Written by Dylan Brandsema
When horror punk legend and former Blitzkid frontman Argyle Goolsby regretfully announced his departure from Silent Horror a few months back, fans were shocked and divided. Originally started in the late 2000ās by drummer Brandall Rector, the band struggled to find success, releasing very little recorded material, and eventually calling it quits. In 2014, roughly two years after the retirement of Goolsbyās widely renowned Blitzkid, the band reunited with Argyle Goolsby on bass and vocals, and finally releasing a full-length album (which mainly consisted of new recordings of older material) which projected them into horror punk superstardom, placing them at what was unquestionably their high point.
The drama and supposed bad blood between members that spawned from the unexpected split took its toll on Silent Horrorās fanbase, most of whom were forced to pick sides, and speculation around the idea of the band releasing more new material without Goolsby at the forefront was weary. Nevertheless, only months after Goolsbyās departure, Silent Horror has released three new songs with their new vocalist Austin Price and original bassist Matt Kerley, the newest of which being ā(We Are) Monster Squadā.
āMonster Squadā kicks into overdrive in it first few seconds, wasting no time and jumping immediately into its first verse. This is followed by the generic verse-chorus-repeat formula that punk has come to know so well, but the kicker to āMonster Squadā is its catchy chorus. At only 2 lines, itās short but itās lyrics āWe are the Monster Squad (woah/woah/woah) Weāll rid the world of all the forces of the darkā are guaranteed to stuck in the listenerās head after only one playthrough. This is primarily due to not just the structure of the melody, but also Priceās operatic and resonate vocal style, which soars high and mighty above all the songās other elements. Thereās definitely some Michael Graves-era Misfits influences happening here, and itās pretty darn great.
If the songās title isnāt an immediate clue, the lyrics, and the art the band has provided for the single, are a clear indication that song is about the 1987 film of the same name, which has developed into a cult classic amongst horror fans. Itās no surprise for horror punk bands to make songs about classic horror films, but itās a delight to hear Silent Horror tackle this 80ās gem, even if it is pretty basic. āMonster Squadā is also levels better than their previous two singles since Goolsbyās departure, āMary Joā and āDigging Up The Morrowā, which, while okay songs, lacked a sense of passion or emphasis thatās clearly evident in this one.
Altogether, āMonster Squadā is promising return for Silent Horror. The lack of Argyle Goolsbyās presence sort of makes it sound like Silent Horror pre-break up, and with this track theyāve shown that they donāt need Goolsbyās star power to produce awesome horror punk, and I personally canāt wait for whateverās next.


