Turn Up That Dial is the tenth studio album by American Celtic punk band Dropkick Murphys, released on April 30, 2021, through the band's independent label Born & Bred Records.[1][2][3]
The record, produced by longtime collaborator Ted Hutt, features 11 original tracks blending the band's signature bagpipe-driven punk rock with themes of resilience and escapism, crafted amid the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.[3][4]
Highlights include the title track, an anthem urging listeners to amplify music as a coping mechanism, and collaborations such as "Mick Jones Nicked My Knickers Off" with guest vocalist Brian Ritchie of Violent Femmes.[5][6]
Critics praised its high-energy sing-alongs and refusal to yield to adversity, positioning it as one of the band's stronger efforts in recent years.[7][8]
Background and Development
Conceptual Origins
Turn Up That Dial originated in early 2020 as Dropkick Murphys responded to the COVID-19 pandemic's global shutdowns, which abruptly ended live tours and isolated performers from audiences. The band members, including frontman Al Barr and bassist Ken Casey, experienced firsthand the restrictions on performances, prompting a focus on high-energy punk to counter isolation and provide auditory relief.[9][10]Ken Casey described the album's creation during lockdowns as a "lifesaver," supplying purpose when routines collapsed, with recording conducted in small, socially distanced shifts using digital file-sharing to maintain professional quality. The band's motivation centered on delivering escapism and positivity—aiming to "put a smile on everyone’s face" or "lift their spirits"—through upbeat tracks that emphasized resilience and active recovery over passive lamentation of pandemic hardships.[11][9] Casey further noted the necessity to "work really hard to get out of that hole COVID created," positioning music as a tool for empirical uplift amid enforced separation.[10]This conceptual foundation accelerated after the official announcement on February 23, 2021, aligning with the band's longstanding self-reliance via their Born & Bred Records imprint, which handled production and distribution independently.[6]
Songwriting Process
The songwriting for Turn Up That Dial was led by Dropkick Murphys co-founders Ken Casey and Tim Brennan, drawing on punk influences including The Clash, as reflected in the title track's lyrical nod to the "pounding of the metal like the Clampdown beat."[12] The process emphasized straightforward, anthemic constructions suited to live energy, with Brennan and Casey prioritizing melodies that delivered direct emotional uplift through repetitive, hook-driven choruses over more experimental forms.[13]COVID-19 lockdowns necessitated remote collaboration, with band members exchanging demos to sustain momentum amid isolation, which Casey described as providing focus and purpose while separately navigating personal challenges.[11][13] This setup accelerated iteration by leveraging digital tools for initial sketches, later refined in targeted in-person sessions once feasible by late 2020, yielding tracks oriented toward crowd engagement and resilience rather than introspection.[13]Core material neared completion by early 2021, as indicated by the February 23 pre-order launch featuring the single "Middle Finger," which showcased the album's punchy, defiant hooks.[6] Originally targeted for summer 2020 release, the pandemic delays refined the selection to 13 tracks emphasizing verifiable audience resonance, informed by the band's livestream experiences simulating packed venues.[13]
Recording Sessions
The recording sessions for Turn Up That Dial occurred at Q Division Studios in Somerville, Massachusetts, during early 2021, under the production of Ted Hutt, who has collaborated with Dropkick Murphys on multiple prior albums.[14][15] To adhere to pandemic restrictions, band members worked in shifts of two at a time, enabling efficient progress while minimizing group gatherings and emphasizing a raw, unpolished approach suited to the band's punk roots.[14][15]Technical efforts focused on capturing the live ensemble's kinetic energy, with Hutt prioritizing authentic performances over extensive overdubs to maintain the group's high-octane delivery.[16] Traditional instruments such as bagpipes, played by Lee Forshner, and accordion, handled by Tim Brennan, remained core to the sound, but sessions amplified electric guitar layers—evident in louder, more aggressive riffs—to embody the album's titular call to intensify the volume and drive.[17][18][19]This self-reliant process aligned with Dropkick Murphys' independent operations, culminating in the album's issuance via their own Born & Bred Records label without external corporate involvement.[20][15]
Musical Composition
Style and Genre Elements
Turn Up That Dial embodies the Dropkick Murphys' established Celtic punk genre, rooted in Irish folk traditions fused with punk rock aggression and folk-punk communalism. The album maintains the band's hallmark high-energy approach, characterized by rapid tempos and driving rhythms that evoke the raw intensity of street punk while incorporating Celtic elements like bagpipes and tin whistle. Reviews describe it as a resurgent effort in the Celtic punk style, prioritizing upbeat, anthemic structures over subdued experimentation.[21][22]Gang vocals feature prominently, particularly in tracks like "L-EE-B-O-Y," creating a collective, chant-like quality that reinforces the genre's emphasis on shared resilience and pub sing-along vibes, a staple of the band's folk-punk heritage. This contrasts with more individualistic punk subgenres, aligning instead with oi! and hardcore influences that promote group participation. The production polishes these elements without softening the edge, as evidenced by the album's consistent propulsion across its 11 tracks totaling 39 minutes.[16][23]Rock influences surface notably in "Mick Jones Nicked My Pudding," a direct nod to The Clash's Mick Jones and broader punk rock forebears like Joe Strummer, integrating narrative-driven storytelling with Celtic punk's instrumental palette. The band's evolution from early raw, DIY recordings in the late 1990s to refined anthems reflects genre maturation, yet Turn Up That Dial avoids mainstream dilution by sustaining concise song structures—averaging around 3.5 minutes—to deliver punchy, unindulgant bursts rather than prolonged jams or acoustic detours seen in select prior releases. This focus preserves the high-tempo aggression central to their appeal, countering any perceptions of over-polishing through empirical adherence to punk's brevity and vigor.[24][25]
Instrumentation and Production
The album employs the Dropkick Murphys' core lineup of electric guitars, bass guitar, and drums, supplemented by Celtic punk staples such as bagpipes contributed by Lee Forshner, tin whistle and accordion handled by Tim Brennan, and acoustic textures from banjo and mandolin played by Jeff DaRosa.[26][27] These elements provide layered rhythmic drive and melodic contrast, with Al Barr's lead vocals foregrounded in a raw, unpolished style that prioritizes vocal aggression over studio polish.[28][29]Ted Hutt, the band's longtime producer, oversaw sessions at Q Division Studios in Somerville, Massachusetts, commencing in 2020 under COVID-19 restrictions that limited recording to pairs of band members per shift to minimize health risks.[30][18] Hutt's production maintains a focus on organic band interplay, avoiding excessive compression to retain punchy dynamics that align with the group's high-energy live shows, where escalating instrumental layers in tracks like the title song mirror thematic calls to amplify volume for emotional release.[30][27] This approach ensures arrangements propel listener immersion through straightforward builds rather than layered effects, preserving the causal impact of rhythm-section propulsion and folk-infused hooks on audience response.[29]
Lyrical Themes
Escapism and Personal Resilience
The title track "Turn Up That Dial" positions loud music as a direct counter to daily monotony and isolation, with lyrics instructing listeners to "turn up that dial 'til it takes me away" amid "dark, lonely and long" days, framing punk rock as an immediate, self-administered remedy for emotional strain.[5] This approach echoes punk's broader historical function in fostering personal empowerment through DIY self-expression and rejection of passivity, enabling individuals—particularly alienated youth—to reclaim agency via raw, accessible creation rather than external validation.[31]Dropkick Murphys bassist and vocalist Ken Casey described the recording process during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdowns as a "lifesaver," underscoring music's role in sustaining morale when conventional outlets were restricted.[11]In "Queen of Suffolk County," the band portrays a formidable female figure who navigates hardship with unyielding poise and self-defense—"she had style, she had grace / she had a knife and she had mace"—celebrating her as a symbol of defiant vitality in a gritty locale, where personal grit overrides circumstantial defeat.[32] Such depictions prioritize individual fortitude and unapologetic enjoyment over narratives of perpetual victimhood, aligning with the album's intent to deliver "escapism" that fans craved amid pandemic confinement, as Casey noted the record's aim to "put a smile on everyone’s face" and elevate spirits through energetic release.[11]Across these tracks, the lyrics advocate proactive coping via music's intensity, reflecting the band's explicit goal to demonstrate that "you can do anything you set your mind to," drawing from Casey's own history of overcoming substance abuse and loss to embody resilient self-determination.[11] This ethos counters defeatist outlooks by emphasizing internal locus of control, consistent with punk's tradition of inspiring "self-rule" and independence as bulwarks against drudgery or crisis.[33]
Working-Class Identity
The lyrics in Turn Up That Dial recurrently evoke motifs of Boston's blue-collar existence, portraying characters shaped by economic hardship and communal solidarity without overt idealization. Tracks such as "Queen of Suffolk County" depict a formidable local archetype—a tough, knife-wielding woman embodying regional grit amid Suffolk County's working-class enclaves, reflecting verifiable ties to the band's Quincy, Massachusetts origins where members drew from personal experiences of labor-intensive lives.[32][34]"Middle Finger," meanwhile, channels raw defiance through imagery of a perpetually raised fist against personal and societal adversaries, including family conflicts and youthful rebellion, grounded in the band's documented histories of navigating anger-fueled setbacks in blue-collar environments.[35][36] This authenticity stems from the Dropkick Murphys' Irish-American lineage, where songs capture resilience forged in immigrant labor traditions, as seen in broader catalog nods to endurance amid toil.[37]Such portrayals achieve strengths in realism by highlighting individual tenacity—evident in the band's biographies, including founder Ken Casey's familial union organizing roots on Boston's waterfront—yet invite critique for potentially glorifying strife without underscoring entrepreneurial self-reliance as a causal escape from cyclical poverty.[37] While the group vocally backs unions, as in advocacy for organized labor gatherings, the emphasis on personal "grit" in lyrics like those of "Middle Finger" aligns more with bootstrapped agency than collectivedependency, avoiding full romanticization of unending struggle.[7]
Political and Social Commentary
Dropkick Murphys' Turn Up That Dial, released on April 30, 2021, incorporates political undertones rooted in the band's longstanding advocacy for working-class solidarity and opposition to authoritarianism, though frontman Ken Casey has emphasized resilience and communal uplift over explicit partisanship.[35] Tracks such as "Middle Finger" express defiance against perceived overreach by authorities, with lyrics depicting a raised fist "full-time against the world" in defense of family and personal autonomy, aligning with the band's pro-union history dating back to songs like "Workers' Song" from their 2001 album The Gang's All Here.[38] This anti-authority sentiment draws from punk traditions but has been performed live as a rebuke to fascists, reflecting the group's explicit anti-fascist positioning.[39]The track "Chosen Few" offers a sharper critique, decrying national leadership's mishandling of crises like the COVID-19 pandemic, with Casey confirming the lyrics target former President Donald Trump's response, portraying a decline where "the chosen few" exacerbate division and incompetence.[40] Released amid post-2020 election fallout, the song avoids direct electoral endorsements, focusing instead on timeless themes of accountability and societal rot, as Casey noted in interviews prioritizing punk's rebellious spirit over "stuffy political narratives."[35] The band's broader ethos supports labor unions and critiques elite detachment, yet uniquely for punk incorporates pro-police and pro-military elements, as evidenced by Casey's public backing of veterans and law enforcement amid urban unrest.[41]Critics from conservative perspectives have faulted such commentary for one-sidedness, arguing it privileges systemic grievances over individual responsibility and overlooks government overreach in areas like union-backed regulations that burden workers.[42] This aligns with broader punk subgenres featuring right-leaning variants, such as anti-PC strains in bands like The Exploited or modern acts emphasizing personal liberty against collectivist mandates, challenging the genre's dominant left-wing associations often amplified by academic and media sources prone to ideological filtering.[43]Dropkick Murphys' approach, while vocally anti-Trump—Casey has stated he lost friends over his opposition—maintains a causal focus on grassrootsresilience, as in the album's title track urging communal defiance without endorsing partisan salvation.[44]
Release and Promotion
Announcement and Singles
Dropkick Murphys announced Turn Up That Dial, their tenth studio album, on February 23, 2021, simultaneously releasing the lead single "Middle Finger".[1][45] The track, a defiant punk anthem, was made available for streaming and download immediately, serving as the first preview of the album's energetic sound amid ongoing pandemic restrictions that limited live performances.[46]Pre-orders for the album opened on the announcement date, enabling fans to secure physical and digital copies ahead of the worldwide release scheduled for April 30, 2021, through the band's independent label, Born & Bred Records.[6] This direct-to-consumer approach supported independent distribution channels, with early orders contributing to initial sales momentum without reliance on major label infrastructure.[47]In May 2021, shortly after the album's launch, the band released an official music video for "L-EE-B-O-Y", a track honoring their longtime bagpiper Lee Forshner, further extending the rollout of visual content tied to the record's personnel and themes.[48] This followed the inclusion of earlier preview singles like "Smash Shit Up" from January 2020, which had built anticipation during the initial COVID-19 lockdowns.
Marketing Strategies
The Dropkick Murphys employed a grassroots-oriented marketing approach for Turn Up That Dial, capitalizing on their established independent infrastructure via Born & Bred Records to engage directly with fans through digital channels rather than traditional major-label advertising. Central to the promotion was a free virtualalbum release party livestreamed on May 1, 2021, at 8:30 PM ET via YouTube, immediately following the album's April 30 street date, which drew viewers worldwide and featured live performances of new tracks to foster immediate communal excitement.[49][50] This event, sponsored by Death Wish Coffee, underscored the band's strategy of low-cost, high-access virtual experiences tailored to core audiences unable to attend physical shows amid ongoing pandemic restrictions.[51]Social media played a pivotal role in building pre-release momentum, with platforms like Facebook and Instagram hosting targeted countdown videos, preorder fulfillment updates, and fan-interaction posts that amplified organic sharing within punk and Celtic music communities.[52][53] The band's official website served as a hub for announcements, merchandise bundles, and direct-to-fan sales, enabling self-sustained promotion without reliance on external intermediaries. This method prioritized fan loyalty—built over decades through thematic alignment with working-class resilience—over broad media buys, achieving reach through word-of-mouth in niche networks often overlooked by mainstream outlets favoring high-profile acts.[54]Distribution to streaming services like Spotify ensured algorithmic visibility via playlist placements in punk and rock categories, though the campaign's efficacy stemmed more from the band's pre-existing listener base than paid pushes, as evidenced by sustained plays post-release without heavy algorithmic intervention. The independent model's success highlighted causal factors like direct fan engagement yielding higher conversion rates compared to hype-driven strategies, circumventing institutional preferences in media and academia for commercially polished narratives over authentic subcultural output.[55]
Initial Commercial Rollout
"Turn Up That Dial" was commercially launched on April 30, 2021, via the Dropkick Murphys' self-owned Born & Bred Records label, which facilitated a direct-to-fan distribution approach emphasizing preorders and bundled merchandise sales through the band's official store. This model diverged from the group's earlier reliance on external labels like Hellcat Records, granting fuller oversight of logistics and revenue streams while prioritizing fan engagement over traditional retail intermediaries.[6][54][56]Physical formats centered on collectible vinyl variants to drive initial demand, including a deluxe edition limited to 1,500 pink and green swirl LPs accompanied by a signed print, a 7-inch vinyl with two live tracks from St. Patrick's Day 2020, and two flexi-discs featuring additional content. Standard black vinyl, CD digipaks, and subsequent represses in clear with pink and green splatter followed, with production handled to support immediate availability via independent distributors. Digital versions were simultaneously released on platforms such as Spotify, [Apple Music](/page/Apple Music), and Bandcamp, enabling broad streaming access from launch day.[2][57][54]The rollout occurred amid lingering COVID-19 restrictions, prompting a shift to virtual launch events rather than in-person gatherings. A free live-streamed album release party took place on May 1, 2021, at 8:30 PM ET, featuring performances of tracks from the album and hosted via the band's platforms to connect with global audiences without physical venues. This approach aligned with the band's prior pandemic adaptations, such as streamed St. Patrick's Day shows, setting the stage for early digital metrics tracking through streams and direct sales data.[58][59]
Track Listing and Personnel
Standard Edition Tracks
The standard edition of Turn Up That Dial features 11 original tracks composed by the Dropkick Murphys, with production handled by Ted Hutt.[28][2] Released on April 30, 2021, through the band's own Born & Bred Records label, it was distributed in standard CD, 12-inch vinyl (black and colored variants), and digital download/streaming formats, totaling approximately 39 minutes in length.[60][4] The sequencing emphasizes upbeat anthems and narrative-driven songs reflective of the band's punk rock heritage, without any cover versions or guest appearances in the base release.[20]
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Turn Up That Dial"
3:42
2.
"L-EE-B-O-Y"
3:23
3.
"Middle Finger"
3:35
4.
"Queen of Suffolk County"
3:51
5.
"Mick Jones Nicked My Pudding"
2:38
6.
"H.B.D.M.F."
3:00
7.
"Good as Gold (St. Brendan's Fleet)"
3:18
8.
"The Bonny Swan"
3:00
9.
"The Captain's Daughter"
3:09
10.
"Curse of a Faithful Heart"
3:15
11.
"Jimmy Collins"
2:10
Key Contributors
Dropkick Murphys' core lineup for Turn Up That Dial, recorded in 2020 and released on April 30, 2021, consisted of Ken Casey on bass and co-lead vocals, Al Barr on co-lead vocals, Tim Brennan on guitar, accordion, tin whistle, piano, and backing vocals, Jeff DaRosa on guitar, banjo, mandolin, bouzouki, and backing vocals, James Lynch on guitar and backing vocals, and Matt Kelly on drums.[62] These members shaped the album's sound through Casey's propulsive bass lines and lyrical drive, Barr's and Casey's dual vocal aggression for punk anthems, Brennan's and DaRosa's multi-instrumental Celtic flourishes adding folk-punk texture, Lynch's rhythm and lead guitar for high-energy riffs, and Kelly's drumming for relentless tempo.[62][28]The production was led by Ted Hutt, a longtime collaborator who produced, mixed, and guided the sessions at Q Division Studios in Somerville, Massachusetts, emphasizing the band's raw energy while refining its hybrid punk-Celtic dynamics.[63][20] Hutt's role ensured cohesive soundstaging, with additional engineering by Ryan Mall and mastering by Dave Cooley, though the band's instrumental core remained the primary causal force in the album's distinctive vigor.[63] No major lineup departures occurred during recording, maintaining continuity from prior releases.[62]
Commercial Performance
Chart Achievements
"Turn Up That Dial" debuted at number 8 on the Billboard Top Album Sales chart, marking the band's entry into the top 10 of that ranking with 11,000 copies sold in its first week.[64] It also reached number 1 on the Billboard Independent Albums chart, highlighting its strong performance among independently released records.In the United Kingdom, the album peaked at number 60 on the Official Albums Chart but achieved higher placements in genre-specific and format-based rankings, including number 2 on the Official Rock & Metal Albums Chart, number 8 on the Official Independent Albums Chart, number 13 on the Official Vinyl Albums Chart, and number 20 on the Official Physical Albums Chart.[65][66][67][68][69] These positions reflect sustained visibility in punk and rock subcharts despite modest overall mainstream impact. The album did not achieve notable peaks in Ireland's official charts based on available data.[70]
Sales Data and Certifications
Turn Up That Dial achieved 11,000 units in pure album sales during its debut week in the United States, reflecting strong initial demand despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and reliance on direct-to-consumer channels through the band's independent Born & Bred Records label.[64] This figure underscored the album's physical sales momentum, bolstered by multiple vinyl variants including limited-edition pink and green swirl pressings and deluxe bundles with flexi-discs, which appealed to collectors and countered broader industry shifts toward digital consumption.[2]As of October 2025, the album has not attained major certifications such as RIAA Gold (500,000 units) or Platinum (1,000,000 units) in the United States, consistent with the band's independent release strategy that prioritizes fan-direct engagement over mainstream promotional infrastructure. Streaming performance has provided supplementary revenue, with the album accumulating streams on platforms like Spotify amid the band's overall catalog exceeding 1.5 billion total plays, though specific figures for Turn Up That Dial remain in the millions rather than tens of millions.[71] This sustained digital uptake, combined with physical sales resilience, highlights the album's viability for an established act operating outside major label ecosystems during a period of disrupted retail and live events.[54]
Reception and Analysis
Critical Evaluations
Critics lauded Turn Up That Dial for its vigorous Celtic punk energy and anthemic choruses, which offered communal uplift during the COVID-19 pandemic's isolation. AllMusic highlighted the album as a "rousing set" of reliable singalongs, emphasizing tracks like "Middle Finger" and "Smash Shit Up" for their raucous, crowd-pleasing appeal, with production that captures the band's instrumentation in sharp relief.[72] Kerrang! praised its role as a "welcome hug" from a band excelling at motivational pub rock, particularly timely for 2021's morale boost.[21] Aggregate professional scores reflected this positivity, averaging 81 out of 100 on Metacritic based on seven reviews.[73]Conversely, reviewers critiqued the album's reliance on familiar formulas, noting a dearth of fresh innovation relative to Dropkick Murphys' earlier output, such as 2005's The Warrior's Code. Punknews.org described it as a "slight return to form," appreciating the upbeat hooks but underscoring repetition in structure over boundary-pushing evolution. Outlets like The Young Folks observed that the band eschewed experimental sound or deeper lyrical risks, prioritizing straightforward party anthems, which some found skippable amid the consistency.[74] User aggregates, such as on Album of the Year, averaged around 70 out of 100, signaling competent delivery but limited breakthroughs in a discography spanning two decades.[75]
Fan and Cultural Responses
Fans appreciated the album's anthemic quality, particularly its suitability for communal sing-alongs during live performances and streams, aligning with Dropkick Murphys' tradition of high-energy, participatory punk rock. The title track "Turn Up That Dial" resonated in this context, with a live acoustic version from promotional events accumulating over 16,000 YouTube views, reflecting grassroots enthusiasm for its escapist theme of amplifying music amid hardship.[76] Online forums highlighted the record's appeal as a morale booster, echoing the band's working-class ethos without delving into polished production critiques typically reserved for professional reviews.[77]The album's release coincided with a free virtual concert stream on May 1, 2021, which sustained fan interaction during pandemic restrictions, drawing viewers to performances of new material like the title track.[49] A live rendition from this event later garnered nearly 200,000 YouTube views, underscoring direct fan access to the band's energetic delivery.[59]Criticisms emerged across ideological lines, with some right-leaning audience members decrying the album's explicit left-wing politics, including jabs at figures like Donald Trump, as overly didactic and alienating to broader working-class listeners.[43][78] Conversely, segments of the punk community, including self-identified leftists, viewed tracks as a dilution of the genre's raw edge, preferring the band's pre-2010s output for its unvarnished aggression over what they perceived as arena-friendly polish.[79]Reddit threads cataloged it among weaker entries in the discography, citing "stupid songs" and a shift from punk authenticity.[80] These divides highlighted tensions over thematic purity, with fans debating whether the record preserved Dropkick Murphys' anti-establishment roots or compromised them for accessibility.[78]Culturally, the album reinforced the band's role in sustaining Celtic punk's communal rituals, yet sparked discourse on political polarization within fan circles, where overt anti-conservative messaging amplified echo chambers rather than universal appeal.[78] Discussions on platforms like Reddit emphasized its sing-along hooks as a counter to lyrical preachiness, maintaining engagement despite splits.[77]
Achievements Versus Criticisms
Turn Up That Dial marked Dropkick Murphys' fourth consecutive top 10 debut on the Billboard 200, reflecting sustained fan loyalty within the punk and Celtic rock niches.[64] The album sold 11,000 pure copies in its first week, contributing to its chart placement amid a landscape dominated by streaming equivalents.[64] The title track emerged as a live staple, appearing regularly in setlists during the band's 2022 European tour and 2023 North American performances, such as at the Huntington Center in Toledo on October 22, 2023.[81]On Spotify, the title track has amassed over 4.4 million streams as of 2025, indicating enduring playlist rotation among rock and punk audiences, though modest compared to the band's signature hits like "I'm Shipping Up to Boston."[82] This endurance underscores the album's role in reinforcing the band's high-energy, communal appeal during tours and virtual events, including a 2021 livestream release party viewed millions of times.Critics have praised the album's rousing Celtic-influenced punk anthems and reliable singalongs, yet noted its strict adherence to the band's formula as potentially limiting innovation and broader crossover potential.[72] Lyrically, tracks like "Chosen Few" deliver politically charged commentary on events such as COVID-19 and leadership failures, while emotional ballads like "I Wish You Were Here" honor personal losses, but the predictability of working-class resilience narratives risks reinforcing genre conventions without fresh causal insights into socioeconomic dynamics.[72] Empirically, the album thrives in its core audience—evident in tour integrations and niche streaming—but shows weaker penetration into mainstream markets, with overall artist monthly listeners at 2.6 million dwarfed by pop-rock contemporaries.[83]
Expanded Editions and Variants
Additional Content
The expanded digital edition of Turn Up That Dial, released on March 18, 2022, adds three bonus tracks to the original album's 11 songs, resulting in a total of 14 tracks available exclusively through streaming platforms.[84] These include the band's punk-infused rendition of the folk anthem "We Shall Overcome," a cover of Larry Kirwan's "James Connolly," and a version of Gerry Cinnamon's "The Bonny."[84][55]The bonus tracks draw from previously released B-sides and covers, with "We Shall Overcome" serving as a standalone single issued on March 15, 2022, accompanied by a music video emphasizing themes of resilience and collective action.[84] Band frontman Ken Casey described the track's inclusion as an opportunity to reimagine the song—historically tied to labor unions and civil rights struggles—with a "loud, ballsy rock" arrangement to amplify its message of hope amid ongoing societal challenges.[84] This approach extends the album's pandemic-recorded material, which focused on optimism and defiance, by appending thematic continuations without modifying the core release.[35]Variants on Apple Music and Spotify provide the expanded content in stereo alongside 3D Dolby Atmos spatial audio mixes, enhancing immersion for digital listeners while maintaining the record's high-energy punk foundation.[85][55] The digital-only format prioritizes accessibility over physical production, allowing the band to share session-adjacent recordings that align with the original's intent of motivational anthems conceived during COVID-19 restrictions.[84]
Reissue Details
The album Turn Up That Dial by Dropkick Murphys has been reissued in multiple limited-edition vinyl formats since its original April 30, 2021, release, emphasizing colored pressings that appeal to collectors and maintain physical media demand.[6] A deluxe edition featured pink and green swirl vinyl, limited to 1,500 copies and including supplementary items such as a signed print and bonus flexi-discs.[86] Other variants include a U.S. store-exclusive greenvinyl pressing limited to 1,000 copies, a coke bottle green indie-exclusive edition, and a limited gold vinyl run.[87][88]A second pressing of the deluxe edition on clear vinyl with pink and green splatter was produced, limited to 2,000 copies, available through the band's official store and contributing to extended availability beyond initial stock depletion.[57] Additional represses, such as on clear vinyl, have appeared in subsequent years, with listings indicating ongoing production to meet collector interest. These variant pressings, often in runs of 1,000 to 2,000 units, underscore the album's collectibility, as evidenced by secondary market activity on platforms like eBay and Discogs, where colored editions command premiums over standard black vinyl.[2]Digitally, an expanded edition was released on March 18, 2022, exclusively in formats like AAC and available on streaming platforms including Apple Music, incorporating additional content to the core tracklist.[89][90] This digital variant supported broader accessibility and long-tail consumption, with high-resolution audio options further extending its digital footprint.[91] Reissues across formats have sustained sales momentum, as reflected in persistent availability on retailer sites like the official Dropkick Murphys store and independent outlets, facilitating incremental revenue from dedicated fanbases.[57][92]
Legacy and Performances
Live Interpretations
Tracks from Turn Up That Dial debuted in the band's virtual album release livestream on May 1, 2021, where the full set emphasized the album's energetic punk anthems amid ongoing pandemic restrictions.[49] This performance highlighted the title track's role in rallying remote audiences, with its driving rhythm and communal lyrics adapted for streamed sing-alongs.[50]Post-2021, album tracks became staples in live sets during tours from 2022 onward, including European festivals and co-headlining runs, amplifying the record's raw studio energy for in-person crowds through extended gang vocals and accordion-driven builds. The title track "Turn Up That Dial" frequently opened or anchored high-energy segments, as seen at Hellfest2022, where it propelled the set's pace with intensified instrumentation to match festival atmospheres.[93] Similar adaptations appeared in North American outings, such as the 2024 Australian tour with Alkaline Trio, where tracks like "Turn Up That Dial" sustained momentum amid shared punk billings.[94]Empirical setlist data indicates the title track appeared in over 20% of documented shows from 2022-2025, with higher frequency in thematic events; for instance, it featured in St. Patrick's Day performances, including the March 14, 2025, set at MGM Music Hall at Fenway, where it followed classics to maintain audience engagement and draw.[95] Other album cuts, such as those evoking communal resilience, recurred in these annual spectacles, reinforcing the band's tradition of blending new material with holiday fervor to sustain fan turnout.[96] This integration preserved the album's escapist themes in visceral, crowd-hyping renditions without altering core arrangements.
Broader Influence
Turn Up That Dial bolstered Celtic punk's endurance by exemplifying the genre's adaptability to digital streaming and pandemic disruptions, with the album's release coinciding with the band's virtual St. Patrick's Day performances that drew widespread online engagement and sustained fan interest.[97][98] This reinforced the viability of high-energy, roots-oriented punk amid reduced live venues, as the record's jaunty Celtic instrumentation and anthemic calls for resilience echoed in peer acts emphasizing similar themes of communal perseverance during isolation.[99][35]Within Dropkick Murphys' trajectory, the album represented a deliberate reversion to foundational Celtic punk elements following more experimental prior works, paving the way for stylistic diversification in later outputs like the acoustic, folk-infused 2022 tribute to Woody Guthrie.[25] By October 2025, it stood as a cornerstone of their catalog, underscoring the band's longevity through consistent thematic focus on labor and defiance, yet critiqued for entrenching conventional left-leaning narratives on class struggle without advancing novel political frameworks or addressing conservative working-class viewpoints.[44][100]The record's influence extended to cultural dialogues on punk's ideological boundaries, as the band's rejection of right-wing usage highlighted a normalization of progressive stances in the scene—prioritizing anti-fascist and pro-union motifs—while forgoing broader ideological pluralism that might incorporate right-leaning critiques of institutional overreach.[101][102] This approach, evident in tracks promoting unyielding optimism, inspired resilience motifs in subsequent Celtic punk releases but risked reinforcing echo chambers within the genre, per observers noting punk's historical yet uneven evolution beyond entrenched leftist paradigms.[103][104]