CIVIC new album 'Chrome Dipped' Out May 30

NEW ALBUM CHROME DIPPED OUT THIS FRIDAY, MAY 30 VIA ATO RECORDS 

SHARE FINAL PRE-RELEASE SINGLE + VIDEO “THE FOOL”

LISTEN | WATCH

ON TOUR NOW IN NORTH AMERICA 

Headline Shows In Seattle, Los Angeles, New York City And Toronto

UK/EU Dates This Summer + New Dates In Australia Announced Today

This Friday, May 30 Australia’s CIVIC will release their third album, Chrome Dipped, via ATO Records. Known for their raw, adrenaline-fueled sound, CIVIC pushes beyond the boundaries of their ’70s Australian punk roots on the LP, marking a bold shift into new sonic territory while retaining their sharp intensity. Guitarist Lewis Hodgson sums it up best: “We’ve always stuck to the rules, doing Australian punk rock properly. But after touring the world, we realized—you can really do whatever the fuck you want.” The album explores themes of loss and grief following the death of frontman Jim McCullough’s mother, as well as broader existential reflection. Ultimately, Chrome Dipped is about casting off old shells—both musically and emotionally—and finding meaning in the messiness of evolution.

Today they share the final single ahead of the album, “The Fool.” The band say “'The Fool' is a nihilistic death march about dreamers and idiots. A jangley pagan punk song meant to provoke the senses. It recalls the story of the fool and what's behind the 1000 yard stare.” The track premiered via Paste Magazine who note, “‘The Fool’ (is) a melodic uppercut of metallic, poppy post-punk that sounds fuller and feistier than CIVIC’s previous LPs.” The band also share a video directed by Conor Mercury.

Listen/share “The Fool” here

Pre-save Chrome Dipped here

CIVIC have previously shared “The Hogg” which Flood Magazine called “a buffet of riffage” and Chrome Dipped title track which saw support from Stereogum, Brooklyn Vegan, Northern Transmissions, among others. Brooklyn Vegan also included the LP in their “50 Albums We're Anticipating for Spring 2025” feature calling it "...a breakout from the bare-bones sound they had on their first two records." 

Renowned for their live show, CIVIC are currently stateside playing fan favorites and new songs off Chrome Dipped across North America. They kicked off the run at Punk Rock Bowling and Music Festival last weekend and have upcoming shows in among other markets, Seattle, Los Angeles, New York City and Toronto. This summer they head to The UK and Europe. Tickets are on-sale here and all dates are listed below.  

North American Tour Dates

5/28 - Holland Project - Reno, NV

5/30 - The Vera Project - Seattle, WA

5/31 - Polaris Hall - Portland, OR

6/3 - Bottom Of The Hill - San Francisco, CA

6/6 - The Echoplex - Los Angeles, CA

6/7 - Soda Bar - San Diego, CA

6/11 - Pearl Street - Washington, DC

6/12 - Foto Club - Philadelphia, PA  

6/14 - Middle East Upstairs - Boston, MA

6/13 - TV Eye - New York, NY

6/16 - The Baby G - Toronto, ON

6/17 - The Sanctuary - Hamtramck (Detroit), MI

6/18 - Schubas - Chicago, IL

6/19 - 7th Street Entry - Minneapolis, MN

UK/EU Tour Dates

6/24 - Dabadaba - San Sebastian, ES

6/25 - El Sol - Madrid, ES

6/26 - Loco Club - Valencia, ES

6/27 - Upload - Barcelona, ES

6/28 - Helldorado - Vitoria, ES

6/30 - Freakout Club - Bologna, IT

7/1 - Punkadeka Preview @ Magnolia - Milan, IT

7/3 - Voodoo - Belfast, UK

7/4 - Workmans Cellar - Dublin, IE

7/5 - Luca Records & Skate Shop - Waterford, IE

7/6 - Kasbah - Limerick, IE

7/8 - Gullivers - Manchester, UK

7/9 - Moth Club - London, UK

7/10 - 2000 Trees Festival - Cheltenham, UK

7/12 - Sjock Festival - Antwerp, BE

7/13 - Ratinger Hof - Dusseldorf, DE

7/14 - Privatclub - Berlin, DE

7/15 - Goldener Salon @ Hafenklang - Hamburg, DE

7/18 - Ravnedalen Live - Kristiansand, NO

7/19 - Bukta Festival - Tromso, NO (with DJ set that night)

7/24 - Paradiso - Amsterdam, NL

7/25 - Supersonic - Paris, FR

7/26 & 7/27 - Binic Folk Blues Festival - Binic, FR

Melbourne quartet CIVIC were determined to shake things up with their third album, Chrome Dipped. 

“We’d been pushing a sort of ’70s Australian punk sound with our first two records, but I think we wanted to take it in a different direction,” says guitarist Lewis Hodgson. “I think it was all starting to feel a bit stale.”

“We didn’t really know what we were going to make but we went into it very open for change,” adds vocalist Jim McCullough.

That the band were willing to stray from the raw, distinctly Australian punk rock blueprint of 2021’s Future Forecast and 2023’s Taken By Force – an album awarded four stars by British magazine Mojo, and hailed by NME as “a blunt, muscly rock record that’s constantly on edge” – speaks volumes about the group’s approach to their art. Not content to simply repeat former glories, Chrome Dipped is designed to forge new ones.

There are, of course, some references to their past – the venomous sting of the aptly named “Poison” (a blistering attack on “people talking shit”) and neck-breaking stomp of “The Hogg” (so named because of its “disgusting sounding riff”) summon the filth and fury of the band’s early work, while the frenetic pace of “Fragrant Rice” ensures the group’s famously raucous live shows will remain sweat drenched. 

But there are elements here that are the work of a band expanding their boundaries, taking their sound into areas such as shoegaze (the woozy “Kingdom Come”, which also incorporates a country twang) and experimenting with different vocal techniques (McCullough’s robotic delivery in “Fragrant Rice”). Hodgson also admits to injecting the songs with more emotional sincerity than he would have in the past been comfortable with.

“We kind of stuck to the rules a little bit earlier on like, do Australian punk rock properly and all that,” says the guitarist. “But after touring around the world and seeing what all these other bands are up to it’s like, you can really do whatever the fuck you want. And so it’s fun to just kind of let go.”

The process wasn’t without its growing pains. The sprawling “Starting All The Dogs Off” calls to mind the apocalyptic abandon of The Birthday Party and The Scientists, eschewing CIVIC’s militant adherence to rigid and precise song structures in favour of something looser and more instinctive. “Not too long ago that was a bit taboo for us,” smiles Hodgson. “Initially it annoyed me, but it was a good exercise.”

To guide the band – which is completed by bassist Roland Hlavka and drummer Eli Sthapit – to these new sonic pastures they tapped Australian singer-songwriter Kirin J. Callinan to produce the record, and legendary musician and producer Chris Townend to engineer. It was Callinan’s idea to spend a week recording at the Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) in Tasmania, a far cry from the outback house in which CIVIC laid down Taken By Force. “We’ve always done our records DIY,” says McCullough. “This time we wanted to step up and make it sound as big as we could.”

“We kind of gave Kirin the keys on this one,” adds Hodgson. “He would deconstruct songs. So what would initially be more of a punk rock song would turn into the ‘Chrome Dipped’ that you hear. It really helped us, pulling the songs apart and putting them back together.”

It was Callinan’s idea to use a sampled snare drum in the title-track, lending it a mechanical, almost drum machine-like feel. The sensation is repeated on “Trick Pony”, which adds squealing, Big Black-inspired guitar to the mix. This battle between cold, mechanical sounds and the humanity informing each song flows throughout the record, as represented in its title. “I like the idea of Chrome Dipped being a kind of a mindset,” says McCullough. “It’s like a casting of your character, or like an outer shell.”

Underneath that outer shell, however, are very real human emotions. For McCullough, who lost his mother during the writing process, songs such as “Gulls Way” and “Amissus” (a Latin word which translates as ‘loss’) were an opportunity to process her passing and ruminate on matters of life and death. Hodgson describes “Kingdom Come” (on which he performs lead vocals) as “a sort of ballad for a functional drug addict”, inspired by the actions and stories of several friends. “The Hogg” muses on human consciousness and the role of machines in the world, its musical aggression in contrast with its delicate and beautiful lyrical imagery (“sunshine on the ocean floor”). 

Hypnotic opener “The Fool” considers the misguided person who “acts like drunken royalty” and thinks they’re “killing it” when in reality they’re doing nothing of the sort (“The fool he wears a crown upon his head/You know it’s made of sticks and absurd string instead”), while “Fragrant Rice” addresses what McCullough calls “the shift of next of kin and the fear of that”. “Swing Of The Noose” posits nihilism as freeing rather than a negative state of mind, while “Starting All The Dogs Off” finds McCullough drawing inspiration from old Australian bush poets to concoct a story of someone on a journey in search of freedom, only for “all these emotions and life things to get in the way”.

Those listening closely may notice the lack of guitar solos throughout these songs – except for some blistering work in “Poison” – a conscious decision on behalf of Hodgson. “I started feeling really inane, because a lot of our songs have a solo,” he smiles. “I think when we played South By Southwest, we had to play the same set three times a day. That really was like, ‘And here’s the solo!’ It was just kind of silly and embarrassing.”

It's just one more change on a record designed to shake things up and break old patterns. “I hope people feel a little confused at first,” smiles Hodgson, “then a bit angry, and then feel good, and then interested, and then they feel like, ‘Oh, this is sick.’ That process exactly. I hope it’s a bit challenging.”

Chrome Dipped tracklisting 

  1. The Fool

  2. Chrome Dipped

  3. Gulls Way

  4. The Hogg

  5. Trick Pony

  6. Poison

  7. Amissus

  8. Starting All The Dogs Off 

  9. Fragrant Rice

  10. Kingdom Come

  11. Swing Of The Noose

Follow CIVIC here: 

https://www.civicivic.com/

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Photo by Marcus Coblyn