A musical subculture that for years thrived on physical interaction – from circle-pits to tape trading – hardcore punk has now largely migrated online. Putting social media in the hands of punks lovers inclined to form communities might’ve lowered barriers to bands getting noticed, but it’s arguably harder than ever for them to do the same in person.
Not that this has stopped Buggin throwing themselves into what they do, both live and on record. Formed in 2018 by a group of friends from Chicago who wanted to give their local scene “a new sound”, in the words of Bryanna Bennett, the vocalist and their bandmates have accomplished a lot more than that already. Debut album Concrete Cowboys recently swept through the punk press to critical acclaim, while they’re currently on their first European tour.
Bryanna joins K! on Zoom from their home in Philadelphia, where they’ve lived since 2020. It’s a bright Tuesday afternoon and they’re being asked to recall their experiences of discovering hardcore punk and navigating their way to finding their voice as one quarter of Buggin.
“Incendiary’s Force Of Neglect was one of the first things I heard and I was like, ‘Oh, shit! They’re talking about some real-ass shit here… I’m not going to get that from any other genre,’” they remember. “It seemed that the controlled chaos of everything in those rooms [at hardcore shows] was just like…” They switch back to the voice of their excited younger self. “‘This is really it!’”
As commanding a presence onstage as they are engaging off it, Bryanna’s first hardcore show typifies the determination that powers Buggin’s music.
“I was 14 and my dad took me! He was like, ‘This is in a bar, you can’t go here by yourself…’” A year later at the Life & Death tour, Bryanna “tried to mosh for the first time, after practising in my bedroom… I got my ass whooped (laughs). I didn’t have any idea how it worked, really. I remember thinking, ‘That was fucked up, but kinda awesome.’
“I have a special place in my heart for kids that are coming to our shows with their parents,” they add. “I really love when that happens, because I wouldn’t be talking to you here today if my dad didn’t take me to shows when I was younger.”