Some tours are just line-ups. Others feel like a genealogy chart for an entire genre. The Campaign for Musical Destruction tour falls firmly into the latter category. Doom, punk, thrash; three musical forces that collided violently in the 1980s to create grindcore, all represented on one bill before the genre’s undisputed pioneers took the stage. In Birmingham, the birthplace of heavy music itself, it felt especially fitting.
Four bands. Four different flavours of aggression. One absolutely relentless night.
Opening the night were Poland’s riff-obsessed doom merchants Dopelord, and they wasted absolutely no time dragging the room into a thick haze of fuzz and slow-burn heaviness. Their set opened with a surprise nod to psychedelic blues history with It Is So Nice to Get Stoned, originally by Ted Lucas, which they transformed into a lumbering doom invocation. From there, the band leaned fully into their Sabbath-worshipping DNA.
Tracks like The Chosen One and Headless Decapitator showcased the band’s ability to balance crushing heaviness with hypnotic groove. Their tone is enormous, bass rumbling like tectonic plates shifting beneath the floor while the guitars delivered creamy blues-soaked leads that floated above the riffs rather than cutting through them. The comparison to a doom-laden version of Mastodon isn’t far off, but Dopelord’s sound feels deliberately more lo-fi and ritualistic.
The highlight for many came when Hail Satan kicked in, instantly getting the Birmingham crowd chanting along with the band. It was one of those moments where doom’s theatricality met genuine crowd participation. Reptile Sun and Doom Bastards closed the set in glorious slow motion, riffs echoing off the venue walls like ancient machinery grinding into life.
Heavy, smoky, hypnotic doom; the perfect way to start a night dedicated to musical extremity.
The Varukers arrived like a Molotov cocktail thrown into the middle of the room. From the opening blasts of How Do You Sleep? and Led To The Slaughter, the band delivered a masterclass in politically charged hardcore punk.
Rat was on fiery form throughout, both vocally and in spirit, and early in the set he paid tribute to Birmingham’s own Ozzy Osbourne, dedicating Endless Destruction Line to the Prince Of Darkness, a moment that drew a roar of approval from the home crowd.
The band’s set was relentless. Die For Your Government, Murder, and Tortured By Their Lies landed like blunt force trauma, their themes of corruption, power and injustice feeling depressingly relevant decades after they were first written. When Rat introduced Nothing’s Changed, the point felt painfully clear.
Songs like Massacred Millions, Deadly Games, and Allegiance To None kept the momentum blisteringly fast, with the crowd responding in kind as the pit grew increasingly chaotic. The closing run of I Don’t Wanna Be A Victim and Protest To Survive was classic UK hardcore, defiant, furious and utterly uncompromising.
Short, sharp, and politically explosive, exactly how punk should be.
Next up were thrash veterans Whiplash, and if anyone in the room needed reminding why the genre exploded in the 80s, this set was the perfect refresher.
The band wasted no time tearing into Last Man Alive and Killing On Monroe Street, unleashing razor-sharp riffs and breakneck tempos that instantly lifted the room’s energy. Tony’s guitar tone was pure old-school thrash (biting and aggressive) while the rhythm section locked in with surgical precision.
One of the night’s standout moments came with Spit On Your Grave, its vicious riffing sending the pit into overdrive. Red Bomb and The Burning Of Atlanta followed, showcasing the band’s knack for combining technical thrash precision with sheer adrenaline.
The band’s set was relentless. Die For Your Government, Murder, and Tortured By Their Lies landed like blunt force trauma, their themes of corruption, power and injustice feeling depressingly relevant decades after they were first written. When Rat introduced Nothing’s Changed, the point felt painfully clear.
Songs like Massacred Millions, Deadly Games, and Allegiance To None kept the momentum blisteringly fast, with the crowd responding in kind as the pit grew increasingly chaotic. The closing run of I Don’t Wanna Be A Victim and Protest To Survive was classic UK hardcore, defiant, furious and utterly uncompromising.
Short, sharp, and politically explosive, exactly how punk should be.
Next up were thrash veterans Whiplash, and if anyone in the room needed reminding why the genre exploded in the 80s, this set was the perfect refresher.
The band wasted no time tearing into Last Man Alive and Killing On Monroe Street, unleashing razor-sharp riffs and breakneck tempos that instantly lifted the room’s energy. Tony’s guitar tone was pure old-school thrash (biting and aggressive) while the rhythm section locked in with surgical precision.
One of the night’s standout moments came with Spit On Your Grave, its vicious riffing sending the pit into overdrive. Red Bomb and The Burning Of Atlanta followed, showcasing the band’s knack for combining technical thrash precision with sheer adrenaline.
Birmingham’s own Exorcism were spotted watching from side stage, a neat passing of the torch moment. Meanwhile, Will’s finger-picked bass passages were a joy to behold, pulling the mind back to Cliff Burton and his enduring influence on thrash’s musicality. It added a welcome musical depth among the speed and aggression.
The closing barrage of Walk The Plank, Thrashquake, Nailed To The Cross, and the immortal Power Thrashing Death turned the room into a full-scale thrash celebration.
The drummer turned into a signing booth post-set, autographing anything thrown his way; CDs, clothing, arms, and yes, even cheeks. Try getting that at a seated show!
Let’s get the bias out of the way early: Napalm Death are one of the most important bands in extreme music, and one of my personal favourites, nights like this make it very clear why.
From the moment they launched into Instinct Of Survival the room exploded. The opening run of Strong-Arm, Continuing War On Stupidity, and Everyday Pox was relentless — a blur of blast beats and politically charged fury delivered at warp speed.
Barney, as always, was in constant motion. Watching him perform is like witnessing someone who never stopped running laps in school PE, either that or he genuinely believes the stage floor is lava; his energy never dropped for a second. The band acknowledged bassist Shane Embury’s absence, with Adam Clarkson stepping in admirably and clearly enjoying every second of the chaos.
Highlights came thick and fast: Suffer The Children had the crowd roaring along, Greed Killing and Incinerator detonated the pit once again, and Scum remains one of the most iconic grindcore tracks ever written. The band even unleashed You Suffer, still famously the shortest song in the world, which somehow still manages to generate one of the biggest cheers of the night. Their cover of Nazi Punks Fuck Off by Dead Kennedys was delivered with ferocious conviction, the entire crowd shouting the chorus back loud and proud.
The closing barrage of Walk The Plank, Thrashquake, Nailed To The Cross, and the immortal Power Thrashing Death turned the room into a full-scale thrash celebration.
The drummer turned into a signing booth post-set, autographing anything thrown his way; CDs, clothing, arms, and yes, even cheeks. Try getting that at a seated show!
Let’s get the bias out of the way early: Napalm Death are one of the most important bands in extreme music, and one of my personal favourites, nights like this make it very clear why.
From the moment they launched into Instinct Of Survival the room exploded. The opening run of Strong-Arm, Continuing War On Stupidity, and Everyday Pox was relentless — a blur of blast beats and politically charged fury delivered at warp speed.
Barney, as always, was in constant motion. Watching him perform is like witnessing someone who never stopped running laps in school PE, either that or he genuinely believes the stage floor is lava; his energy never dropped for a second. The band acknowledged bassist Shane Embury’s absence, with Adam Clarkson stepping in admirably and clearly enjoying every second of the chaos.
Highlights came thick and fast: Suffer The Children had the crowd roaring along, Greed Killing and Incinerator detonated the pit once again, and Scum remains one of the most iconic grindcore tracks ever written. The band even unleashed You Suffer, still famously the shortest song in the world, which somehow still manages to generate one of the biggest cheers of the night. Their cover of Nazi Punks Fuck Off by Dead Kennedys was delivered with ferocious conviction, the entire crowd shouting the chorus back loud and proud.
Closing with Persona Non Grata / Smear Campaign, Napalm Death left the stage having delivered exactly what the tour promised: musical destruction. And on Birmingham soil, it felt especially powerful.
Barney has spoken recently about stopping when it feels forced. On this evidence, that time is nowhere near. Whether it was the last night of the tour, the pull of home turf, or simply a band still utterly in love with what they do, Napalm Death were unstoppable.
Four genres. Four bands. One lineage.
A spectacular display of musical destruction ; delivered with precision, passion and just enough chaos to remind us why this music matters in the first place.
Barney has spoken recently about stopping when it feels forced. On this evidence, that time is nowhere near. Whether it was the last night of the tour, the pull of home turf, or simply a band still utterly in love with what they do, Napalm Death were unstoppable.
Four genres. Four bands. One lineage.
A spectacular display of musical destruction ; delivered with precision, passion and just enough chaos to remind us why this music matters in the first place.

