Going Out in Style
Going Out in Style is the seventh studio album by the American Celtic punk band Dropkick Murphys, released on March 1, 2011, through their independent label Born & Raised Records.[1] The record consists of 13 tracks blending punk rock with traditional Irish folk influences, including bagpipes and accordion, and features guest vocals from artists such as Fat Mike of NOFX and Chris Cheney of The Living End on the title track.[2] The album debuted at number six on the Billboard 200 chart, selling over 43,000 copies in its first week and marking the band's highest-charting release up to that point on the all-genre ranking, while reaching number two on the Top Rock Albums chart.[3] Structured as a loose concept album narrating the fictional life story of an Irish immigrant named Davey McGowan—from youthful rebellion to later reflections on family and mortality—the lyrics draw on themes of working-class resilience, loyalty, and historical nods to Boston's Irish-American heritage.[4] Dropkick Murphys promoted the release with music videos, including one for the title track, and extensive touring, culminating in headlining performances at Fenway Park.[5] Critically, Going Out in Style was noted for its matured songwriting and production polish compared to prior efforts, though some reviewers critiqued its shift toward broader rock appeal over raw punk energy.[2] The album solidified the band's commercial breakthrough, contributing to their growing fanbase beyond punk circles and influencing subsequent releases with its narrative-driven approach.Background and Recording
Concept Development
The concept for Going Out in Style emerged from the Dropkick Murphys' intent to craft a concept album weaving together elements of Irish immigrant experience, drawing directly from the band's collective personal histories and family lore. Frontman Ken Casey initiated the narrative framework around the fictional character Cornelius Larkin McGee, an Irish immigrant whose life story serves as a retrospective after his death, incorporating anecdotes from band members' ancestors who faced similar transatlantic journeys, economic hardships, and cultural assimilation in early 20th-century America. This approach allowed the album to encapsulate Boston's working-class Irish-American ethos, reflecting the resilience required to preserve traditions like communal wakes and familial bonds against industrialization and urban poverty.[6][7] The storyline structures McGee's arc chronologically: beginning with his immigration from Ireland, progressing through wartime service in the Korean War, family establishment amid labor struggles, and culminating in a defiant, celebratory death—embodying the album's titular ideal of "going out in style" via a raucous funeral procession. Casey emphasized this loose narrative cohesion to unify disparate songs without rigid theatricality, stating it framed "the fictional story of one person's life that incorporates all of the songs" to highlight intergenerational continuity. Inspirations included Casey's visit to a Boston funeral home for album artwork scouting on an unspecified date prior to recording, where a lone casket sparked reflections on Irish send-offs, prompting the thematic pivot toward mortality and legacy.[8][7][9] Band discussions underscored themes of endurance, with Casey advocating for motifs of upholding Irish customs—such as storytelling and collective defiance—against contemporary dilutions like economic precarity and cultural erosion in working-class communities. This genesis phase, occurring in late 2010 before formal sessions, prioritized authenticity over fabrication, ensuring the protagonist's trials mirrored verifiable immigrant narratives from historical records and oral histories rather than idealized tropes. The result positioned the album as a homage to unyielding heritage, informed by the group's South Boston roots where Irish folklore intersects with punk ethos.[8][6]Recording Sessions
The recording of Going Out in Style primarily occurred at Q Division Studios in Somerville, Massachusetts, during 2010, following an intensive writing period for the band.[10][11] Additional engineering took place there, with mixing handled at Kingsize Soundlabs in Los Angeles, California, and some supplementary recording in Melbourne, Australia, at Red Door Sounds.[2] This Boston-area focus aligned with the Dropkick Murphys' local roots, facilitating a process that wrapped in time for the album's March 1, 2011, release on Born & Bred Records.[11] Ted Hutt served as producer, drawing on his experience with acts like Flogging Molly and the Gaslight Anthem to integrate the band's punk aggression with folk and Celtic influences, while prioritizing a full sonic palette that retained raw intensity.[11][12] Hutt's approach emphasized capturing the group's live performance energy through direct, unpolished takes, avoiding overproduction to preserve the authentic, visceral quality emblematic of their working-class ethos. Sessions involved the core lineup—Ken Casey, Al Barr, Tim Brennan, James Lynch, Matt Kelly, and Jeff DaRosa—focusing on high-tempo executions that mirrored their stage dynamic, with minimal overdubs to sustain immediacy.[13] Challenges arose in balancing the album's narrative-driven songs with the band's trademark rowdiness, as Hutt guided refinements to ensure punk drive did not overshadow melodic folk layers, such as accordion and tin whistle integrations.[13] Band members later noted the sessions' demanding pace, prioritizing first-take vitality to evoke real-life grit over studio perfectionism. This methodology yielded 16 tracks, including guest spots like Bruce Springsteen's on "Peg O' My Heart," recorded remotely but aligned with the core sessions' spirit.[13]Musical Style and Themes
Genre and Instrumentation
"Going Out in Style" embodies Celtic punk, fusing punk rock's aggressive rhythms with Irish folk elements to create anthemic, high-energy tracks suited for rowdy crowds.[14] The foundational instrumentation relies on electric guitars, bass guitar, and drums, delivering fast tempos and driving beats typical of punk, as heard in the title track's insistent hooks and gang vocals.[2] This setup evokes a beer-hall intensity, with songs structured around verse-chorus formats that build to explosive choruses.[15] Celtic influences are amplified through prominent traditional instruments, including bagpipes for swelling melodies, accordion for rhythmic bounce in tracks like "Sunday Hardcore Matinee," tin whistle for lilting intros, and banjo or mandolin for folk textures.[16] [17] [18] These additions integrate more deeply than in prior releases, shifting from sporadic flavoring toward a polished hybrid where folk layers enhance punk's raw edge without diluting its velocity—evident in the album's 15 tracks averaging around 2-3 minutes each, prioritizing momentum over earlier, more abrasive minimalism.[15] [13]Lyrical Content and Narrative
"Going Out in Style" functions as a concept album chronicling the life of Cornelius Larkin, a fictional Irish immigrant whose experiences synthesize the Dropkick Murphys' family histories and observations of working-class Boston life. The narrative arc traces Larkin's journey from immigration hardships in early 20th-century America, through grueling manual labor and familial duties, to his service in the Korean War and eventual defiant death amid a raucous funeral. This structure eschews melodrama, grounding the tale in sequential vignettes of cause-and-effect struggles rather than idealized heroism.[19][4] Central themes revolve around resilience forged through persistent labor and familial solidarity, portraying Irish-American existence as a chain of empirical challenges met with individual grit and inherited traditions. Songs depict toil without victimhood, as in "The Hardest Mile," where Larkin trudges through snow and rain for low-wage work, emphasizing self-reliant endurance over systemic blame. Family bonds supersede personal ambition, evident in tracks like "Family Ghost," which invoke ancestral guidance as a bulwark against isolation, prioritizing collective legacy in a lineage of laborers.[6] Lyrical critiques target exploitative "tyrants"—ambiguous overseers symbolizing workplace oppressors—without delving into contemporary ideological battles, maintaining focus on timeless adversarial dynamics resolved through personal defiance. This approach privileges causal agency, where outcomes stem from choices amid adversity, as seen in "Cruel," detailing survival's brutal pragmatism in an unwelcoming land. Ballads like "Peg O' My Heart" integrate romance as a stabilizing force within hardship, reinforcing themes of loyalty over fleeting individualism. The album's close in the title track celebrates a boisterous send-off, underscoring communal rituals that affirm life's continuity beyond individual demise.[20]Release and Promotion
Singles and Media
The lead single from Going Out in Style was the title track "Going Out in Style", released to promote the album's March 1, 2011 launch.[4] An official music video for the single, directed by Mark Higgins, premiered on March 2, 2011, depicting a funeral procession evolving into a lively Boston street party, underscoring themes of defiant celebration amid mortality.[5] The video featured guest appearances by musicians Fat Mike of NOFX and Chris Cheney of [The Living End](/page/The_Living End), comedian Lenny Clarke, and Boston sports figures including hockey Hall of Famer Bobby Orr, Bruins players Milan Lucic and Shawn Thornton, and Red Sox player Kevin Youkilis, reinforcing the band's ties to local Irish-American working-class identity.[21][22] Rolling Stone hosted an exclusive debut of the video on the album's release day, highlighting its portrayal of an "Irish party" atmosphere with crowd scenes evoking communal revelry.[23] The clip was also made available on platforms like YouTube and Apple Music, with promotional links directing to iTunes for album purchase, aligning with digital rollout strategies common for the era.[5][24] Another single, "Memorial Day", supported initial radio and online promotion, though it lacked a comparable high-profile video release at launch.[4]Early media efforts emphasized Boston-centric visuals to amplify the album's narrative of immigrant grit and festivity, with the single's video serving as a cornerstone for pre-tour buzz without extending into live performance tie-ins.[25]
Marketing Strategies and Touring
The Dropkick Murphys released Going Out in Style through their independent label, Born & Bred Records, on March 1, 2011, enabling direct oversight of promotional efforts and fan-centric distribution channels that bypassed traditional major-label intermediaries.[26] This self-managed approach facilitated themed merchandise, including posters and apparel emphasizing the album's narrative arc of Irish immigrant struggles and resilience, which aligned with the band's branding to foster authentic community ties rather than broad commercial appeals.[27] Such strategies underscored grassroots engagement, leveraging the Claddagh Fund—established in 2009 for veterans and youth causes—to integrate charitable elements into fan interactions, though specific album-tied fundraisers remained secondary to core music promotion.[28] Post-release, the band prioritized live performances to build hype, embarking on the Going Out in Style Tour from June 4 to October 25, 2011, encompassing 84 concerts across North America and Europe.[29] Setlists heavily incorporated new material, reflecting a deliberate push to showcase the album's interconnected storytelling; for instance, the title track "Going Out in Style" appeared in 54 performances, "Take 'Em Down" in 50, and "Hang 'Em High" in 47, out of approximately 57 documented shows with available data.[30] This emphasis on narrative-driven songs like "The Hardest Mile" (35 plays) demonstrated empirical fan alignment through sustained inclusion, contrasting potential criticisms of over-commercialization by prioritizing extended tour exposure over short-term media stunts. While attendance specifics for individual dates vary, the tour's scope evidenced robust draw from the band's core punk and Celtic music audience, sustained by Born & Bred's independent model that avoided diluted partnerships.[30]Commercial Performance
Chart Positions and Sales
Going Out in Style debuted at number 6 on the Billboard 200 chart for the week ending March 19, 2011, selling 43,259 copies in its first week and marking the highest chart position and largest opening week sales in Dropkick Murphys' career up to that point.[31][6] The album's performance reflected sustained momentum from the band's prior release, The Meanest of Times, which peaked at number 20 in 2007, combined with release timing shortly before St. Patrick's Day on March 17, which aligned with heightened interest in the group's Celtic punk style among its core Boston-area and Irish-American fanbase. Internationally, it reached number 85 on the UK Albums Chart for one week.[32] No certifications were awarded, and total sales figures beyond the debut week remain unreported in primary tracking data.[33]| Chart (2011) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 6 |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 85 |
Certifications and Metrics
"Going Out in Style" has not received any certifications from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for physical sales, digital downloads, or streaming equivalents as of October 2025. The album's commercial metrics include first-week U.S. sales of 43,000 units, which represented a career high for the Dropkick Murphys upon its March 1, 2011 release.[31] [34] No comprehensive total sales figures for the album have been publicly disclosed by Nielsen SoundScan or equivalent tracking services beyond its debut performance.[3] In the United Kingdom, it peaked at number 85 on the Official Albums Chart with limited weeks on the tally.[35]Critical Reception
Positive Assessments
Reviewers commended Going Out in Style for its high-energy delivery and tight cohesion, particularly in executing the concept album's narrative arc drawn from Irish immigrant folklore. The album chronicles the fictionalized life of Cornelius Larkin, an Irish-American bootlegger, blending punk rock vigor with folk storytelling traditions rooted in historical working-class struggles.[36][37] Consequence of Sound highlighted the record's "raucous, hearty, beer-swinging bash" quality, praising its anthemic tracks like "Climbing a Chair to Bed" for their catchiness and the overall replay value that sustains listener engagement without dilution.[37] ThePunkSite.com echoed this, calling it "strong, energetic, rowdy and arm-raising" with no filler tracks, positioning it as a benchmark for the band's output due to its relentless pace and unified sound.[36] PopMatters assessed the album's conceptual risks as paying off through addictive hooks and narrative payoff, appealing directly to audiences valuing authentic, ethos-driven music over polished elite sensibilities.[38] Louder praised its irrepressible rabble-rousing spirit, noting how the folk-punk instrumentation fosters communal anthems that reinforce the band's working-class roots.[39] These elements contributed to the album's reputation for delivering unpretentious, high-octane cohesion that prioritizes empirical listener impact over experimental abstraction.[13]Criticisms and Limitations
Critics have noted the album's reliance on formulaic punk rock instrumentation, which renders certain tracks insufficiently engaging for longtime fans. Specific complaints targeted songs such as "The Hardest Mile" and "Cruel" as particularly dull due to their adherence to repetitive punk structures without fresh elements.[40] This lack of sonic innovation extends to the overall production, which mirrors the band's established sound without significant evolution, leading to perceptions of stagnation compared to contemporaries like Flogging Molly.[40] Lyrically, the album marks a departure from the band's earlier emphasis on overt political activism and anti-establishment themes, opting instead for a concept-driven narrative centered on the fictional life of an Irish immigrant, Cornelius Larkin. Reviewers observed that while isolated tracks like "Take 'Em Down" retain calls to organize against exploitation—"When the boss comes callin’ don’t you sell your soul, When the boss comes callin’ we gotta organize"—most content features only vague allusions to tyrants or resistance, diluting the direct ideological fire of prior works.[41] This toned-down approach has been described as disappointing for audiences accustomed to the group's more confrontational stance, potentially distancing listeners who valued its role in rallying against systemic issues.[41] Additionally, some critiques highlight an overdependence on familiar Irish cultural motifs, such as folk-infused storytelling and communal anthems, without pushing toward novel artistic territory, resulting in trite phrasing like "No mercy, no quarter/They’ll pay for their sins" and clichéd closers evoking band camaraderie.[40] This reliance reinforces the album's conventional celtic punk framework but limits deeper exploration beyond established tropes.[40]Track Listing
Standard Edition
The standard edition of Going Out in Style includes 13 tracks with a total runtime of 45 minutes and 47 seconds.[42]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Hang 'Em High" | Dropkick Murphys | 3:59[43] |
| 2 | "Going Out in Style" (featuring Chris Cheney, Fat Mike, and Lenny Clarke) | Dropkick Murphys | 4:08[43][12] |
| 3 | "The Hardest Mile" | Dropkick Murphys | 3:26[43] |
| 4 | "Cruel" | Dropkick Murphys | 4:21[43] |
| 5 | "Memorial Day" | Dropkick Murphys | 2:59[43] |
| 6 | "Climbing a Chair to Bed" | Dropkick Murphys | 2:59[26] |
| 7 | "1953" | Dropkick Murphys | 4:14[26] |
| 8 | "Deeds Not Words" | Dropkick Murphys | 3:41[26] |
| 9 | "Broken Hymns" | Dropkick Murphys | 5:03[26] |
| 10 | "Take 'Em Down" | Dropkick Murphys | 2:11[26] |
| 11 | "Sunday Hardcore Matinee" | Dropkick Murphys | 2:43[26] |
| 12 | "21st Century Digital Boy" | Brett Gurewitz | 2:48[4] |
| 13 | "Peg O' My Heart" (featuring Bruce Springsteen) | Alfred Bryan, Fred Fisher | 2:20[26][44] |