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Skank Roots and New Routes with Mad Caddies
Born in California's Santa Ynez Valley, Mad Caddies built their name on tuneful ska-punk that leans into reggae, swing, and brass.
Brass, bounce, and a seasoned grin
After years between full-lengths, they have entered a fresh phase, tightening the lineup around road-tested players and a focus on melody. Expect a set that moves from sunny skank to sprinting punk, with staples like Drinking for 11, Road Rash, Brand New Scar, and Monkeys. Crowds tend to be mixed in age, with longtime punk fans shoulder to shoulder with newer ska listeners, and the energy stays friendly and self-aware. You will hear bright trumpet lines carry choruses while the rhythm guitar clips the offbeat, then the drums push double-time for the mosh-prone parts. Trivia worth knowing: the band cut the covers set Punk Rocksteady with help from Fat Mike, reshaping punk classics into lilting reggae and ska. Another deep cut note: their early gigs were house parties in the valley before a Fat Wreck connection put them on bigger stages. For clarity, any setlist and production notes here are thoughtful projections based on patterns, not a guarantee of specifics.Life Around Mad Caddies Shows
The room usually starts with polite sway and ends with wide lanes of dancing as people find their skank rhythm.
Patches, prints, and big group 'hey' moments
You will spot vintage punk tees next to floral shirts and brimmed caps, a mix that mirrors the band's sunny grit. Folks sing the horn hooks as loud as the lyrics, and a simple two-clap pattern often pops up on the offbeats. Merch tables lean into color, with screen-printed posters, enamel pins, and at least one brass-themed design that regulars collect show to show. Between songs, banter is dry and brief, which keeps the flow moving and makes the singalong cues feel earned. Older fans nod to the late-90s skate era while newer faces lock in on the reggae sway, and the mix feels welcoming rather than nostalgic cosplay. After the last tune, the vibe is more handshake than victory lap, the kind of night people talk about in terms of songs, not scenes.Mad Caddies: Brass, Bounce, and Bite
Chuck's vocal is clean and slightly sandy, so melodies cut through even when the tempo jumps.
Horns point the melody, rhythm locks the dance
Guitars keep tight upstrokes on the offbeat, then switch to straight-ahead downstrokes in the choruses to add grit. The horn section mines simple, singable lines, often in thirds, and they leave space so the bass can bubble under the beat. Drums toggle between laid-back reggae pocket and pushy punk drive, which makes the drop into a half-time bridge feel bigger. Live, they like to strip a verse to just bass, rim clicks, and muted trumpet, then bring the full band back on a shout cue. A small but telling detail: the guitar will capo higher to keep the skank bright while horns stay in comfortable keys. Lighting supports the groove with warm ambers for reggae sections and crisp whites for the fast tunes, never stealing the ear from the music. Expect one or two songs to get a dub-style breakdown where delays color the horn phrases and the tempo breathes without losing pulse.If You Like Mad Caddies, You Might Lean This Way
Fans of Less Than Jake will recognize the punchy horn hooks and quick pivots from ska bounce to punk speed.