If punk is at its best when it feels like a clenched jaw and a heartbeat too fast, DOWNGIRL’s ‘CPR’ is the genre at full voltage. From the first distorted blast, ‘CPR’ feels like a siren cutting through fog, a frantic, breathless sprint toward safety or toward confrontation. The guitars snarl like cornered animals, the drums thunder with barely controlled chaos, and Alex Neville’s voice tears through the mix with a ferocity that refuses to apologise for its rage.
What gives ‘CPR’ its teeth is the story at its core. A night gone sideways, a venue that felt wrong from the moment the band arrived, a crowd buzzing with the kind of energy that makes your stomach knot. Men circling. Eyes lingering too long. The creeping dread that every woman recognises, even before she can name it. The track sounds like that exact moment your body goes rigid and your brain decides, quietly and urgently, to stay alive.
And yet DOWNGIRL draw a straight line between lived violence and the structures that allow it, refusing to let the conversation slip back into vague gestures or hollow slogans. The band call out the imbalance directly, demanding accountability from the people who uphold it, actively or passively.
The accompanying music video expands that defiance into triumph. Instead of re-enacting the terror, DOWNGIRL choose to rebuild the narrative from the ground up, placing themselves in a world held together by queer solidarity and community protection. Dykes on Bikes roar through the frame like an army of protectors, turning the clip into a celebration of strength carved out of shared experience. Director Tim Kent captures that duality with stunning clarity.
‘CPR’ is furious, vulnerable, and incandescent with purpose. DOWNGIRL take the night that tried to swallow them and spit it back out as something loud, unignorable, and defiantly alive. This is what it sounds like when a band refuses to shrink. This is what it sounds like when the hunted become the ones holding the torch.








