doors 7:30 show 8:00
ALL AGES
$33 advance | $35 day of show
Dropkick Murphys formed in 1996 in Boston, MA. The band was originally just a bunch of friends looking to play music for fun. We started playing in the basement of a friend's barbershop and our goal was to blend the musical influences we had grown up with (Punk Rock, Irish Folk, Rock, and Hardcore) into one loud, raucous, chaotic, and often out of tune mix that we could call our own.
To our surprise people seemed to liked it and we began to record music and tour constantly. To date we have released over ten singles, two EP CD, and four Full Length albums and have had the good fortune of being able to play across a large portion of the world. We are truly grateful to the many friends and bands that have helped us out and supported us along the way in the US, Canada, Europe, U.K. Ireland, Scandinavia, and Australia as well as the many countries we look forward to playing in the next century.
The bands' main goal is to play music that creates an all for one, one for all environment where everyone is encouraged to participate, sing along, and hopefully have a good time. In the true spirit of punk rock we view the band and the audience as one in the same; in other words our stage and our microphone are yours.
In addition to hopefully bringing people together for a good time, we hope to share some of our experiences and beliefs in working class solidarity, friendship, loyalty and self- improvement as a means to bettering society (i.e. You can preach till you're blue in the face but if you're lying in the gutter no one's gonna listen. If you pick yourself up by the bootstraps and live your life to the best of your ability you may set an example that others will follow).
Mark Lind (that’s me) broke into the Boston music scene in 1996 as the front man for Ducky Boys. Since then I’ve played with Sinners & Saints, Dirty Water, Ducky Boys for a second stint and now the Unloved. Some people really like the early Ducky Boys’ stuff but I don’t think I really knew what I was doing until playing in Sinners & Saints. Getting to play with my brother, Rob, and Dustin Hengst taught me a lot about songwriting as a craft. The first band I was really able to apply these lessons to was Dirty Water. We existed as a band for one year and released one EP that a lot of people like and I’m still very proud of.
In 2003 I transitioned back to Ducky Boys and we released Three Chords and the Truth in November 2004 to a lot of excitement and rave reviews. In 2006 we followed it up with The War Back Home which we were all collectively very proud of and many people consider it to be the best release the Ducky Boys ever did.
On the same day of that CD’s release I released my debut “solo” CD called Death or Jail. I followed it up with a self released EP called Compulsive F@k Up in the Spring of 2007 and then did a full recording with The Unloved later that year which became The Truth Can Be Brutal, released in June 2008.
We’re currently playing regionally in support of The Truth Can Be Brutal and plotting the next recording. There is no time frame on when that will come together but I’d like to have it recorded and released some time in 2009.
Bryan is a regular performer in the North East. He is known for his intense live performances, as well as insightful, poetic songwriting. He has shared the stage with the likes of rock and roll legend Chuck Berry, The Neighborhoods, Chad Smith of The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Black 47, H20, and was recently spotted opening up for the Dropkick Murphys' at their famed St. Patrick's shows in Boston. This is Passionate, acoustic-punk from the heart. Street life, politics, addiction, and moments of beauty, anguish, clarity, and dissent litter the alleys of McPherson's songs. The words are as honest as they are urgent; every second counts!