What's New: The Bloody Hell
“The Bloody Hell’s Pandemic Rant Turned Anthem: ‘Feel It Too’ is a Middle Finger to Online Chaos”
Halifax’s rowdy punk squad The Bloody Hell ain’t here to coddle you. After four years of radio silence—well, pandemic-induced chaos—they’re back with “Feel It Too,” a snarling, riff-heavy gut-punch that’s equal parts satire and solidarity. Think Misfits meets Tom Petty, if Petty chugged whiskey and screamed into a megaphone.
Frontman Ian Kean wrote this gem while trapped in quarantine’s endless doomscroll. “Everyone was losing their damn minds online,” he laughs. “Hot takes, conspiracy theories—it was a circus. But hey, I was right there with ‘em, sweating in sweatpants, feeling just as lost.” The track? A cathartic roast of our collective meltdown, wrapped in a hook so catchy it’s borderline illegal. “We’re all clowns in this rodeo,” Kean shrugs. “Might as well laugh while we burn.”
“Feel It Too” cracks open the door to their *2025 album Blood Code—eight anthems of that trashy, hook-laden magic they’re known for, but this time, new guitarist James Densley’s riffs are throwing gasoline on the fire. Same scrappy spirit? You bet. But the bedlam? Dialed to 11.
Since 2017, these Canucks have shared stages with Propagandhi, Motorhead’s angrier cousins, and local legends like The Blackrats. Their 2018 debut? A Nova Scotia Music Awards darling. 2022’s Nobody Cares? Louder, meaner, and somehow more nominated. Critics called it “accessible chaos” (The Punk Globe) and “catchy horror punk” (Metal Talk).
Now, Blood Code’s their next shot of adrenaline. “We’ve leveled up,” Kean grins. “But don’t worry—we’re still the same messy punks.”
Look, 2020 broke us all. But The Bloody Hell? They turned that dumpster fire into a bonfire anthem. “Feel It Too” isn’t just a song—it’s a sweaty, beer-stained hug for anyone who survived Zoom apocalypses and TikTok therapists. So crank it, mosh in your living room, and remember: we’re all gloriously screwed together.
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