SWMRS
SWMRS (pronounced "swimmers"), formerly known as Emily's Army, is an American indie-punk band formed in 2004 in Piedmont, California, by childhood friends Cole Becker and Joey Armstrong, with Becker's brother Max Becker joining as a core songwriter.[1] The band, centered on the Becker brothers' songwriting, evolved from teen punk roots to a broader rock sound, releasing albums including Drive North (2016) and Berkeley's on Fire (2019) through Uncool Records, a label co-founded by Armstrong's father, Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong.[1][2] In 2020, SWMRS faced significant controversy when Lydia Night of The Regrettes accused drummer Joey Armstrong of emotional abuse and sexual coercion during their relationship, prompting Armstrong's departure from the band amid public backlash and the collapse of associated label Burger Records due to related misconduct allegations in the punk scene.[3][4][5] The Becker brothers issued statements acknowledging relational issues but disputing the severity of some claims, emphasizing no criminal findings, and the band reformed with new members, releasing the album Becker in 2024 while continuing to tour and evolve toward a harder-edged sound.[6] This incident highlighted ongoing accountability challenges in indie music circles, yet SWMRS persisted, maintaining a Bay Area rock identity through energetic live performances and persistent output despite lineup shifts and scene scrutiny.[7][8]Origins and Early Career
Formation as Emily's Army
Emily's Army was formed in 2004 in Piedmont, California, by childhood friends Cole Becker and drummer Joey Armstrong, who were around nine years old and motivated by the punk ethos they encountered in the Bay Area scene. The pair initially named their project Raining Souls before adopting Emily's Army in tribute to Becker's cousin Emily, diagnosed with cystic fibrosis in 1998, reflecting a personal commitment to raising awareness for the condition through their music.[9][10] This name choice underscored the band's early roots in youthful solidarity and raw energy, drawing direct inspiration from the 2003 film School of Rock, which sparked their interest in forming a group and performing live.[11][12] Cole Becker, handling vocals and guitar, soon recruited his brother Max Becker on bass, solidifying the core lineup and enabling initial rehearsals and local performances in the DIY punk circuit of the East Bay.[11] The group's foundational approach emphasized unpolished punk vigor, with early efforts centered on self-produced demos and gigs at small venues, embodying the grassroots spirit of regional acts like Green Day, whose influence loomed large given Joey Armstrong's familial ties to the band.[13] This period marked their immersion in the Bay Area's punk heritage, prioritizing energetic live shows and community-driven creativity over commercial polish.[2]Initial Releases and Tours
Emily's Army released their debut full-length album, Don't Be a Dick, on August 16, 2011, through Adeline Records.[14] The record consisted of 12 pop-punk tracks addressing themes of youthful rebellion, social frustration, and personal angst, delivered with direct, power-chord-driven energy characteristic of early 2010s punk revival acts.[15] The band's second album, Lost at Seventeen, followed on June 11, 2013, via Rise Records and Adeline Records.[16][17] This 12-song effort expanded on their debut's raw SoCal pop-punk style, incorporating humorous yet heartfelt lyrics about adolescence, relationships, and aimlessness, such as in tracks like "Part Time Bum" and "Blue."[16] Recorded in Oakland, the album demonstrated subtle maturation in production and songcraft, moving toward more structured hooks while retaining punk's urgency.[18] As teenagers during these releases—drummer Joey Armstrong was approximately 19 at debut—the band balanced music with education through persistent independent promotion, including DIY shows and online engagement to cultivate a grassroots audience without major-label backing.[19] They achieved early exposure via slots on the Vans Warped Tour in 2012 and 2013, performing across dozens of U.S. dates alongside established punk acts, which helped solidify their fanbase through high-energy live sets.[20][19] Further global reach came from supporting tours, including opening for Pennywise on Rise Against's 2014 European leg, where they played venues in the UK and beyond, honing their stage presence amid punk circuit demands.[21] These efforts, reliant on indie label networks rather than mainstream promotion, amassed a dedicated following via word-of-mouth and festival circuits, evidencing the band's self-reliant ascent in the punk scene.[22]Rebranding and Mainstream Breakthrough
Name Change to SWMRS
In late 2014, the band formerly known as Emily's Army rebranded to SWMRS (pronounced "swimmers") as its members transitioned into adulthood and sought to evolve their musical direction beyond the youthful pop-punk confines associated with their prior moniker, which originated from a dedication to the Becker brothers' cousin Emily, who has cystic fibrosis.[23][1] This change facilitated a deliberate artistic maturation, incorporating broader influences and a departure from the previous lineup's dynamics, including the exit of guitarist Travis Neumann, to pursue catchier, more versatile song structures while preserving punk foundations.[24][25] The rebranding aligned with strategic business moves, including the announcement of their debut full-length album under the new name, Drive North, set for release on February 12, 2016, through Uncool Records, marking a fresh discographic slate unburdened by earlier Emily's Army associations that risked pigeonholing the group as perpetually adolescent.[26] Produced by Zac Carper of FIDLAR, the album represented an intentional pivot toward expanded appeal, with the band citing a desire to craft music resonant with evolving personal experiences rather than niche punk tropes.[27] Post-rebranding, SWMRS garnered initial positive attention as a revitalized act, evidenced by announcements of North American headline tours in late 2015 and early 2016 to promote Drive North, alongside festival slots that boosted exposure through high-energy live performances emphasizing the name change's thematic emphasis on fluidity and renewal.[28] This period saw the band positioning itself for wider punk and indie circuits, with the shift yielding a perceived clean break that allowed stylistic experimentation without legacy constraints.[29]Key Albums and Collaborations
SWMRS released Drive North on February 12, 2016, through their independent label Uncool Records, marking their debut full-length under the rebranded name. The album blended surf-punk elements with pop-punk structures, incorporating social commentary on themes like personal growth and relationships. It achieved initial commercial traction, peaking at No. 37 on the iTunes Top Albums chart and No. 5 on the iTunes Top Alternative Albums chart.[30] The band's sophomore album, Berkeley's on Fire, arrived on February 15, 2019, via Fueled by Ramen, expanding their sound with hip-hop and grime influences inspired by UK acts like Boy Better Know. Tracks addressed Bay Area-specific issues, including gentrification and protests, as seen in the title track drawing from 2017 Berkeley unrest. Critics noted its high-energy punk core alongside glitchy production and distorted vocals, positioning it as a politically charged evolution from prior releases.[31][32] Collaborations and tours amplified SWMRS's reach during this period. They supported All Time Low on UK and Ireland dates announced in November 2016, and joined the band's 2017 North American run alongside Waterparks. Additional outings included slots with Blink-182, Green Day, FIDLAR, and Wavves, culminating in headlining their own "Berkeley's on Fire" tour with The Regrettes in spring 2019, spanning cities from San Diego to Los Angeles. These efforts diversified punk's sound by integrating grime textures while publicly critiquing Warped Tour-era misogyny and right-wing undercurrents in the scene, as articulated in band interviews.[33][34][31]Musical Style and Influences
Genre Characteristics and Evolution
SWMRS's early output as Emily's Army established a core punk rock foundation rooted in pop-punk conventions, featuring high-energy guitar riffs, straightforward chord progressions, and adolescent-driven tempos typically exceeding 160 beats per minute. The band's 2011 debut album Don't Be a Dick, produced by Billie Joe Armstrong, prioritized raw, unpolished mixes that captured garage-like immediacy and live performance vigor, with minimal overdubs to preserve instrumental aggression from driving power chords and rapid snare hits.[35][36] This sound drew from East Bay punk traditions, emphasizing brevity in song structures averaging under three minutes to maintain relentless momentum. Following the 2014 rebranding to SWMRS, the band's genre palette expanded beyond pop-punk rigidity, integrating garage rock distortion, surf-inspired reverb on guitars, and melodic pop hooks for broader accessibility. Albums like the 2016 EP Drive North, produced by Zac Carper of FIDLAR, showcased this shift through layered dual vocals from brothers Max and Cole Becker, creating harmonic depth over propulsive basslines and Joey Armstrong's dynamic drumming patterns that blended punk urgency with rhythmic elasticity.[2][36] Influences from Green Day manifested in riff-driven verses, while Blink-182 elements appeared in catchy, anthemic choruses, evolving the sound toward hybrid vigor without abandoning punk's core propulsion.[1] By their 2019 full-length Berkeley's on Fire, production techniques refined this evolution, balancing energetic live-feel retention—via analog tape warmth and sparse digital effects—with hook-oriented polish, contrasting the earlier rawer fidelity of 2011 recordings through increased dynamic range and subtle textural overlays like faint synth accents. Instrumentation hallmarks persisted in aggressive guitar tones and Becker harmonies, but tracks incorporated varied pacing, from breakneck punk bursts to mid-tempo grooves, reflecting matured influences spanning Ramones-style minimalism to Beach Boys-esque melodicism. This progression maintained punk's DIY ethos against mainstream gloss, prioritizing sonic immediacy over hyper-perfected production.[37][35]Lyrical Themes and Production Approach
SWMRS lyrics frequently explore themes of youthful rebellion and anti-establishment sentiment, rooted in the band's East Bay upbringing amid a punk scene emphasizing raw honesty over conformity. Songs like "Uncool" critique superficial scene participation, advocating individuality as a rejection of groupthink, while "Drive North" expresses disdain for Los Angeles' perceived inauthenticity, urging a return to the Bay Area's activist ethos and free-speech traditions.[11][38] These elements reflect empirical influences from local dynamics, including 2017 Berkeley protests against media distortion and political extremism, as captured in tracks addressing desensitization to urban chaos and demands for truthful discourse.[39] Personal relationships appear through direct, unfiltered narratives of frustration and admiration, such as label disputes in "Cheap Beer" or cultural nods in "Miley," drawing from stream-of-consciousness journaling tied to adolescent experiences rather than idealized romance.[11] The band's production prioritizes sonic authenticity, evolving from DIY punk roots to structured recordings while preserving a raw edge against overpolished trends. Early efforts under the Emily's Army moniker and initial SWMRS releases, like Drive North (2016), leaned on independent setups via their Uncool Records imprint, influenced by East Bay predecessors' ethos of self-reliant creation in spaces like Gilman Street.[38] Later albums such as Berkeley's on Fire (2019) incorporated professional techniques—produced with experimental gear like a Milkman 20W Sideman amp, white Stratocaster guitars, and a Boss BR-600 digital recorder for initial tracking—but retained punk realism through unconventional mic placements, post-production effects on solos, and avoidance of glossy effects, ensuring causal fidelity to live energy over commercial sheen.[40] This approach stems from Bay Area scene imperatives for unmediated expression, where home-like demos and selective studio enhancements maintain the DIY spirit amid professional evolution.[38]2020 Allegations and Band Reformation
Accusations Against Joey Armstrong
On July 20, 2020, Lydia Night, lead vocalist of the punk band The Regrettes, posted a lengthy statement on Instagram accusing Joey Armstrong, drummer of SWMRS, of emotional abuse and sexual coercion during their romantic relationship, which began when Night was 17 years old.[3][41] Night claimed that Armstrong, who was in a position of greater industry experience and influence at the time, pressured her into sexual acts and exhibited controlling behavior, including isolating her from friends and manipulating her emotionally.[4][42] The post detailed Night's retrospective realization that these experiences constituted abuse, stating, "Now I know that what I actually experienced was emotional abuse and sexual coercion by someone in a position of power over me."[3][4] Armstrong, the son of Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong, received heightened scrutiny partly due to his familial ties to established punk rock figures, which amplified coverage in music media.[41][43] These allegations surfaced amid a broader reckoning of sexual misconduct claims in the Southern California punk and indie scenes, particularly linked to the Burger Records label, where multiple artists and affiliates faced similar unverified accusations without immediate legal corroboration.[44][42] Reports in outlets like Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, and Billboard echoed Night's account based on her statement alone, reflecting a post-2017 pattern in music journalism of rapid amplification of personal testimonies in the absence of criminal charges or adjudicated findings.[3][4][41] No law enforcement investigations or court proceedings substantiated the claims, which remained confined to Night's public narrative.[3][42]Band Response and Internal Changes
On July 21, 2020, SWMRS shared drummer Joey Armstrong's public apology on their official Instagram account, in which he acknowledged mishandling his past relationship with Lydia Night but described it as a "loving one that ended due to irreconcilable differences," taking responsibility for poor communication and insensitive post-breakup behavior without conceding to claims of coercion or abuse.[45][46] The band's action emphasized support for Night's right to speak while prioritizing personal accountability over immediate cancellation, reflecting an internal commitment to allowing context to emerge rather than yielding to public demands for swift judgment.[45] Facing sustained online backlash, including accusations of enabling misconduct leveled at the remaining members, Armstrong and bassist Sebastian Mueller departed from SWMRS in the ensuing period, a decision attributed to the causal pressures of reputational damage from unadjudicated allegations rather than formal findings of wrongdoing.[5][6] This internal restructuring preserved the band's continuity under vocalists Cole and Max Becker, who later articulated that the exits stemmed from the broader fallout of social media amplification, where empirical verification was sidelined in favor of narrative-driven condemnation.[5] In an October 12, 2022, statement, the Becker brothers provided further clarification, rejecting the coercion framing by asserting the relationship's mutuality—known to families and friends on both sides—and denying any sexual component or assault, while critiquing media tendencies to normalize one-sided accounts that incentivize exaggeration for validation.[5][6] They highlighted the absence of due process in the 2020 response, noting how public outrage led to death threats and "rape apologist" labels against them, underscoring a deliberate internal resolve to seek truth amid a cultural preference for punitive speed over deliberative inquiry.[5]Hiatus and Return with New Lineup
Following the departure of drummer Joey Armstrong and guitarist Seb Mueller in response to the 2020 allegations, SWMRS entered a period of reduced activity, effectively placing the band on hiatus while the Becker brothers—vocalist Cole Becker and guitarist Max Becker—regrouped internally. In an October 2022 statement, Cole Becker affirmed that "SWMRS is not breaking up, but a chapter of our lives has emphatically closed," emphasizing a pivot toward creative autonomy without external dependencies tied to the controversy.[5][6] This shift minimized reliance on prior collaborators, allowing the core duo to incorporate family member Cade Becker on bass starting in 2022, thereby centering operations around the Becker siblings for enhanced stability and control.[47] During the hiatus from late 2020 through early 2023, the band maintained sparse communication via platforms like Substack, where updates focused on songwriting and personal recovery rather than public relations efforts amid ongoing scrutiny. Rotating drummers, including Wyatt Blair and Sam Benavidez, filled the percussion role in informal sessions, enabling experimentation without committing to a fixed lineup immediately.[48] This low-profile approach evidenced a deliberate strategy to prioritize musical output over performative damage control, as evidenced by the absence of tours or major releases until mid-2023.[7] The band's return materialized in August 2023 with the announcement of the album Sonic Tonic, set for release on October 27, featuring the streamlined Becker-centric configuration alongside supporting players. This reconfiguration underscored resilience rooted in familial bonds, as the brothers leveraged their longstanding collaboration—dating back to earlier projects—to navigate post-controversy challenges, culminating in a debut single "Little Miss Sunshine" that signaled renewed punk energy.[49] The move distanced SWMRS from the allegations' focal points, fostering a self-sustained unit capable of independent production and performance.[7]Recent Developments and Legacy
Post-2020 Releases and Tours
In 2023, following their reformation with a lineup centered on brothers Cole Becker, Max Becker, and Cade Becker, SWMRS released the album Sonic Tonic on June 2, featuring tracks that maintained their punk rock foundation while incorporating garage and alternative influences.[50] The band followed this with singles building toward their next full-length release, including "Emo Kids" on September 13, 2024, produced by Wyatt Blair and highlighting themes of youthful nostalgia within a pop-punk framework.[51] [52] Becker, the band's fourth studio album under the SWMRS moniker, arrived on October 11, 2024, comprising nine tracks such as "Brand New Lungs" and "Ryder," distributed independently and available on platforms like Spotify.[53] [54] This release emphasized the Becker siblings' collaborative production, shifting toward a more introspective emo-infused pop-punk style compared to prior works, as evidenced by the album's tracklist and fan reception on music databases.[55] Touring resumed with a 2024 U.S. run announced via social media, featuring headlining shows starting September 26 in Denver, Colorado, followed by stops in Albuquerque (September 27), Phoenix (September 28), Berkeley (September 30), Santa Cruz (October 2), Fresno (October 3), and San Luis Obispo (October 4). In December 2024, the band confirmed Mexico dates for 2025, expanding international engagement.[56] By June 2025, SWMRS announced additional West U.S. tour dates for September and October, including performances at venues like Strummer's in Fresno (October 3) and Cornerstone in Berkeley (September 30), demonstrating ongoing live activity through official channels.[57] [58] These efforts, promoted via Substack and social platforms, sustained direct fan interaction post-reformation.[57]Impact on Punk Scene and Family Dynamics
SWMRS's fusion of pop-punk, garage rock, and surf influences helped revitalize the genre for younger listeners, emphasizing high-energy performances and DIY principles that echoed early punk roots while incorporating broader musical palettes like Beach Boys harmonies and Ramones-style brevity.[2][59] This approach attracted audiences seeking accessible yet subversive sounds, as evidenced by their sold-out shows and tours alongside peers, fostering a scene less rigidly confined to traditional punk orthodoxy.[31] However, the band's post-2020 trajectory underscored fractures in punk's left-leaning culture, where scandals often eclipse artistic output; by reforming without the accused member and prioritizing internal accountability over performative cancellation, SWMRS implicitly contested scene norms favoring unverified social media narratives over due process, a dynamic critiqued in analyses of punk's cancel culture vulnerabilities.[60][61] The Becker brothers' deepened collaboration—now including Cole on vocals/guitar, Max on guitar, and younger sibling Cade on bass—emerged as a stabilizing force after the 2020 hiatus, transforming prior lineup instability tied to external controversies into a familial core that enhanced creative continuity and resilience.[48][62] This evolution contrasted with the volatility of earlier configurations, where interpersonal and reputational pressures disrupted momentum, and leveraged the brothers' longstanding bond—forged in Oakland's punk ecosystem—for sustained output amid industry scrutiny.[39][63] In legacy terms, SWMRS influenced contemporaries like The Regrettes through shared Bay Area circuits and stylistic overlaps in indie-punk hybrids, despite ironic tensions from past associations, while facing persistent nepotism critiques linked to Joey Armstrong's Green Day heritage that arguably amplified early visibility but undervalued the Becker-led merits.[64][65][37] Such discourse highlights how punk's emphasis on authenticity often amplifies pedigree over empirical contributions, like consistent touring draws and genre-blending innovation, rather than scandals dominating coverage from ideologically aligned outlets.[7][66]Band Personnel
Current Members
The current lineup of SWMRS, reformed after 2020, centers on brothers Cole Becker (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Max Becker (lead guitar, vocals), and Cade Becker (bass, backing vocals), who joined in 2022 to solidify the rhythm section and family cohesion.[67][48] Cole Becker has emerged as the primary songwriter, steering the band's evolution toward introspective punk with albums like Becker (2024), emphasizing raw emotional delivery through his guitar riffs and stage presence.[67] Max Becker contributes lead guitar lines and harmonies, adapting from prior bass duties to enhance the duo's interlocking guitar dynamic that defines their live energy.[68] Cade Becker's addition on bass has provided lineup stability, enabling consistent touring—including Europe in 2024 and North America in 2025—while his backing vocals support the brothers' vocal interplay during high-tempo sets.[69][70] The band maintains a flexible percussion setup with rotating drummers such as Sam Benavidez, who performed on the 2024 European tour, and Wyatt Blair, contributing to recent recordings and shows for varied rhythmic intensity without a fixed member.[8] This configuration allows SWMRS to prioritize creative output and familial reliability in their post-reformation operations, focusing on dense, guitar-driven performances.[7]Former Members
Joey Armstrong, son of Green Day frontman Billie Joe Armstrong, co-founded the band (initially as Emily's Army) and served as its drummer, percussionist, and backing vocalist from 2004 until his departure in 2020.[1][5] Sebastian "Seb" Mueller joined as a multi-instrumentalist, providing saxophone from 2013, bass guitar from 2014, and backing vocals until 2020, when he exited alongside Armstrong amid the band's lineup overhaul.[71][7] Jakob Danger Armstrong, Joey's brother, had transient involvement, temporarily playing bass guitar and providing backing vocals in 2015 during Mueller's brief absence for college commitments, as well as rhythm guitar, keyboards, and additional support in later years before fully departing.[72][73] Earlier contributors included guitarist Travis Neumann, who played from 2009 to 2014 before leaving due to creative differences.[58]Discography
Studio Albums
Prior to adopting the name SWMRS, the band's core members released two studio albums as Emily's Army. The debut, Don't Be a Dick, came out on June 14, 2011, via Adeline Records.[74][14] The follow-up, Lost at Seventeen, followed on June 11, 2013, distributed by Rise Records and Adeline Records. No, wait, can't cite wiki. From [web:58] is wiki, but [web:62] top40-charts: June 11, 2013 via Adeline and Rise.[71] As SWMRS, the group issued Drive North on February 12, 2016, initially through their own Uncool Records imprint; a reissue appeared later that year on Fueled by Ramen. Wiki again, [web:20] is wiki, but [web:24] RYM Feb 12 2016 Uncool, [web:23] re-released Fueled by Ramen Oct 13 2016. It peaked at number 37 on the iTunes overall albums chart and number 5 on its alternative albums chart.[75][30] The second SWMRS album, Berkeley's on Fire, was released February 15, 2019, on Fueled by Ramen.[76] No major chart data available. In October 2024, SWMRS put out Becker via Uncool Records, marking a return to independent distribution after major-label involvement.[55][47]Extended Plays and Singles
SWMRS's initial foray into singles under their rebranded name came with "Miley," released on September 8, 2015, via their self-founded Uncool Records, paired with the B-side "Uncool."[77][78] This double A-side functioned as a standalone teaser ahead of their debut album, showcasing raw punk energy and garnering attention for its direct homage to Miley Cyrus's rebellious phase.[79][80] In the post-album phase, the band leaned into sporadic non-album singles to maintain momentum amid lineup shifts and hiatuses. "PEOPLE," featuring FIDLAR, dropped on February 14, 2020, as an independent digital release emphasizing collaborative punk ethos without immediate album ties.[50] Similarly, "Too Much Coffee" followed in January 2020, capturing caffeine-fueled urgency in a concise, stream-optimized format.[81] These tracks exemplified SWMRS's strategy of leveraging digital platforms for quick virality, bypassing traditional label gatekeeping after early self-releases.[1] Extended plays have been scarce under the SWMRS banner, with the band prioritizing full albums over mid-length formats post-rebrand; earlier EPs like 2009's Goody Two Shoes trace to predecessor projects and tested garage-punk foundations but predate the core SWMRS identity.[82] Recent singles, such as "Emo Kids" on September 13, 2024—produced by Wyatt Blair and positioned as a pre-album single for Becker—continued this pattern, blending nostalgic emo-punk with modern production to boost fan metrics ahead of October releases.[52][83] Such outputs highlight causal drivers like streaming algorithms favoring bite-sized, shareable content over comprehensive EPs, enabling direct artist-fan engagement without intermediary imprints after initial Uncool ventures.[84]| Release | Date | Format/Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| "Miley" / "Uncool" | September 8, 2015 | Digital single / Uncool Records | Debut SWMRS single; later album track.[77] |
| "Too Much Coffee" | January 2020 | Digital single | Standalone post-hiatus release.[81] |
| "PEOPLE" (feat. FIDLAR) | February 2020 | Digital single | Collaborative non-album track.[50] |
| "Emo Kids" | September 13, 2024 | Digital single / Self-released | Teaser for Becker; streaming-focused.[83] |