Meet Boxing Club, the four-piece post-punk outfit hailing from London via Glasgow—a powerhouse band that will transport you straight back to the late 1970s and early 1980s, when post-punk first exploded.
Imagine a packed, dingy London pub, walls pulsating with energy, the crowd moshing and drenched in sweat and lager, every note of the band cutting through the chaos.
Boxing Club’s latest release, “Barbra,” delivers that exact energy straight to your ears—no venue required.
The track is lyrically playful, anchored by guitar riffs that mean business, and carried by a vocal performance so entrancing it commands attention for the full two minutes and 49 seconds.
Boxing Club might be a hidden gem, but it won’t stay that way for long—they have a magnetic quality that’s impossible to ignore from the very first listen.
Their lyrics tackle everything from politics to nightlife to the chaos of modern life, giving the music both bite and breadth.
“Barbra” is a must-listen for fans of post-punk and new wave—but even if that’s not usually your scene, you might be surprised at how much it grabs you. Its sonic accessibility makes it easy to get lost in, drawing listeners in regardless of their usual taste.