The Ginger Quiff – Albums/EPs of the Year

Having had a prolonged break from writing The Ginger Quiff blogs in 2025, as well as missing many of the gigs I wanted to get to, it also meant I missed reviewing some of my favourite albums of this year. That didn’t mean I wasn’t enjoying the music or using it as a form of therapy, I am one of those people who can’t get through a day without listening to music, and if I do, something is majorly wrong… any, for what it’s worth here are my 50 favourite akbums of 2025, 25 favourite EPs (actually 26) and my favourite re-releases and compilations, where I did review them, I’ve included the link to the review.… Read the rest

Looking Back… Junk Pups

Junk Pups recently bowed out playing their last gig as part of the Palestine Red Crescent Benefit gig in the Hug and Pint in December. Here is every appearance in these pages from 2022 to that last gig…

2022

Singles Round Up 2022 – Part 4…

Junk Pups – Front Garden Flamigo

In the time its taken me to eventually getting round to publishing this, Junk Pups have another single out in the shape of Miss Behave, but lets take some time to bask in the glory of the angular post punk guitars and laidback funky groove of Front Garden Flamingo.… Read the rest

The Ginger Quiff – Gigs of 2025

With the count coming in at 44 it was a poor showing on the gig front for 2025 for me, it was a clusterfuck of a year with a mixture of poor physical & mental health curtailing, with a certain irony given the dopamine boost live music brings, my gig going somewhat and also curtailing my writing. I probably missed just as many gigs I’d planned to attend as I actually attended, and among these missed events I’m sure would have been some guaranteed to be amongst the best of the year.

As it was, every gig played it’s part in making it a successful year of gig going despite the high number of missed dates…

The Second House Guest Festival in April alongside Tenement Trail in October were two obvious highlights of the gig going year giving the opportunity to see a whole host of bands who are all part of the reason the live music scene in Scotland is in such rude health, and they also sewed the seeds of an idea in my head that should be coming to fruition imminently despite a delay in the planned announcement…

Several bands had me return to see them time and again, each time proving their worth and playing cracking sets (equally there were bands I had tickets to see several times and didn’t make any of their gigs…).… Read the rest

The Red Eyes – After Hours (Acoustic Volume 1)

Like Ex-, The Red Eyes are one of Scotland’s prime purveyors of melodic punk influenced by the first wave of 1978/77 punk bands. Alan Bishop and Co. have been a fixture on the Scottish punk scene for what must be coming up on thirty years, with five albums under their belt from their debut Up to Our Eyes In It through to 2022’s Falling Through the Cracks. My own introduction to the band came after a friend raved about them having seen them support 999 in Glasgow, and lent me their first two CDs, the aforementioned Up to Or Eyes In It and On Prescription, and since then I’ve seen the band in a variety of venues across Glasgow, never failing to put on anything less than an outstanding performance, the driving rhythms of the bands punk roots shining through and giving a platform to Alan’s now familiar vocals delivering his stories through song.… Read the rest

Ex – – Imposter Syndrome – album review

On Know Your Rights The Clash handily provided their listeners with a “public service announcement with guitars.” 43 years on, and on their twentieth album/EP release to date, Imposter Syndrome, the prolific Ex- provide not so much a public service announcement but a social conscience with guitars. Taking nothing away from the rest of the band, the vitality and energy of whose playing provides the indispensable soundtrack to Imposter Syndrome, Meek’s lyrics here are as essential as ever and a crucial part in what makes Ex- stand head and shoulders above the majority of their peers. As someone who is as profuse in his writing as Meek, he never fails in managing to blend his creativity with a nail on head social commentary.… Read the rest

Slime City – National Record of Achievement – album review

Slime City have already reached legends in their own lunchtime status in their home city, the shitehole that is Glasgow, with their debut album Death Club so it was clearly time to go interstellar and conquer the rest of the music loving public. And what better way to do it than with the release of their new album, National Record of Achievement. I’m too fucking old to have experienced National Records of Achievement, but I’m willing to put my trust in Slime City (is that wise?) that they were a waste of time and energy, labelling them an utterly pointless exercise as they ascertain that nobody will ever ask to see it. … Read the rest

This Questionable Life – Sucker Punch – EP Review

This is the fifth EP from the band whose name unfortunately becomes more and more pertinent with each release, or may be that’s just me…

Anyway, however questionable things may be in the current dystopian times we are living through, there is always music to fall back on, giving a respite from reality, or that feeling that you’re not alone and there is hope for change. That’s the feeling from listening to this EP from This Questionable Life.

The hard-edged driving rhythm of the EP’s opening song, it’s title track, has a sense of R.E.M. in it’s melody, a punchy high-energy beat underlines some crunching riffs and sets the standard for the rest of the EP.… Read the rest

The Primevals – Best of the BBC Sessions 

I’ve not written enough about Nick Godfrey and what he’s doing with Precious Recordings of London. These sessions are a testament to how important radio is as a means of exposure to bands trying to get their music heard far and wide. It’s always been a struggle to make it in an industry packed with traps and pitfalls, and even more so in this day and age with the rise of AI and corporates and streaming companies who are trying to bleed bands for as much as they can get and pay them next to nothing. BBC Radio Scotland should be ashamed of recent announcements ending several shows that have given space and exposure to hundreds of local bands over the years. … Read the rest

Miki Berenyi Trio & f.o. machete – Live in Sleazys

It was the last gig of 2025 for me, so what better way to bow out than in the company of one my favourite bands who also happened to be the purveyors of one of my albums of the year (a list which I’ve not even considered yet, and given that I missed a whole chunk of the year needs a bit of thought…) and also in the presence of a singer who I last saw in what I fear was as far back as 1994 in King Tuts if my memory serves with her first band Lush, so I was well overdue a re-acquaintance.… Read the rest

Lacuna – Nest – EP review

Following the success of their What If I Told You I’d Been Lying the Whole Time EP earlier in the year, featuring the sublime GQ favourite, Shelley, Lacuna continue on their ascendant arc with the brilliant Nest EP. Like Milange, whose EP Till You Drop EP I have recently reviewed there seems to be a universal acknowledgement that Lacuna are one of those bands who deserve to be huge, and the four songs here do nothing to dispel that assumption.

The EP opens with the majestic title track, a song packed with a heavy dose of lyrical mystery and intrigue, while musically the band create a sweeping cinematic soundscape that rises either immense swells and falls into quiet introspection.… Read the rest