ALBUM REVIEW: Jenkem by The Dwarves

There is a distinct survival instinct required to outlast your own notoriety. For decades, The Dwarves have operated as one of underground music’s most volatile anomalies. Banned, censored, and gleefully nihilistic, yet possessing a level of sharp musicianship that their chaotic reputation frequently obscures. Their latest album, Jenkem (June 5th) doesn’t look back with a sense of cozy nostalgia. It instead lands as a fierce and breakneck reminder that the band is still entirely unbothered by convention and fully in control of their specific brand of auditory violence.

Rather than leaning into bloated arrangements, the album delivers a barrage of fourteen tracks that scream by in less than twenty minutes. The production, handled by Blag Dahlia and mixed by Andy Carpenter, injects a level of modern sonic clarity that cuts straight through the noise. The guitars slice cleanly through the mix while the rhythm section is given plenty of room to hit with maximum force. On “We Are The Scene,” the band delivers an abrasive and unapologetic declaration of who they are, like it or not, and it proves their speed and aggression haven’t eroded with time.

The structural integrity of Jenkem lies in its sheer brevity and lack of filter. Tracks like “Drug Lust,” “Psychosis Tripping,” and the ruthlessly “I’m Dead” show the band compressing decades of underground grit into short and sharp shocks that hit quickly and get out of the way. It sounds less like a legacy act going through the motions and more like a contemporary disruption. It’s a reminder that their songwriting remains just as confrontational as it was during their early days.

Jenkem doesn’t invite casual listening, nor does it ask for industry validation. It simply stands as a necessary restoration of pure and unfiltered punk rock defiance. Long after their contemporaries have softened or faded into the background, The Dwarves remain a singular and unpredictable presence, proving that some bands don’t need to adapt to the times when the music is built to survive the wreckage.

Catch The Dwarves live
06/12 — Austin, TX @ Austin Noise Fest w/ Prong
06/13 — Dallas, TX @ Dusty’s
06/14 — San Francisco, CA @ Bottom of the Hill w/ The Pandoras
06/17 — Barcelona, ES @ Razzmatazz 3
06/18 — Valencia, ES @ 16 Toneladas
06/19 — Vitoria, ES @ Azkena Rock Festival
06/20 — Tours, FR @ Bateau Ivre w/ Eyehategod
06/21 — Clisson, FR @ Hellfest
06/23 — Utrecht, NL @ DB
06/24 — Düsseldorf, DE @ Pitcher
06/25 — Haarlem, NL @ Patronaat w/ Eyehategod
06/26 — Ysselstyn, NL @ Jera On Air
06/27 — Hamburg, DE @ Hedi
06/28 — Berlin, DE @ BiNuu w/ Eyehategod
06/29 — Regensburg, DE @ Alte Mälzerei w/ Eyehategod
07/01 — Trutnov, CZ @ Obscene Extreme Festival
07/03 — Zabok, HR @ Regenerator
07/04 — Pula, HR @ Monteparadiso w/ Eyehategod
07/08 — Athens, GR @ Gazarte Ground Stage
07/09 — Prolsdorf, DE @ Krach am Bach Festival
07/12 — Gierle, BE @ Sjock Fest
07/18 — Theley, DE @ Backside Festival
09/04 — Philadelphia, PA
09/05 — Brooklyn, NY
09/06 — Montague, MA @ RPM Fest
09/11 — Scottsdale, AZ w/ The Exploited, Total Chaos
09/12 — Los Angeles, CA w/ The Exploited, Total Chaos
09/13 — Murrieta, CA w/ Total Chaos
09/16 — Las Vegas, NV w/ Total Chaos
09/17 — Orange County, CA w/ The Exploited, Total Chaos
09/18 — San Francisco, CA w/ The Exploited
09/20 — Sacramento, CA w/ The Exploited