The Last Gang
The Last Gang
Crazy & The Brains, Hans Gruber And The Die Hards, kids on fire


The Last Gang


The Last Gang is a 21st-century American punk rock quartet from the Los Angeles area.
The band was formed in the 2000s by singer and guitarist Brenna Red. It went through various personnel changes (Red being the consistent member) and occasionally went on hiatus.[1][2][3]
The Last Gang began to break out in 2017 with a British tour and a single on Fat Wreck Chords, releasing a full album, Keep Them Counting, in 2018 and being picked as one of 18 artists to watch in 2018 by Alternative Press.[4] The band's third album, Noise Noise Noise, was released on October 8, 2021.

Crazy and the Brains (stylized as Crazy & the Brains) is an American punk band. The band was originally Chrisoph Jesus’ solo project at The Sidewalk Cafe in New York, New York in 2013 (though most of the members are originally from Bayonne, New Jersey).
They have toured with Gogol Bordello,The Bouncing Souls, The Bridge City Sinners, Days N Daze, Negative Approach, & The Slackers.
Vice has compared them to Rancid and The Ramones. Earlier press also made mention of their use of xylophone in songs, referring to them as “xylo-punks” and noting ” There aren’t a whole lot of punk bands that feature the xylophone”

Hans Gruber and the Die Hards were formed in Austin, TX in 2014. In May 2022, the band released With a Vengeance on Ska Punk International Records. Both The Sensations and Hans Gruber and the Die Hards have an unconventional approach to music, making this a collaboration listeners will never forget.

Hailing from the rain soaked streets of Seattle, comes the punk rock sweethearts, Kids on Fire. Like the sun peaking through the grey pacific northwest clouds, Kids on Fire have crafted songs that reflect the determined optimism and resiliency that can exist in us all, even the midst of isolation, turmoil and struggle. With themes touching on social commentary, personal and communal growth, as well as loss, Kids On Fire have birthed a new record, The Best of the Worst of Times, that takes the pensive energy created by two years of isolation and hardship to culminate in a high powered burst of punk rock catharsis.
