British punk trio The Virginmarys drops a new album that confronts real life issues with raw sound, fury, and honesty.

Hailing from Macclesfield, England, the Virginmarys make anthems that scream with all the potent sound and fury of modern punk acts, brimming with the honesty of prime British rock of the early 1970’s.

In early May the energetic three-piece released its sophomore album, Divides, via Wind-up Records. A kicking and screaming collection of songs, all unapologetically honest, Divides​ is a confronting reflection of life today in modern Britain. It's a call to arms, asking for anyone who has ever felt disillusioned to  "stand up and unite in love - not to divide in fear".

The album is the highly-anticipated follow up to their 2013 debut LP, King of Conflict.  Littered with themes that touch on the state of politics in their homeland of Britain,  to their own experiences dealing with mental health or issues with addiction, the band members wanted to create an album that would serve as a heart-on-your-sleeve style account of their lives in 2016, and the divides they encounter each day.

"This album has been filtered through the anger and frustration of living in a crumbling and fucked up society run by those who couldn't care less whether you live, die, eat or starve so long as their own status and life style is maintained within a self serving system," muses band frontman Ally Dickaty on the themes that carve through the record.

Reflecting on the bands influences on the record, the three-piece looked to the past. "A big part of what was so exciting about rock bands and writers of the 60s and 70s that helped shape music was that they weren't afraid to sing about the world around them," says Ally, who counts artists like Bob Dylan and Black Sabbath, the Beatles to the Sex Pistols as influences.

Dickaty sums up Divides with equal passion - ”“The overall theme of the album is the divides among people, freedom and power, injustice, inequality and corruption. Anger, disillusionment, injustice, frustration about where I feel we are in today's society. History repeating. Restraint by systems that benefit the few and the choices left to take part or be cast aside and face persecution. The rise of depression and anxiety and use of anti-depressants and drugs across the globe. Disillusion in politicians and democracy. There's a lot of divides with us in Britain, many created by the government and media turning people against one another. We are brainwashed with who to love, who to fear, who is good and who is evil.”

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