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Graveyard Shifts and Glory: The Damned at 50

The Damned formed in London in 1976, fusing breakneck punk with a macabre sense of theater.

Fifty years fast, still strange

Marking 50 years, the current phase centers on a settled lineup with Dave Vanian, Captain Sensible, Paul Gray, Monty Oxymoron, and William Granville-Taylor, leaning into psych-tinged energy heard on Darkadelic.

Setlist sparks and side notes

Expect a career-spanning blast with New Rose, Neat Neat Neat, Love Song, and a two-part Smash It Up that starts slow and then sprints. The room usually mixes veteran punk fans trading stories with younger goth-leaning listeners who came via post-punk playlists, all quick to move but respectful of space. One bit of lore: The Damned issued the first UK punk single with New Rose. Another: Dave Vanian once worked as a gravedigger, a thread that still colors the band’s look and stage lighting. Everything about the set and production here is an informed guess from recent shows, and they could flip the script on the night. You might also catch a cheeky cover tease between songs, a habit they use to reset the tempo.

The Damned's 50-Year Scene, Up Close

The scene is varied and warm, with vintage band tees, patched jackets, and sharp black tailoring sharing the rail.

Patches, polish, and a dash of velvet

You will spot bats-and-roses pins next to football scarf knots, plus the occasional red beret nod to Captain Sensible. Choruses turn communal on Love Song, while the title line of Smash It Up becomes a grin-and-shout release that stays playful rather than rough.

Shared choruses, shared history

Merch tables lean into the 50-year theme with bold type, zine-style artwork, and a few deep-cut designs for the lifers. Pre-show, fans trade bootleg knowledge and compare favorite eras, often debating the glossy sweep of The Black Album versus the jagged charm of Damned Damned Damned. After the lights drop, small pockets pogo while others sway in long coats, and both reads feel right for a band that spans punk speed and gothic poise.

How The Damned Sound Hits the Room

Dave Vanian's low, steady vocal cuts through the rush like a lighthouse, giving shape to the sprint.

Sharp engines under the gloom

Captain Sensible's guitar favors bright, biting tones that skate on top of the mix, while Monty Oxymoron's keys add eerie swells and psych sparkle. Paul Gray locks the songs down with tuneful bass lines that often act like a second melody, meeting William Granville-Taylor's crisp snare to steer the pace. Tempos jump from whiplash fast to a mid-tempo strut, and the band uses those shifts to let the baritone bloom before the next blast.

Small tweaks, big impact

A neat live habit: Smash It Up usually arrives as the gentle Part 1 before exploding into Part 2 at a quicker clip than the studio. They also like to stretch Neat Neat Neat with a driving, one-chord vamp where the keys and bass trade little runs. Lighting tends toward deep purples and blood reds that frame the silhouette poses, but the focus stays on tight playing and sharp starts and stops.

If You Ride With The Damned, Try These Too

Kindred speed and shade

If The Damned sit at your crossroads of speed and shade, Buzzcocks bring the taut hooks and breathless pacing that scratch a similar itch. Stiff Little Fingers share the urgent, crowd-shouted choruses and a live punch that favors momentum over polish.

Hooks, heft, and baritone moods

For fans who love the noir edges and keys-driven swirl, The Stranglers deliver baritone vocals, sharp bass figures, and moody textures that echo the band’s darker streak. Siouxsie and the Banshees connect on the gothic drama front, where atmosphere and melody ride together without losing bite. If you chase wiry guitars that still swing, both Buzzcocks and The Stranglers cover that lane differently, one bright and pop-forward, the other colder and more prowling. All four acts prize songs that hit hard live, with tempos that move and choruses built to be belted back.

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