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Beldon Haigh has had it with everything in ‘Dumpster Fire’

  • jimt
  • Jul 11
  • 2 min read
ree

Equal parts punk spectacle and cultural bonfire, “Dumpster Fire” is the anthem for anyone who’s ever yelled at the news and then laughed through the rage. This once-obscure Scottish rock group—known for channelling their existential dread into deadpan viral videos—has fully weaponised their wit in their latest release. The song is a three-minute riot, both musically and ideologically, exploding with so much catharsis it should come with a warning label.


The accompanying music video is as chaotic as it is genius: Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, and Kim Jong Un—played by band members in disturbingly spot-on wigs—tear through a gallery of priceless art and rare books like deranged punk rockers at the end of the world. The imagery is absurd, hilarious, and unsettling all at once. It’s not subtle. It’s not polite. And that’s exactly the point. “Dumpster Fire” isn’t just a song—it’s a Molotov cocktail lobbed at apathy, weaponised with a wink.


Musically, the band doesn’t skimp on quality. With scorching slide guitar riffs, relentless drumming, and a tempo that barrels forward like a train with no brakes, “Dumpster Fire” is more than just an angry anthem—it’s an addictive one. The production, helmed by Beldon and mixed to perfection by Ryan Benyo, ensures that every distorted chord and shouted lyric hits with precision and power. It’s raw, it’s loud, and it doesn’t let up.


In a world overflowing with noise, “Dumpster Fire” cuts through with fire and flair. It’s rock with a mission, pop hooks with a punch, and satire that lands squarely between your ribs. Whether you're a middle-class suburbanite who's sick of everything or just someone who loves a good anthem to scream into the void, this is your song. Turn it up. Light a match. Welcome to the inferno.



Watch the video here:



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