Review / 200 Words Or Less
Northern Towns
Good as Gold

Swagger City (2009) Michael

Northern Towns – Good as Gold cover artwork
Northern Towns – Good as Gold — Swagger City, 2009

Northern Towns is a new San Diego outfit that features former members of Over My Dead Body and Please Mr. Gravedigger. Before you get excited about the band drawing from their past, I should tell you that this band sounds nothing like those bands at all.

Good as Gold leads off with "Latchford," a song with a Clash-esque rhythm and swagger to it. There is a bit more of a standard fair gruff punk influence in the vocals, as opposed to what Joe Strummer offered. This style is later revisited on "Dead Waves Make No Sounds" and "Purple Hearts," the latter of which boasts a heavy reggae influence. Northern Towns mixes things up with the Cock Sparrer inspired oi sounds on "Life Pisses By" and "Full Steam Ahead" has an early hardcore punk vibe, a time when the genre was more closely associated with punk than metal. There is also the more modern styling on "Changing of the Guard," touching on the garage rock sounds reminiscent of "the bands" that were popular about ten years ago.

With their debut Northern Towns have added to the solid start for Swagger City Records. The band has a brand new split 7" they just released, so if you enjoy this, pick that up as well.

7.0 / 10Michael • December 10, 2009

Northern Towns – Good as Gold cover artwork
Northern Towns – Good as Gold — Swagger City, 2009

Recently-posted album reviews

The Dwarves

Sunshine, Lollipops & Rainbows
GREEDY (2025)

Sunshine, Lollipops & Rainbows is a live studio recording from 1989, released on picture disc earlier this year on limited vinyl for Record Store Day. Given that it came shortly before the release of Blood, Guts & Pussy, it's no surprise that it's heavy on songs from that record (10 of 14, if I've counted correctly). It's more primal than … Read more

Osmium

Osmium
Invada (2025)

Osmium brings together four artistic heavyweights, united not just by a shared experimental ethos, but by a love of bespoke and often self-made instruments. On their debut record, Hildur Guðnadóttir harnesses the unstable feedback of the halldorophone, a cello-like instrument designed by Halldór Úlfarsson. James Ginzburg (emptyset) contributes tamboura-like drones using a monocord of his own design. Sam Slater operates … Read more

Lutheran Heat

Hi Again
Pinata Records (2025)

Lutheran Heat have one of my favorite band names, a distinctly Minnesota tongue-in-cheek nod to local culture and mannerisms. But while I dig the band name, that's not really relevant to the rest of this review. Hi Again is their first record in 9 years, but it continues their garagey indie-punk tones. Expect garage rock guitar tones, slacker indie rock … Read more