Can't Please 'Em All

General Chaos

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Sale - Sale price $33.99 CAD Regular price
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Description

Can't Please 'Em All is the second album by General Chaos, a punk trio from Montreal formed in 2022 — when its three members were just twelve years old — released on May 8, 2026 via Stomp Records. Guitarist and vocalist Constantin Blondy, bassist Aude Deniger, and drummer Rémi Jacques are all sixteen at the time of the album's release, and their story has attracted attention not merely as a novelty but because the music backs up the hype. They built their reputation through early sets at Pouzza Fest and all-ages rooms across Québec and Ontario, were profiled by La Presse under the headline "Quand le punk carbure au Kool-Aid" ("When punk runs on Kool-Aid"), and released their debut LP Outta My Way with Montreal recording mainstay Ryan Battistuzzi. For Can't Please 'Em All, they returned to the studio with Battistuzzi at Le Stuzzio and brought in Fred Jacques of The Sainte Catherines to produce — a statement of intent that signals the band's deep roots in Montreal's punk ecosystem, a city that raised The Nils, The Asexuals, Planet Smashers, and The Sainte Catherines themselves. The album was recorded in three days and sounds like it: raw, immediate, and entirely unpolished.

Sonically, the record sits at the intersection of Rancid's street-level punch, the Descendents' urgency, early Green Day's snap, and the political edge of Propagandhi — two-to-three-minute burners with bass pushed forward, drums locked in, and guitar kept lean and direct. Lead single "Busted" captures the tension between independence and consequence ("Don't wanna get caught but I got busted / Speak the words on my mind not gonna get silenced"), while the second advance single "The Idiots Have Taken Over" takes aim at political dysfunction south of the Canadian border and the broken public education system in Québec, written in one practice session two weeks before the band entered the studio. As Tim "Napalm" Stegall observed of that track, the song features a full verse dropout over feedback and a minimal drum pattern — "a dub instinct that most veteran punk bands never develop" — suggesting ears and compositional awareness that belie the band's age. Across the album, the lyrical targets include political polarization, consumer culture, straight edge conviction, and generational frustration, delivered with the kind of direct, unfiltered writing that the best punk has always demanded. "No filler. No polish. No irony layer," as Stomp Records puts it. "Just clarity and pace."

Can't Please 'Em All is the second album by General Chaos, a punk trio from Montreal formed in 2022 — when its three members were just twelve years old — released on May 8, 2026 via Stomp Records. Guitarist and vocalist Constantin Blondy, bassist Aude Deniger, and drummer Rémi Jacques are all sixteen at the time of the album's release, and their story has attracted attention not merely as a novelty but because the music backs up the hype. They built their reputation through early sets at Pouzza Fest and all-ages rooms across Québec and Ontario, were profiled by La Presse under the headline "Quand le punk carbure au Kool-Aid" ("When punk runs on Kool-Aid"), and released their debut LP Outta My Way with Montreal recording mainstay Ryan Battistuzzi. For Can't Please 'Em All, they returned to the studio with Battistuzzi at Le Stuzzio and brought in Fred Jacques of The Sainte Catherines to produce — a statement of intent that signals the band's deep roots in Montreal's punk ecosystem, a city that raised The Nils, The Asexuals, Planet Smashers, and The Sainte Catherines themselves. The album was recorded in three days and sounds like it: raw, immediate, and entirely unpolished.

Sonically, the record sits at the intersection of Rancid's street-level punch, the Descendents' urgency, early Green Day's snap, and the political edge of Propagandhi — two-to-three-minute burners with bass pushed forward, drums locked in, and guitar kept lean and direct. Lead single "Busted" captures the tension between independence and consequence ("Don't wanna get caught but I got busted / Speak the words on my mind not gonna get silenced"), while the second advance single "The Idiots Have Taken Over" takes aim at political dysfunction south of the Canadian border and the broken public education system in Québec, written in one practice session two weeks before the band entered the studio. As Tim "Napalm" Stegall observed of that track, the song features a full verse dropout over feedback and a minimal drum pattern — "a dub instinct that most veteran punk bands never develop" — suggesting ears and compositional awareness that belie the band's age. Across the album, the lyrical targets include political polarization, consumer culture, straight edge conviction, and generational frustration, delivered with the kind of direct, unfiltered writing that the best punk has always demanded. "No filler. No polish. No irony layer," as Stomp Records puts it. "Just clarity and pace."

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0626177020926 0626177020919
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
Stomp Records Stomp Records
detail icon genre
Genre :
Rock/Pop
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in 12.5 x 12.5 x 0.5 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
90 g 250 g

Can't Please 'Em All

General Chaos

Sale - Sale price $20.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $20.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $33.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $33.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

Can't Please 'Em All is the second album by General Chaos, a punk trio from Montreal formed in 2022 — when its three members were just twelve years old — released on May 8, 2026 via Stomp Records. Guitarist and vocalist Constantin Blondy, bassist Aude Deniger, and drummer Rémi Jacques are all sixteen at the time of the album's release, and their story has attracted attention not merely as a novelty but because the music backs up the hype. They built their reputation through early sets at Pouzza Fest and all-ages rooms across Québec and Ontario, were profiled by La Presse under the headline "Quand le punk carbure au Kool-Aid" ("When punk runs on Kool-Aid"), and released their debut LP Outta My Way with Montreal recording mainstay Ryan Battistuzzi. For Can't Please 'Em All, they returned to the studio with Battistuzzi at Le Stuzzio and brought in Fred Jacques of The Sainte Catherines to produce — a statement of intent that signals the band's deep roots in Montreal's punk ecosystem, a city that raised The Nils, The Asexuals, Planet Smashers, and The Sainte Catherines themselves. The album was recorded in three days and sounds like it: raw, immediate, and entirely unpolished.

Sonically, the record sits at the intersection of Rancid's street-level punch, the Descendents' urgency, early Green Day's snap, and the political edge of Propagandhi — two-to-three-minute burners with bass pushed forward, drums locked in, and guitar kept lean and direct. Lead single "Busted" captures the tension between independence and consequence ("Don't wanna get caught but I got busted / Speak the words on my mind not gonna get silenced"), while the second advance single "The Idiots Have Taken Over" takes aim at political dysfunction south of the Canadian border and the broken public education system in Québec, written in one practice session two weeks before the band entered the studio. As Tim "Napalm" Stegall observed of that track, the song features a full verse dropout over feedback and a minimal drum pattern — "a dub instinct that most veteran punk bands never develop" — suggesting ears and compositional awareness that belie the band's age. Across the album, the lyrical targets include political polarization, consumer culture, straight edge conviction, and generational frustration, delivered with the kind of direct, unfiltered writing that the best punk has always demanded. "No filler. No polish. No irony layer," as Stomp Records puts it. "Just clarity and pace."

Can't Please 'Em All is the second album by General Chaos, a punk trio from Montreal formed in 2022 — when its three members were just twelve years old — released on May 8, 2026 via Stomp Records. Guitarist and vocalist Constantin Blondy, bassist Aude Deniger, and drummer Rémi Jacques are all sixteen at the time of the album's release, and their story has attracted attention not merely as a novelty but because the music backs up the hype. They built their reputation through early sets at Pouzza Fest and all-ages rooms across Québec and Ontario, were profiled by La Presse under the headline "Quand le punk carbure au Kool-Aid" ("When punk runs on Kool-Aid"), and released their debut LP Outta My Way with Montreal recording mainstay Ryan Battistuzzi. For Can't Please 'Em All, they returned to the studio with Battistuzzi at Le Stuzzio and brought in Fred Jacques of The Sainte Catherines to produce — a statement of intent that signals the band's deep roots in Montreal's punk ecosystem, a city that raised The Nils, The Asexuals, Planet Smashers, and The Sainte Catherines themselves. The album was recorded in three days and sounds like it: raw, immediate, and entirely unpolished.

Sonically, the record sits at the intersection of Rancid's street-level punch, the Descendents' urgency, early Green Day's snap, and the political edge of Propagandhi — two-to-three-minute burners with bass pushed forward, drums locked in, and guitar kept lean and direct. Lead single "Busted" captures the tension between independence and consequence ("Don't wanna get caught but I got busted / Speak the words on my mind not gonna get silenced"), while the second advance single "The Idiots Have Taken Over" takes aim at political dysfunction south of the Canadian border and the broken public education system in Québec, written in one practice session two weeks before the band entered the studio. As Tim "Napalm" Stegall observed of that track, the song features a full verse dropout over feedback and a minimal drum pattern — "a dub instinct that most veteran punk bands never develop" — suggesting ears and compositional awareness that belie the band's age. Across the album, the lyrical targets include political polarization, consumer culture, straight edge conviction, and generational frustration, delivered with the kind of direct, unfiltered writing that the best punk has always demanded. "No filler. No polish. No irony layer," as Stomp Records puts it. "Just clarity and pace."

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