I have to confess that Booze & Glory have been a band that I have never truly listened to over the past few years or so, not through anything other than having a band name that conjures up football terraces, lads down the pub having a knees up and stomping out anthems. This kind of punk rock has never really pricked up my ears and excited the brain in the same way that a good blast of Bad Religion or The Damned would, yet it does have its place in my collection and within the punk family. Songs that unite a generation have always been at the core of punk from the beginning, politics and screaming against the system were covered, so having the bands that simply bring the people together and celebrate their identity is where bands like Booze & Glory excel, conviction is ...