Feature / Music
20 Years Of Scene Point Blank: Collections & Reflections

July 17, 2024

20 Years Of Scene Point Blank: Collections & Reflections
20 Years Of Scene Point Blank: Collections & Reflections

SPB anniversary

by Cheryl

Can you believe SPB is 21? Can I believe that I’ve been here for 13 years? Do I know what to write here? All of these answers are a resounding no. It feels like no time has passed since I joined the site and yet I’ve done so many cool things here that only time can account for it. When I look back at everything I’ve written for SPB, I am both proud and confused. Some of them I have no memory of and some I cannot forget.

I knew about SPB since the early days of the site as Matt was active in a community I was also a member of — shout outs to the old school Despair Faction — yet writing about something I enjoyed was not really on my radar until around 2010/11. One fateful day in April 2011, Bleak Metal was born and the rest is history. Soon a fellow DF friend, Aaron, asked if I would like to join SPB and from then on I have been here. I also joined several other popular webzines around the same time and probably burned out much earlier than I should have due to the amount of work I was doing with very little in terms of reward.

My output has dropped significantly in recent years. I wrote for many webzines, a physical magazine and my own blog and over time the excitement and willingness to commit to so many things definitely disappeared. Now I have two outside online spaces, plus my own, to call home and each offer something a little different. I’m not as active in writing, especially since I realised that I can say no to requests and not feel bad about it – therapy is amazing, guys.

Having the Only Death Is Real column certainly helped to maintain a presence in less obvious ways as the shorter review style suits my brain quite a lot more for the moment. Plus, I can cover several records at once and feel way more productive overall. No longer do I feel like I have to be the first to cover something or have a particular artist on my list. I am relaxed and it’s lovely.

Looking back through my reviews, I see how much my own style has changed and how I approach music in general. Now I don’t listen to absolutely everything I get sent. I do if it seems interesting or a friend recommends it. I don’t write about absolutely everything I get sent. Now I am more comfortable taking on what I want to do, rather than what others want me to do. That was a revelation for me and over the last two years it’s something I have tried to stick to. Now when I write, I don’t feel the pressure or expectations that I used to and that’s so freeing.

SPB played a large role in that as there is so much freedom here to do the things that you love. Want to write about some weirdo album only ten people will like? Do it! Want to write about a cool, popular release that everyone will like? Do that, too!

SPB has given a lot and will continue to do so with the people we have and the people that will join us in the future.

Skip to page View as a single page

— words by the SPB team • July 17, 2024

20 Years Of Scene Point Blank: Collections & Reflections
20 Years Of Scene Point Blank: Collections & Reflections

Pages in this feature

  1. Opening page
  2. Loren Green, Editor
  3. Travel through time with Scene Point Blank
  4. Musicians and labels on SPB
  5. Scott Wilkinson, former writer
  6. Sarah Jane, contributor
  7. Delaney, contributor
  8. Christopher D, contributor
  9. Dennis, contributor
  10. Cheryl, senior staff writer
  11. Campbell, contributor
  12. Aaron H, senior staff writer
  13. Matt, founding member

Related features

Commerce or Amusement? #1

Regular Columns / Commerce or Amusement? • June 9, 2026

Are You In The Music Business? Or Just Involved In Music? Interview Series #1 Featuring Jordan Stamm of Drunk Dial Records CC: Hello Jordan! Could you start off by telling the readers a little bit about yourself and Drunk Dial Records? Do you recall how you and I met? JS: … Read more

J Mau & The Kiss Off

ASL interpreter

Interviews / Don't Quit Your Day Job • June 8, 2026

There are a lot of misconceptions about the life of a musician. Most musicians have day jobs – and not just to pay the bills. Jobs provide new challenges, personal fulfillment and, yes, some rent or gas money. How an artist spends their time by day will influence the creative … Read more

Crash Outfit

One Question Interviews • June 5, 2026

Paul Warner (Crash Outfit) SPB: How much space in your home is dedicated to music (media or instruments)? Warner: I would say it equals the exact dimensions of a well-fed woolly mammoth. Read more

General Chaos

One Question Interviews • June 3, 2026

Constantin (General Chaos) SPB: What is a lesson you learned from the making-of your first album that directly influenced how you approached album #2? Constantin: I think when we came into studio the second time, we already had an idea of what to expect since we knew the studio and … Read more

Bat Leather

One Question Interviews • June 1, 2026

Cory (Bat Leather) SPB: What is your favorite music-related film or documentary? Cory: It’s a tie between The Color of Noise and Some Kind of Monster. TCON is possibly the greatest snapshot of the ‘90s noise rock scene. Great interviews and amazing footage. SKOM….Love ‘em or hate ‘em, but watching … Read more

More from this section

Demos You Want To Check #3

Music / New Kids On The Block • May 8, 2026

The musical landscape is ever changing. New genres are popping up, new hypes burst out of nowhere and die out and new bands present themselves to the world. How on earth are you expected to keep up, right? Well, it never hurts to help! So here we are, your humble … Read more

Guest List: War On Women

Music / The Set List • April 24, 2026

It feels like a lifetime ago when Mitt Romney referenced a "war on women" during the 2012 presidential cycle. A lot has changed, a lot has stayed the same -- but a new politically-charged band formed in the aftermath of that comment, calling themselves War On Women. Now, roughly 14 … Read more

The New York Dolls: Reflections and Legacy

Music • March 30, 2026

I first discovered the New York Dolls in the mid-to-late 1980s, just as I was beginning to stretch the boundaries of my musical journey. Up until then, my exposure to music had mostly come through my parents, aunts, and uncles. They planted the initial seeds, and those seeds quickly grew, … Read more