary 1980s underground scene, are returning with their first new album in 35 years. Three and a half decades after their debut full length, What’s This?, rattled punk kids everywhere, the veteran outfit is coming out of dormancy, with their new album, Second Time Around, that will be released on June 19th via Red Scare Industries. To mark the announcement, the band has shared new single, Hold Steady.
“I don’t think anyone had Sludgeworth putting out a full-length record in 2026 on their Bingo card. But during the hiatus, there were plenty of moments where I found myself imagining the record we never got to make, the one that should have come out as a follow-up in 1992. I think we finally made that record.” (drummer Brian McQuaid)

Second Time Around is full of the band’s tried-and-true hooks and daggers like the tongue-in-cheek anthem Can’t Change Yesterday and the friendship anchor Hold Steady. The album, which reunites Brian McQuaid (Screeching Weasel) and Dan Schafer (Screeching Weasel / The Methadones / The Riverdales / Dan Vapid & The Cheats) with guitarists Dave McLean (Ethyline) and Adam White (Ethyline) alongside new bassist Simon Lamb (Violets / The Methadones), feels like a natural progression for the beloved pop punk band that ultimately disbanded in 1993, but not before making a sincere impression on fans and future generations of music makers. Not the least of which is McQuaid’s son Max who’s behind the kit in up-and-comers Feral Tact and also added instrumentation to Second Time Around.

The roots of the band go back to 1989 when McQuaid and Schafer left another legendary group, Screeching Weasel, and found just as much attention with their new project. But, really, it begins even before then when all the members were cutting their teeth in teenage riot acts in the Chicago suburbs, Schafer singing in the hardcore band Generation Waste. In their first life, Sludgeworth shared stages with an early Green Day, alongside The Offspring, Tool, Primus, Henry Rollins, ALL, Jawbreaker, Rise Against, The Effigies, and Naked Raygun. Their posthumous 1995 compilation, Losers of the Year, was released on the venerable Lookout! Records, which helped launch bands like Green Day. Red Scare Industries reissued it in 2022 with two unearthed bonus tracks, never-before-seen photos, and liner notes from Rise Against‘s Joe Principe, Naked Raygun‘s Jeff Pezzati, Mikey Erg, and Dillinger Four‘s Patrick Costello, deepening the lore and the demand for a comeback.

That demand proved real. When the band announced a return to the stage at Chicago’s Cobra Lounge in 2023, the show sold out in five minutes. A Riot Fest appearance and dates with Smoking Popes followed, as did their first post-reunion release, the Together Not Together 7-inch in 2024. This summer, Sludgeworth will hit the road with Teenage Bottlerocket, with hometown record release shows in Chicago.