Concerts

Dead Ringer

Everything about Dead Ringer -- from its name to its vaguely radical screeds to the shrill tone of its guitars -- screams generic. So it's to the band's credit that Let Freedom Ring, its debut full-length, takes such played-out elements and pounds them into something compelling. With obvious nods toward...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Everything about Dead Ringer — from its name to its vaguely radical screeds to the shrill tone of its guitars — screams generic. So it’s to the band’s credit that Let Freedom Ring, its debut full-length, takes such played-out elements and pounds them into something compelling. With obvious nods toward Good Riddance and Face to Face, the foursome infuses pop-punk with big doses of metal and hardcore, giving liftoff to singer/guitarist Joel Rossi’s gruffly melodic tirades against hypocrisy, the government and, of course, the pitfalls of his own psyche. This is hardly the recipe for innovation, but apart from a pointless cover of “Suspicious Minds” that sounds way too similar to Avail’s version of the Elvis classic, there’s not a moment on the disc that doesn’t feel sincere, impassioned, catchy and wholly credible. Freedom is more than a dead ringer for good punk rock; it’s the real thing.

We’re thankful for you. Are you thankful for us?

We feel thankful for our staff and for the privilege of fulfilling our mission to be an unparalleled source of information and insight in Denver. We’re aiming to raise $50,000 by December 31, so we can continue covering what matters most to this community.
Help us continue giving back to Denver.

$50,000

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Music newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...