The Canterbury quartet celebrate a decade in the game!
The New Cross Inn may not be sold out tonight, but there is a friendly, community feel amongst the folks who’ve turned out for an evening of quality punk rock. In an ideal world, Spoilers would have become much more widely known and appreciated in their 10 years together (to date), but as things are, they’re undoubtedly and rightfully treasured by those in the know.
For a band whose music would make an ideal soundtrack to sleepless nights caused by the increasingly desperate state of our world, Dealing With Damage certainly look like they’re having a blast onstage. You’d swear that new-ish bassist Owen had been in the band since day one, so well does he gel with the others, pulling off ridiculously complicated licks with the greatest of ease. Album number three is in the works, and judging by today’s set, it should be another masterclass in melodic punk rock and post-hardcore. Superb.
To be labelled ‘pop-punk’ is a mixed blessing, given that the term’s been linked to horrifically saccharine, toothless bands (Good Charlotte and Simple Plan, we speak of thee) as well as those who have mastered the art of playing fast, melodic tunes with some actual bite.
Thankfully, Brighton quartet Making Friends are firmly in the latter camp; ripping through the likes of ‘ATM’ and ‘Happy Fucking Whatever’ in brilliantly scrappy style, barely pausing for breath between songs. ‘Planet Zoo’, in particular, reminds us of ‘Revolutions Per Minute’-era Rise Against (i.e. their prime), and boasts an awesome widdly guitar solo, so if that sounds like your bag, be sure to check out their ‘Fine Dying’ album.
Verse Chorus Inferno deserve kudos, not just for having come all the way from Italy, but also for their choice of name. Oh, and they sound great, too, infusing songs like ‘The Ballad Of Bill Gates’ (!) and ‘Fast Times in Den Haag’ with elements of bouncy power-pop and alt-rock. Oh, and they also do an ace cover of Face To Face’s ‘Disconnected’ into the bargain. Your listening homework is 2022’s fabulously titled ‘Flying A Delorean To 2007’ (can we come along for the ride?), most of which is so damn catchy it should be illegal.
Spoilers frontman Dan also plays bass for Snuff, so he’s probably sick of the comparisons, but it has to be said that his own band shares Duncan Redmonds’ crew’s knack for tunes that grab you by your frontal lobe and instantly draw you in. Imagine the likes of Husker Du, Midway Still, even a touch of early Green Day, all blended together and delivered in a style as unmistakably British as the mid-set Brexit/misery/pie-and-mash banter (trust us, you had to be there).
The band are clearly stoked to not just still be together after all these years, but also to be sounding so good and drawing a decent-sized crowd to boot. They rip through mini-anthems like ‘Peaches And Cream’ and ‘Thereabouts’ with obvious relish, and their enthusiasm is infectious, with crowd singalongs and fists in the air aplenty.
After heartfelt thanks, the adrenaline rush of the closing ‘Punks Don’t Die’ feels like a love letter to everyone present, and indeed, gigs like these are fine reminders that punk itself is in rude health – thank you very much. Cheers to Be Sharp Promotions for putting it all together, and congratulations to Spoilers on their tenth anniversary; here’s to the next ten!
Main Photo Credit: CLARE DOWSE
Follow Spoilers on Their Socials:
Need more Punk In Your Life?

Dead Pioneers, London Underworld, 1st Mar 2026
Even when the band strip things down to little more than a monologue from Gregg, the rage channelled into the likes of ‘The Caucasity’ results

Punk Rock Creatives Season 2: Chaos, Cats, and More Compilation Albums Than You Could Ask For..
Season 2 of Punk Rock Creatives Podcast has begun – now unleashed into the digital world. This season has kicked down the door and demanded

Album review: Grail Guard – ‘Still No Future’
Metalcore-style riffing and chunky breakdowns certainly have their place in hardcore, but ultimately the genre’s origins lie in punk, and kudos to Grail Guard for

Album Review : The Darts brand new spooky serenade – ‘Halloween Love Songs’
This record celebrates All Hallows Eve in The Darts’ own customary garage / horror-punk kind of way. ‘Halloween Love Songs’ is a quality product and

Album review: Grippers return with their ‘Disobedient Mental Attitude’
After much touring throughout Europe, Grippers found time to record their third album, ‘Disobedient Mental Attitude’, which dropped on February 6th 2026. The tricky third

Album review: Conviction with a pulse – MELONBALL find clarity in the chaos with ‘Take Care’
A few seconds of drum roll, a sharp intake of breath — and then everything bursts open. That’s how Melonball’s second album ‘Take Care’ begins,
I spend my days teaching English to foreign students, and my evenings attending as many gigs as possible. Raised mainly on a diet of 90s third-wave punk, my tastes have grown to include just about anything from trad ska to thrash metal. The Ramones are my musical gods.



Did you know that we are 100% DIY? We run our own game. No one dictates to us, and no one drives what we can or cannot put on our pages – and this is how we plan to continue!
