Drug Church have returned! Today, punk’s most beloved agitators are announcing their new album, PRUDE, due out October 4th from Pure Noise Records. For over a decade Drug Church have been building a strong case that they’re the best loud guitar band in the game, and PRUDE feels like it just might be the undeniable proof.
PRUDE is a lean 28 minutes of hardcore aggression and ’90s alternative hooks that’s bursting at the seams with personality, irreverence, and heart. It’s a record that’s so instantly satisfying that it almost belies what a unexpected feat it is for a prickly, hard-to-pigeonhole punk band from Albany, NY to become one of the most consistently crowd-pleasing outfits on planet earth.
Drug Church are celebrating the announcement of PRUDE by sharing its first single, “Demolition Man,” alongside a music video starring the one and only Biff Wiff, known for his work in I Think You Should Leave, Everything Everywhere All At Once, and more. It’s a towering cut of furiously catchy melodies that applies frontman Patrick Kindlon’s signature sardonic lyricism to the question: what is the purpose of humankind? “A song about envying dogs because they know what they’ve gotta do each day,” he explains. “I’m sure dogs are often confused, but they always have the north star of instinct. People live without it.β
PRUDE follows 2022’s Hygiene, an album that drew praise from the likes of Pitchfork, NPR, The FADER, and Rolling Stone, landed on year-end lists from Vogue, Stereogum, SPIN, BrooklynVegan, Revolver, Bandcamp, and many more), and catapulted Drug Church from cult favorites to the ranks of the most exciting up-and-coming bands in aggressive music.
Recorded/produced by longtime collaborator, Jon Markson, PRUDE not only meets the extremely high bar set by Drug Church’s previous work, it manages to exceed it. Never content to rest on their laurels, the band have pushed their key elementsβeye-popping aggression, bulletproof melodies, and incisive lyricsβto even greater heights, and discovered more than a few new tricks along the way. There’s only one band that sounds like Drug Church, and thankfully they’re extremely good at being themselves.
PRUDE is due out October 4th from Pure Noise Records.
Upcoming Shows:
07/20 Amityville, NY @ Amityville Music Hall
07/21 Lake Como, NJ @ Salty’s Beach Bar
09/20-22 Chicago, IL @ Riot Fest
09/26 Louisville, KY @ Louder Than Life
10/06 Birmingham, AL @ Furnace Fest
10/10 Sacramento, CA @ Aftershock Festival
10/11 Las Vegas, NV @ Best Friends Forever Festival

Drug Church is #1, so why try harder? Truer words have never been spoken (or emblazoned upon merch that may or may not reference a novelty shirt seen on a 1998 Fatboy Slim album cover). For over a decade, Drug Church have been building a very strong case that theyβre the best loud guitar band in the game; their fifth full-length PRUDEβa 28-minute blast of aggression, melody, irreverence, and genuine heartβfeels like the undeniable proof.
The album is so downright satisfying it tricks you into thinking thereβs nothing all that surprising about a difficult-to-pigeonhole punk band from Albany, NY, with a name like Drug Church somehow having a career at all, much less one that would last over 10 years and qualify them as the best band going.
But before you start trying to think of who might have them beat (good luck), consider what just might be the key to Drug Churchβs unexpected staying power: Donβt take it too seriously.
βI think at this point Iβm at peace with the fact that Iβm not a musicianβIβm a band guy,β laughs vocalist Patrick Kindlon.
βIβm just a guy in a band. It works because thereβs a drive to express myself and weβre good enough at this that weβre allowed to do itβbut Iβm never gonna try to sell myself as a person thatβs pushing boundaries or is super clever. I make music because I enjoy it.β This βthe mystique is that there is no mystiqueβ mentality isnβt so much a guiding principle as it is a dose of honesty. In a world where everyone is telling you how game-changing their material is, part of what makes Drug Church so special is that they seem to be extraordinarily good at being themselves.
The bandβKindlon, guitarists Nick Cogan and Cory Galusha, bassist Pat Wynne, and drummer Chris Villeneuveβarrived fully-formed in 2011 with a singular amalgamation of eye-popping aggression, bulletproof hooks, and incisive lyricism, and rather than reinventing themselves on every record, theyβve simply aimed to get better and better at a sound they can actually call their own. βDoing something really leftfield isnβt really our ambition,β Kindlon explains. βThe goal is to put out good records that sound like we doβweβre not trying to do an OK Computer. But I do think that when you just do something well, you hit a point where people think they have a complete understanding of who you are.β
Of course, in true Drug Church fashion, PRUDE rejects that kind of oversimplification, instead demanding attention and keeping it through sheer force of will.
Produced and engineered by longtime collaborator Jon Markson, the album makes it very clear that Drug Church havenβt stopped pushing themselves and still have more than a few tricks up their collective sleeve. PRUDE begins with the 20-second misdirect of a far away guitar that introduces βMad Care.β
The song then suddenly launches into the kind of hyper-catchy mix of hardcore and β90s alternative at which Drug Churchβs instrumentalists excel, while Kindlon (with his signature roar thatβs halfway between singing and barking and somehow just as hooky as Coganβs earworm guitar leads) spits out a portrait of bad circumstances and even worse choices.
Kindlonβs ability to walk a tightrope between harrowing, hilarious, and heartfelt is crucial to Drug Churchβs alchemy, but for someone whose writing style is perhaps most known for being cuttingly sardonic, PRUDE unexpectedly leans into that third H. βIβm hesitant to say this album is more emotional, but I think thereβs definitely some emotional songs on the record,β he explains.
βI wanted to avoid some of the topics Iβve been hammering for years, but I almost canβt, Iβm limited to what interests me, or upsets me, or grabs my attention. So thereβs certainly classic Drug Church stuffβpeople derailing their lives, a strong pull to some type of individualism, frustration with mob mentality, this idea that maybe community isn’t what itβs sold asβbut I would say that this album approaches it from sort of a sad storytelling way. This one feels more earnest to me.β
No song better exemplifies this than βHey Listen,β with lyrics that describe seeing a missing persons bulletin in the Walmart near the remote recording studio where the band made PRUDE. βThis idea that thereβs just a class of children thatβs not even considered, itβs just very upsetting to me,β Kindlon says.
βThe notion that you could be not even a runaway, but a throwaway kidβthat you could go missing and someone wouldnβt even look into it for a week.β Itβs a dark and deeply affecting song juxtaposed by some of the sunniest guitar lines Cogan and Galusha have put in a Drug Church song.
Throughout PRUDE, the band continuously pull off this core magic trick: messy characters and knotty ideas delivered through massive hooks. See βSlide 2 Me,β where they forcefully push these elements towards opposite poles to phenomenal result: the story of a botched liquor store robbery wrapped in a guitar riff that would make Stephan Jenkins jealous and Kindlonβs delivery at its most outright melodic.
Or βBusiness Ethics,β where the singer recounts the inspired-by-true-events hijinks of a drug-fueled self-kidnapping scheme across a song that sounds like Copper Blue performed by Slapshot.
Elsewhere songs like βChowβ and βThe Bittersβ lament a kind of misguided moralizing and sanctimony. βIt just feels like everyone in the past 10 years or so seems to believe theyβve tripped into being rightβand with that comes righteousness. So you stand in judgment and come off like an annoying dickhead,β Kindlon laughs.
As always with Drug Church, while thereβs an ingrained irreverence in his lyrical venting, thereβs also a real sense of frustration and sadness around the undeniable callousness thatβs seeped into everyday lifeβand become dismayingly mundane. βYou see this in every culture, but particularly in desperate ones,β Kindlon says.
βLike in prison cultureβyouβre looking for the permissible population to abuse. Youβre looking for the guy with a charge worse than yours so that you can crack a skull, because cracking skulls is your outlet.β
PRUDE comes to a close with two songs that continue to highlight how far Drug Church have actually come. βYankee Trailsβ and βPeer Reviewβ are some of the most anthemic tracks the band have ever written, which is a tall order for a group of musicians who seem to have stage-dive-inducing-shout-along as their default songwriting setting.
Both are powered by Wynne and Villeneuveβs thunderous rhythm section, but Cogan and Galushaβs guitars are equal parts distortion and texture, pivoting on a dime between bite and shimmer. On βYankee Trails,β Kindlon describes a friendβs cross-country struggle to kick a drug habit with the kind of granular detail that rings heartrendingly true, and then on βPeer Review,β he makes it crystal clear that there isnβt an ounce of judgment in this or any of the hard luck stories that populate the album. βIβm just not at all interested in judging people,β he says.
βI can have a laugh, Iβm not immune to peopleβs missteps being entertaining, but I have zero interest in filing anyone under good or bad. People seem to want you to die in your mistakes and I just don’t share that at all. I think the mistakes people are capable of making is a continuous theme in our work, and maybe we played it for laughs a little more in the past, but Iβm a little more somber on it now.β
So is this all indicative of some kinder, gentler Drug Church? Is it clean guitars and sincerity from here? Is this where the edges soften and hard-earned longevity gives way to a slow descent into mediocrity? Of course not. Donβt take it too seriously, donβt overthink it. As the final words of PRUDE say: βToo much time inside your own head / you lost sight of what it is.β Itβs Drug Church. Theyβre #1.
