James Snyder writes songs as if he were in the room next door — hushed and vulnerable in his own space, but aware and perhaps even thrilled that someone might be listening. With Beach Slang, these uplifting confessionals become euphoric punk anthems about squeezing every second out of life. So it's telling and endearing that, when he played a solo acoustic set in the NPR Music offices, Snyder giggled with the nervous energy of a songwriter who's just been walked in on by a large group of strangers. Last year, Beach Slang released a pair of 7“ EPs — Who Would Ever Want Anything So Broken? and Cheap Thrills On A Dead End Street — that immediately became the stuff of punk singalongs. On stage with a full band, lines like “Kids like us are weird, and more, we're brave“ (from “Filthy Luck“) and “I get in trouble when things get quiet“ (from “Dirty Cigarettes“) are drowned out by distortion. But here, they take on a raw character, as they reflect the search for courage amid loneliness. Beach Slang is in the middl
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