Mike McColgan era (1996–1998) Dropkick Murphys were originally formed in 1996 in
Quincy, Massachusetts, initially consisting of lead vocalist
Mike McColgan, bassist/vocalist
Ken Casey, guitarist
Rick Barton, and drummer
Jeff Erna (who was replaced the next year by Matt Kelly). The band was named after
Dr. John "Dropkick" Murphy's alcohol-detoxification facility. The "Dropkick Murphys" first started playing in the basement of a friend's barbershop and soon began to tour and record. They received their first big break when
the Mighty Mighty Bosstones selected them as the opening act for their 1997 tour in support of ''
Let's Face It''. After putting out a series of EPs (which included their 1997 debut
Boys on the Docks), they were signed by
Hellcat Records in 1997 and made their debut for the label on the very first ''Give 'Em the Boot
label sampler album that same year. In 1998, they released their first full-length album, Do or Die'', which was produced by
Rancid's
Lars Frederiksen. The band's only full release to feature their founding lineup. Lead singer Mike McColgan left the band in 1998 during the middle of a US tour with
the Business. According to McColgan, he wanted to follow in the footsteps of his uncle and join the
Boston Fire Department, which he eventually did in 2001. The band gave a different explanation for McColgan's departure in the liner notes of their 1998 release
Curse of a Fallen Soul: "We'd like to take this time to officially let you know that Mike McColgan, our former lead singer has quit the band. We apologize to anyone who was a fan of Mike as our singer, however contrary to popular rumor, he did not leave the band to join the fire department. Mike left the band because he is no longer interested in being a member of this band or the movement of which we are a part." The band explained that their music is very serious to them and that it did not feel right having a singer who was going through the motions. Even McColgan felt that the band deserved a singer who was emotionally invested in the music. McColgan returned to the punk scene in 2002 as singer of the
Street Dogs.
Hellcat years (1998–2007) After McColgan's departure, the band searched for a replacement but did not have much luck.
Al Barr, lead singer for
The Bruisers was well aware of the Dropkick Murphys and at first actually resented the fact that the Dropkick Murphys were quickly becoming one of the biggest bands in the area, opening for all the bigger bands to come through, a slot Barr and the Bruisers would usually have obtained. Barr was informed of McColgan's departure and quickly assumed that the band was finished. However he was contacted by Derek TC NYSR producer-founder of the groundbreaking 1990s Oi!-Skampilation series at
the Middle East Club in
Cambridge and told to contact Ken Casey right away. Barr auditioned for the band, first performing a new song titled "10 Years of Service" and was offered the job right away which he accepted. Barr's first release with the band was the 1998 single for "Curse of a Fallen Soul", a song that also would appear on their upcoming album. On March 9, 1999, the band released their second studio album and first with Barr, ''
The Gang's All Here''. The album featured more of a hardcore–street punk sound closer to that of Barr's former band, The Bruisers and more of an Irish influence than on their debut album. The band gained their first mainstream exposure when the video for their single "10 Years of Service" received airplay on the
MTV show
120 Minutes. The band set out on a year-long tour to support the album. In late 1999, the band along with
The Business, released a split single (as McBusiness) titled, "Mob Mentality" in 1999. A year later they released a full-length album of the same name featuring the two bands covering each other's songs along with songs from other artists. Dropkick Murphys also re-recorded their own song "Boys on the Docks" with Al Barr on vocals marking the third different recording of the song. As the band began the process of recording their third album in 2000, Rick Barton decided to quit during the recording sessions. In 2014, Barton discussed his departure saying "Myself and Kenny ended up hating each other. We've since made amends, but you know, touring in a band for four straight years... that same old story." With Barton gone, the band added four new members which included former
Ducky Boys guitarist
James Lynch, who joined shortly prior to Barton's departure, 17-year-old guitarist
Marc Orrell,
mandolin and
tin whistle player
Ryan Foltz and
bagpipe player Robbie "Spicy McHaggis" Medeiros, whose nickname was inspired by a
McDonald's menu item while the band was on a tour in
Scotland, would join the band as their new full-time bagpipe player replacing Joe Delaney, who played on their debut album, but could not tour with or commit full-time to the band. With a new line-up in place, the band spent the rest of 2000 recording their third album.
Sing Loud, Sing Proud!, the band's third album, was released on February 9, 2001. The album showcased the band's developing sound and new lineup (Rick Barton was featured on three of the album's tracks) and included collaborations with
Pogues frontman
Shane MacGowan and
Cock Sparrer's Colin McFaull. The album would feature the singles and music videos for "The Spicy McHaggis Jig", "The Gauntlet" and a cover of "
The Wild Rover" and featured the
Boston College fight song, "
For Boston", which would go on to become one of the band's most performed show openers. The band embarked on one of their biggest tours at the time. In 2002, the band recorded three shows at the Avalon Ballroom during St. Patricks Day weekend, a weekend performance of shows in their hometown of Boston that would become an annual and must see event for the band and their fans. The result of the recording was the band's first live album, ''
Live on St. Patrick's Day from Boston, MA'' which was released in September 2002. In 2002, former lead singer Mike McColgan formed the band
Street Dogs. The first incarnation of the line-up would also feature Jeff Erna, the original drummer for the Dropkick Murphys. The band released their debut album,
Savin Hill, in 2003. The song "Stand Up" featured guest appearances by Ken Casey and Al Barr. Casey was originally asked to produce the album; however, he was too busy with the Dropkick Murphys. After the
Sing Loud, Sing Proud tour in early 2003, McHaggis decided to quit the band and was replaced by Canadian piper
Scruffy Wallace. Foltz would depart soon after (though he made an appearance in the music video for "Gonna Be A Blackout Tonight", a song featured on the band's next record). Multi-instrumentalist,
Tim Brennan was recruited to replace Foltz and has been with the band ever since. 2005
Blackout, the band's fourth album, was released on June 10, 2003. The album included the minor radio hit "
Walk Away", as well as the fan favorite song "
Fields of Athenry". The band also re-recorded "The Dirty Glass". The song was previously released the prior year on
Face to Face vs. Dropkick Murphys with
Kay Hanley as a guest vocalist. The re-recorded version featured vocals from Stephanie Dougherty (Deadly Sins). Dougherty became an unofficial member of the band and would also join them on tour working their merchandise table until departing the band in 2009 (although she would return for random performances of the song following her departure). The song "Time To Go" was written about the
Boston Bruins, and in November 2003 the band performed the song live at the
TD Garden during intermission at a Bruins game.
Blackout included a special bonus DVD with the music video for "Gonna Be A Blackout Tonight" along with two live clips filmed during the 2002 St. Patrick Day shows. It featured the trailer for the band's then untitled upcoming DVD which would eventually be titled
On the Road With the Dropkick Murphys and released in March 2004. The tour to support the album featured the band appearing on the 2003
Warped Tour. For the 2004 baseball season the band released a re-working of a century-old
Boston Red Sox fan anthem, "
Tessie". "Tessie" was used in the major motion picture
Fever Pitch and was included on the
EA Sports video game
MVP Baseball 2005 soundtrack. The band was invited to the
Fever Pitch premiere of the movie which was held at
Fenway Park where the video was also shot. The song continues to be played at Red Sox games along with
Dirty Water after games the team wins. "Tessie" also was the first release of the band to feature Tim Brennan and Scruffy Wallace. In 2005, Dropkick Murphys released
Singles Collection Volume 2, featuring covers, B-sides, and other material that didn't make it onto previous albums, and the band contributed a recording of "We Got the Power" to
Rock Against Bush, Vol. 2, an outtake from the
Blackout album. ''
The Warrior's Code'', the band's fifth and final album for Hellcat, was released on June 21, 2005, and made its debut at number 49 on the album charts, which at the time was the highest debut for a Dropkick Murphys album. The album features the singles "Sunshine Highway" and "The Warrior's Code" as well as the bonus track "Tessie". The album also featured a re-recorded version of "
I'm Shipping Up to Boston", a song originally recorded for the band's "Fields of Athenry" single. The song featured lyrics from a
Woody Guthrie poem the band found in his archives. The song was featured in the 2006
Academy Award-winning film
The Departed.. Two videos, one with and one without footage from
The Departed, were made due to overwhelming response to the song, which became at the time the band's first and biggest charting single (at the time) reaching number 1 on the
Bubbling Under Hot 100. The song helped introduce Dropkick Murphys to an even bigger mainstream audience thanks to the film and soundtrack. The song also became the walk-up song of Boston Red Sox player
Jonathan Papelbon, who danced an
Irish jig to the song several times throughout the 2007
Boston Red Sox World Series Championship season. During the team's victory parade, Papelbon did the jig while the band played the song on the same float. In 2012 the band said that since Papelbon signed with the Philadelphia Phillies, he could no longer use the song, as it was a "Boston song". They hoped the new Red Sox closer
Andrew Bailey would use it, but both Bailey and his replacement,
Koji Uehara had different songs.
Washington Nationals' second baseman
Daniel Murphy also used it as a walk-up song.
Born & Bred (2007–2022) playing guitar in 2007 The band's sixth album,
The Meanest of Times, was released on September 18, 2007, on the band's own label, Born & Bred Records. It marked the band's first album to not be released through Hellcat.
The Meanest of Times debuted at No. 20 in the U.S., their highest chart debut to date. The first single, "
The State of Massachusetts", became the band's band second number 1 single on the
Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart (and their last on that chart) and reached number fourteen on the
Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart giving them their highest ever position on that chart as well. The song was also used as the opening theme to the MTV show
Nitro Circus; it reached No. 83 on the
Rolling Stone Top 100 songs of 2007.. Following a tour to support the album, guitarist
Marc Orrell announced in January 2008 that he was leaving the band after eight years. Orrell said of his departure "I'm very grateful for everything playing with DKM has brought me and I'm sad to be going but I feel like the time has come for me to try working on different styles of music and some of my own projects, I'm ready to spread my wings as they say." Tim Brennan replaced Orrell as a full-time guitarist while multi-instrumentalist
Jeff DaRosa was introduced as a new member of the band. The re-configured line-up continued to tour into 2008. Their show in
Pawtucket, Rhode Island, had a sellout crowd of 10,060 which according to the band was their largest ever. On April 22, 2009, the band appeared on stage with
Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band during their stop in Boston on the
Working on a Dream Tour. The band joined in on Springsteen's songs "
Glory Days" and "American Land". During the show, guitarist Tim Brennan proposed to his girlfriend Diana onstage, which was followed by a performance of the Springsteen song "So Young And in Love". The next month the band opened for
Aerosmith at the
Comcast Center in
Mansfield, Massachusetts at a "Hometown Heroes" concert; they later joined Aerosmith onstage to perform "Dirty Water". ". On January 1, 2010, the band gave a performance of "I'm Shipping Up to Boston" before the
Boston Bruins–
Philadelphia Flyers NHL Winter Classic, held at Boston's
Fenway Park. Two months later on March 16, 2010, the band released their second live album,
Live on Lansdowne, Boston MA. The album also featured the band's first full-length live DVD. The album made its debut at No. 25 in the U.S. charts, making it their second-highest-charting album at the time. In December 2010, "The Warrior's Code", the title track from the 2005 album of the same name, was briefly featured in the
Academy Award-nominated film
The Fighter. The film is the story of
Micky Ward, a boxer from
Lowell, Massachusetts, who is the subject of the song and appears on the cover of ''The Warrior's Code
album. The song was also featured in the trailer for the comedy Your Highness''. In February 2011, "Barroom Hero", from the band's debut album, was featured in the Academy Award-nominated documentary
Restrepo, making it the band's third song to be featured in a film which was nominated for an Academy Award. " The band released their seventh studio album,
Going Out in Style, on March 1, 2011. The album debuted at number 6 on the
Billboard 200 – the highest position ever for a Dropkick Murphys album–and sold 43,259 copies in the U.S. in its first week. The album features guest appearances by
Bruce Springsteen,
Fat Mike,
Chris Cheney, and
Lenny Clarke. The album's title track was released as the first single and was followed by "Memorial Day" and "Sunday Hardcore Matinee" as singles. The band began an extensive tour to support the album which included the
Shamrock-N-Roll Festival in September 2011. The opening bands on that tour included
Chuck Ragan,
the Mahones, the Parkington Sisters, various local acts and boxer Mickey Ward giving boxing demonstrations. The co-headlining act on the nine-date tour was Mike McColgan's Street Dogs. This was the first time the two bands would tour together other than appearances on festival lineups such as the
Warped Tour. McColgan joined his former band onstage for the first time in thirteen years for performances of songs including "Barroom Hero" and "Far Way Coast" from
Do or Die. The band released an expanded version of the album titled
Going Out in Style: Fenway Park Bonus Edition on March 13, 2012, that featured a twenty-song bonus CD of a show performed at
Fenway Park.
Signed and Sealed in Blood, the band's eighth album, was released on January 8, 2013. "
Rose Tattoo", the album's first single, was released on November 7, 2012, and became one of the band's most popular songs despite it failing to chart. The
Christmas inspired "The Season's Upon Us" was released as the album's second single on December 18, 2012, and became the band's third highest-charting single reaching number twenty-four on the
Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart. The album made its debut at number nine on the charts giving the band their second straight top ten charting album and second highest-charting album to date. "The Boys Are Back" was released as the album's third single in January 2013 and was followed by the album's fourth and final single, "Out of our Heads" in September 2013 and was also used as the opening theme song for the 2013 release show ''
Boston's Finest''. "Prisoner's Song" was also featured in commercials for
Captain Morgan around this time as well. The band performed their annual St. Patrick's Day tour in 2013, which culminated in the band performing at their largest headlining show to date, held in the U.S. at
TD Garden in Boston. On May 14, 2013, the band released a re-recorded version of "Rose Tattoo" with Bruce Springsteen. The song was featured on their
Rose Tattoo: For Boston Charity EP, which was released in response to the
Boston Marathon bombing that happened a month earlier. The single reached number twenty-five on the
Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart making it the band's fourth highest-charting single and as of 2025 their final charting single in the
United States. In 2013, former founding Dropkick Murphys members Mike McColgan and Rick Barton formed the group FM359 making the first time McColgan and Barton had worked together in over fifteen years since McColgan quit the Dropkick Murphys in 1998. Their debut album,
Truth, Love and Liberty, was released in January 2014. In October 2014, the band gave a special nine-song performance aboard the
USS Constitution during its final voyage of 2014 and in honor of the historic ship's 217th birthday. After the band's performance on November 16, 2014, in
San Antonio, Texas, the band was headed to
Tulsa, Oklahoma, for their next performance. They also made a stop in
Dallas to take Al Barr to the airport so he could fly home to attend the funeral of a close friend. Just north of
Austin, Texas, the band's tour bus was involved in a fatal accident when a pedestrian suddenly ran onto the highway in front of the bus, in what is believed by police to be a suicide. Ken Casey said that "the band is pretty shaken up and don't want to talk about the situation, especially since they don't even know if the family has been notified yet". The band's bus was badly damaged and their driver was too upset over the tragedy, leading the band to cancel their Tulsa performance. The two acts scheduled to open for the band gave a free show for the fans in Tulsa at a different venue. In 2015, Ken Casey started Murphys Boxing promotion and served as a corner man for boxers such as
Danny O'Connor (once ranked one of the top 15 boxers in the world) and
Spike O'Sullivan. After twelve years with the band, Josh "Scruffy" Wallace departed on June 22, 2015, with the band stating via Facebook: "We wish Josh and his family all the best going forward and thank him for his time with us." Wallace would go on join
the Mahones in early 2016. Former retired firefighter/paramedic Lee Forshner replaced Wallace as the band's bagpipe player. The band's annual St. Patrick's Day tour in 2016 marked the band's 20th anniversary. The tour featured two new songs called "The Ghosts of Rock'n'Roll" and "Sandlot". 2019 The band released their ninth studio album
11 Short Stories of Pain & Glory on January 6, 2017. The album was preceded by the singles "Blood", "
You'll Never Walk Alone" and "Paying My Way". A fourth and final single, "Until the Next Time", was released in June 2017. From July to late August 2017, the band embarked the "From Boston to Berkeley Tour", a co-headlining tour with
Rancid, in North America. In May 2018, Ken Casey was involved in an accident on a building site and suffered severe damage to one of his vertebral disc which required surgery. The injury caused him to lose feeling in his fingers which forced him to be unable to play the bass during the band's shows until he fully healed. Kevin Rheault, the band's longtime stage tech and who filled in for other band members in the past, filled in on bass at the band's live shows and has since become the band's official bassist however Casey plays bass only in studio. During a St. Patrick's Day show at the House of Blues on March 17, 2019, Casey attempted to defend fans which were being attacked by another concert-goer. He was hit in the head by a beer can, causing blood to appear on his face, though he stayed on stage and finished the concert while the involved fan was escorted from the building. "Smash Shit Up" and "The Bonny" were released on 12" for digital download in January 2020 and were followed by "Mick Jones Nicked My Pudding" and its b-side "James Connolly" which were released as an exclusive download through the band's website in March 2020. Fans could pay what they wanted from $2 up to a $50 option, that featured a video shout-out from the band, or to a $100 option that would feature a "Roast Your Buddy" video by the band. Owing to the
COVID-19 pandemic, the band postponed their annual St. Patrick's Day shows until September 2020. However, thanks to
Cambridge, Massachusetts, based
software company
Pegasystems, they performed a special free
live streaming show titled
Streaming Up to Boston in
Derry, New Hampshire at Studio Lab/Events United, on March 17, 2020, where they also previewed three songs from their upcoming album, including "
Mick Jones Nicked My Pudding", "Queen of
Suffolk County" and "Burn it to the Ground". Casey also said the band financially would take a hit due to their shows being postponed. "[We have] zero insurance. We don't even carry cancelation insurance on our shows. We've been through this a few times before with festivals that were canceled because of hurricanes or storms. The cost of a band of our size, we'd be paying a third of our guarantee for every show for insurance. You gotta roll the dice at that point.""Streaming Up to Boston" drew an audience of more than 13 million viewers and raised over $60,000 for the Boston Resiliency Fund, a nonprofit that provides essential services to Boston residents—including first responders and critical care providers amid the pandemic. On May 29, 2020, the band performed a full no-audience concert titled
Streaming Outta Fenway at
Fenway Park in Boston, which again would be sponsored by Pegasystems. The live-streamed performance featured a special appearance by
Bruce Springsteen who appeared remotely and performed two songs with the band. The event marked the first music performance without an in-person audience at a major U.S. arena, stadium or ballpark. During the livestream, viewers were encouraged to donate to three charities: the Boston Resiliency Fund, Feeding America, and Habitat for Humanity, Greater Boston. Prior to the performance, the music video for "Mick Jones Nicked My Pudding" was shown. The two hour show attracted over 9 million viewers and raised over $700,000 (with Pegasystems donating the first $151,000). A few days later it was announced that the band reached a six-figure deal with Pegasystems. Pegasystems agreed to financially back all of the band's in-person shows in Boston as well as a St. Patrick's Day livestream for the next three years. The band's manager Jeff Castelaz said the six-figure partnership includes an up-front payment to support the band's 10-person road crew, to help make up for the sudden loss of the crew's income with the end of live touring. Ken Casey said the only revenue for the band came from online merchandise sales during the two live streaming shows and that the future remains uncertain for rock bands and that he doesn't necessarily see the financial sense in touring for crowds at venues that can only be half full, after they finally do reopen." On August 21, 2020, part of the band gave an acoustic performance of "
Tommy Gun" by
the Clash during an online livestream 68th birthday tribute to
Joe Strummer called
A Song for Joe: Celebrating the Life of Joe Strummer. The band performed a free live stream concert online, for the second year in a row, due to COVID-19 restrictions. ''St. Patrick's Day Live Stream 2021...Still Locked Down'' took place on March 17, 2021. Instead of charging a fee to view the performance, the band is encouraged fans to donate to help out paying their crew and other expenses. In November 2020, "I Wish You Were Here" was released as the third single (following "Smash Shit Up" and "Mick Jones Nicked My Pudding") from the band's still yet to be titled upcoming album. On February 23, 2021, the band announced that their tenth album,
Turn Up That Dial, would be released on April 30, 2021. The album's fourth single, "Middle Finger", was released at the same time of the announcement. The album's fifth single, "Queen of
Suffolk County" was released on March 31, 2021."L-EE-B-O-Y" (a song about the band's bagpipe player Lee Forshner), "H.B.D.M.F" and "Good as Gold" were also released as singles following the album's release. On May 1, 2021, the band held a record release party
livestream where they performed
Turn Up That Dial in its entirety along with other songs from previous albums. The band toured in support of the album beginning with their
Boston to Berkeley II North America co-headlining tour with
Rancid from August to October 2021,
Hiatus of Al Barr and independent years (2022–present) After eight years with the band, Lee Forshner departed early in 2022. He was replaced in February 2022 by Campbell Webster, who joined as the band's touring bagpipe player. Webster's first recording with the band was a cover of "
We Shall Overcome" which would appear along with the previously released songs "The Bonny" and "James Connelly" on an expanded digital only release of
Turn Up That Dial. That same month, it was announced that Al Barr was forced to depart from the band's 2022 St. Patrick's Day Tour and their 2022 summer tour in Europe to take care of his ailing mother, who has
Lewy Body Dementia. Jesse Ahern, Mikey Rivkees (
The Rumjacks), and Jen Razavi (
The Bombpops) assisted on vocals for certain songs in place of Barr during their shows, with Ken Casey taking over the rest of Barr's lead vocals. As of March 2025, Barr has yet to rejoin the band and Casey, who no longer plays bass during their shows, has taken over full-time lead vocals while Barr is away. The band released three singles throughout 2022: "Two 6's Upside Down" (July 2022), "Ten Times More" (August 2022) and "All You Fonies" (September 2022). All three would eventually appear on their eleventh album,
This Machine Still Kills Fascists, which was released on September 30, 2022. The album was the band's first since their 1998 debut album
Do or Die to not feature Barr, and was the band's first fully acoustic album. Its ten songs featured unused lyrics written by
Woody Guthrie. "The Last One" (featuring
Evan Felker), "Cadillac, Cadillac" (featuring Sammy Amara of Broilers) and "Never Git Drunk No More" (featuring
Nikki Lane) were also released as singles from the album. The band embarked on an acoustic theater tour in the fall of 2022 to support the album. Their twelfth album,
Okemah Rising, was released on May 12, 2023. The album, which again did not feature Barr, was recorded during the same sessions for
This Machine Still Kills Fascists and similarly also features songs using unused lyrics written by
Woody Guthrie. The band again hit the road to support the album. The album was preceded by the singles "I Know How it Feels" and "Gotta Get to Peekskill" (featuring
Violent Femmes). "Bring It Home" (featuring
Jaime Wyatt) was released as the album's third and final single in May 2023 On August 30, 2024, the band released the short documentary,
This Machine Rising, on
YouTube. The film documented the band recording
This Machine Still Kills Fascists and
Okemah Rising albums along with the theater tour that supported the two albums. On September 19, 2024, the band released a new single titled "Sirens", their first original song to be released as a single since "Good As Gold" in December 2021. "Stand with Us", a new song, was performed for the first time on January 29, 2025, in
Amsterdam. On February 17, 2025, the band announced the seventeen date
Summer of Discontent U.S. tour with co-headliner
Bad Religion and opening band the Mainliners. The tour will run from July 2025 to August 2025. On March 17, 2025, the band's founding singer Mike McColgan and his band the Bomb Squad, performed
Do or Die in its entirety at a special St. Patrick's Day performance in
Long Beach, CA. On March 9, 2025, in
South Carolina, a new song titled "Chesterfields & Aftershave" was performed for the first time. On March 15, 2025, the band performed another new song, "The Big Man" (which is about
Pennywise guitarist Fletcher Dragge), during a benefit show in Boston. Throughout the final week of May 2025, the band started dropping teaser videos on their social media pages with the
hashtag #FORTHEPEOPLE. The teasers were setting up for the announcement of the band's thirteenth studio,
For the People, and its first single, "Who'll Stand with Us?" which were announced on June 3, 2025. The album was released July 4, 2025, on streaming platforms and will be released with five bonus tracks on October 10, 2025, on CD and LP. The album features appearances by Al Barr (who is currently on hiatus from the band),
Billy Bragg,
The Scratch and
The Mary Wallopers. On July 12, 2025, the band promoted the album's release with a free two hour show in
Quincy, MA. 10,000 fans turned out according to the media director of the city and the band's spokesperson. "
Chesterfields and
Aftershave" was released as the third single from
For the People. The song, which is about Ken Casey's memories of his grandfather, was released on September 7, 2025,
Grandparent's Day. On February 1, 2026, the band performed a short three set at the
New England Patriots Super Bowl LX send-off rally at
Gillette Stadium. They changed up the lyrics to "The Boys Are Back" to "The Pats Are Back" and "I'm Shipping Up to Boston" to "I'm Shipping Up to Cali" as the Super Bowl is being held in
San Francisco, CA. They also performed "Out of Our Heads". On February 9, 2026, the band, along with other artists, announced that they were parting ways with the
Wasserman talent agency after the company's founder,
Casey Wasserman, was named in the
files related to
Jeffrey Epstein. “It saddens us to part ways with [our agents], but the namesake of the agency is in the Epstein files so…we GONE” the band wrote in a statement posted on
Instagram. On March 7, 2026, the band performed at the "Abolish
I.C.E." fundraiser in
Minnesota where they performed a unreleased song titled "Don't Call Me a Fucking Terrorist" for the first time. On March 17, 2026, the band released an eight-song split EP with Boston hardcore band Haywire titled
New England Forever. The EP will first be made available as an exclusive 12" during the band's tour beginning on February 9, 2026. "Citizen
I.C.E.", which features both bands and is a re-working of the Dropkick Murphys' 2005 song "Citizen
C.I.A.", was released as a single on February 4, 2026. The band will appear on
20th Century Paddy - The Songs of Shane MacGowan, a tribute album to
The Pogues singer
Shane MacGowan, that will be released on November 13, 2026. To close out the band's March 17, 2026 St. Patrick's Day show at the Citizens
House of Blues Boston, Al Barr made a surprise appearance joining the band for their final four songs of "Worker's Song", The Vultures Circle High", "Alcohol" and "I'm Shipping Up to Boston". It marked the first time Barr had performed with the band since going on hiatus in 2022 to care for his mother. ==Musical style and influences==