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	<title>Turnstile &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>The Brothers Behind Carpet Company Have Created Baltimore&#8217;s Coolest Fashion Brand</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/carpet-company-baltimore-fashion-skate-streetwear-brand-opens-station-north-profile-brothers-ayman-osama-abdeldayem/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lydia Woolever]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Apr 2026 15:20:20 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Style & Shopping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ayman Abdeldayem]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Carpet Company]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Good Neighbor]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Osama Abdeldayem]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Station North]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Turnstile]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=181286</guid>

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			<p>The Abdeldayem brothers are in a bit of a daze. It’s mid-March, and the usually high-energy Osama and slightly more subdued Ayman are slumped down in the second-floor break room of their East Baltimore warehouse, next to an overflowing stack of <em>Thrasher</em> magazines.</p>
<p>They’re a few weeks into daily fasts for the month of Ramadan, which at least partially explains the fatigue. But also, they just wrapped a meeting about hiring more staff, are about to head out to shoot a social-media video, and have hundreds and hundreds of cardboard boxes downstairs, filled with thousands and thousands of clothes and accessories waiting to be sorted, packed, and shipped during their next highly anticipated drop for <a href="https://www.carpetco.us/">Carpet Company</a>.</p>
<p>“It’s been like, bro, what month are we in?” says Osama, leaning back in an antique armchair, wearing a tie-dye button-up that the brothers co-designed.</p>
<p>“It’s a lot,” agrees Ayman, himself in a bedazzled Spitfire sweatshirt they also dreamed up together. “We were just talking this morning about how to not burn out.”</p>
<p>Yet all of that is not even what’s been occupying most of their time. A few miles west, the up-and-coming streetwear designers have been neck deep in finishing their first brick-and-mortar store. Unsurprisingly, there have been delays, dealing with construction and City Hall. But if all goes well with next week’s inspections, they’ll be “full blast” to opening in early April, at this point less than one month away.</p>
<p>You probably already know the spot—that old bank on the corner of North Avenue and St. Paul Street, in Station North. Outside, once boarded up, covered in graffiti and rust, the circa-1929 Beaux Arts building has been restored to its former glory, a glimpse into the bustling past on one of the city’s historic main drags.</p>
<p>Inside, though, you can see the future, where these two Maryland skaters are about to make their debut as the biggest fashion brand to ever come out of Baltimore.</p>

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			<div class="vc_single_image-wrapper   vc_box_border_grey"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1200" height="811" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0005.jpg" class="vc_single_image-img attachment-full" alt="" title="IMG_0005" srcset="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0005.jpg 1200w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0005-1184x800.jpg 1184w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0005-768x519.jpg 768w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0005-370x250.jpg 370w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0005-740x500.jpg 740w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0005-480x324.jpg 480w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1200px) 100vw, 1200px" /></div><figcaption class="vc_figure-caption">Above: New tees and tongue-in-cheek interior details in Station North. </figcaption>
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			<p>Through a wall of windows, natural light pours into the white-washed showroom, bouncing between its glossy floor and abundance of chrome, from the sleek shoe racks to the shiny centerpiece pyramid, a nod to their Egyptian heritage. There are big splashes of color, too, like the dozen skateboard decks hanging like modern art, and the old vault transformed into a David Lynchian dressing room, painted cherry red and topped with a DJ booth to hype the inevitable crowd.</p>
<p>Carpet already has its fans. When they dropped their first sneak peek of the shop on Instagram, some 15,000 likes rolled in within 24 hours. “Baltimore’s Louvre,” “eighth wonder of the world,” “unmatched duo,” “let’s GO,” wrote their legions of followers, more than 150,000 on that <a href="https://www.instagram.com/carpetcompany/">platform</a> alone.</p>
<p>All that love translates into a deeply loyal clientele. Their collections sell out online in minutes—hoodies, tees, cargo pants, sneakers, going viral for their bold, chic, tongue-in-cheek vibe—purchased by a motley crew of in-the-know cool kids from around the world who wait with bated breath for the brand’s next thing. But the permanence of an IRL store brings up all kinds of new questions, which are enough to rack the brothers’ nerves. Like how many products to stock? Or how many customers will come? And will they like it? Will Baltimore?</p>
<p>“I don’t know, I hope so,” says Ayman with a nervous laugh, locking eyes with Osama.</p>
<p>All signs point to yes.</p>

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			<p><strong>You could say</strong> Carpet Company began by accident. Born in Alabama, Osama and Ayman are the youngest of five sons, all first-generation American. Their Egyptian parents—their dad, a physicist, their mom, an accountant—moved to the Mid-Atlantic when they were in middle school, settling in Prince George’s County, halfway between Baltimore and Washington, D.C.</p>
<p>At first, it wasn’t easy. Landing here right after 9/11, the brothers were bullied for being Muslim. But luckily, they had one hobby that kept them a united front, and consumed every minute of their free time.</p>
<p>“As soon as school let out until we could no longer see our feet at night, it was skateboarding,” says Osama, now 35.</p>
<p>They’d gotten hooked down south, after getting their hands on a classic skate video. Full of city-street shredding and punk-rock music, a hand-me-down tape of Toy Machine’s now-iconic 1996<em> Welcome to Hell</em> documentary became their first muse. They watched that raw footage over and over, idolizing pros like Brian Anderson. Before long, they convinced their parents to buy them boards from Kmart. Which is how they finally made friends in Maryland, and first paid attention to what people wear.</p>
<p>“It was rare to find another skater in P.G. County, so literally anybody you’d see in a skate shoe, you’d follow them, especially if that shoe was damaged, because that told you they actually skate, and if they did, you could talk for hours,” says Osama. “Shoes were how you connected. They became very empowering for me. They say so much about who you are.”</p>
<p>Skateboarding did, too. At the core, it’s always been more than a sport—an art form, really, and means of self-expression. How you approach a trick, how you stick a landing, it’s all about showing off your own individual style. There are no hard rules. Creativity is often lauded over technical skill. And mistakes, not to mention injuries, are inevitable, only pushing you harder. And so it’s no surprise that this scrappy subculture—and its style—would eventually become the definition of cool.</p>
<p>These days, skatewear is everywhere, as likely to be spotted in the everyday outfits of Gen Z as on the runway-ready pages of <em>Vogue</em>. Remember Supreme, the once upstart skate shop with its catchy logo and cult following? It’s now worth $1 billion. And luxury brands want in, too, with Louis Vuitton picking skaters—Virgil Abloh and Pharrell Williams—for its past two creative directors. Last year, a giant skate bowl was erected in the heart of Paris Fashion Week.</p>
<p>“Skateboarding and fashion is a love story for the ages,” wrote <em>GQ</em> at the time. “Fashion’s desire for authenticity, for gritty realness and youthful abandon, has made skateboarding a wellspring of inspiration.”</p>
<p>And throughout the early 2000s, Ayman and Osama witnessed that evolution in their own way. Early on, the brothers wore clothes that felt comfortable to skate in. But at some point, their underground scene collided with the mainstream. Ayman remembers the moment distinctly. In 2006, rapper Lupe Fiasco dropped his hit single, “Kick Push.” “By high school,” he says, “skaters were cool.”</p>

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			<h4 style="text-align: center;">“It was rare to find skaters in P.G. County, so anybody you’d see in a skate shoe, you’d follow them, especially if that shoe was damaged, because that told you they actually skate,” says Osama. “Shoes were how you connected.”</h4>

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			<p>All the while, the brothers’ footwear interest had turned into an outright obsession. At home, they were now collectors, aka “hypebeasts,” pulling every penny to buy not just Vans, but also Nikes and New Balances, sometimes just to flip them at a profit on Facebook so they could cop something better. And that sensibility spread throughout the rest of their closets, and got noticed in their classrooms, too.</p>
<p>For teenagers in the early aughts in their culturally diverse suburb of P.G. County, clothes were the ultimate status symbol. Osama remembers classmates getting kudos for wearing the hot new thing, as well as called out for rocking knockoffs. It was cutthroat, he says. Yet it only deepened their intrigue.</p>
<p>“We were exposed to so many different people, and so many different styles, and we took notes,” says Ayman, now 33, calling those early years in P.G. County the foundation of Carpet’s DNA.</p>
<p>You can see it in their collections today: graphic tees, trucker hats, ball-and-chain jewelry—all so ’90s and Y2K. But back then, starting a fashion brand was not part of the plan.</p>
<p>When not out skateboarding or shopping, Osama and Ayman were inside, buckling down on homework. Their dad was a taskmaster when it came to the kids’ education, enrolling Osama in college classes at 14. He happened to not be a huge fan of their after-school activities, either. In fact, any time their ragtag skater pals came to the house, the old man would make them complete math problems, too.</p>
<p>A bit grudgingly, the brothers attended University of Maryland. Ayman was an I.T. major before dropping out for a job at NASA. Osama graduated with a degree in math, also becoming an engineer. It still feels like a detour, he says, “but it’s also part of why we are where we are today.”</p>

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			<div class="vc_single_image-wrapper   vc_box_border_grey"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="1200" height="805" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0010.jpg" class="vc_single_image-img attachment-full" alt="" title="IMG_0010" srcset="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0010.jpg 1200w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0010-1193x800.jpg 1193w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0010-768x515.jpg 768w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/IMG_0010-480x322.jpg 480w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 1200px) 100vw, 1200px" /></div><figcaption class="vc_figure-caption">The Abdeldayem brothers in their Station North store. </figcaption>
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			<p><strong style="font-size: inherit;">It&#8217;s January</strong><span style="font-size: inherit;"> and Osama and Ayman are walking around the future Carpet store. Drywall dust coats the floor, and brown paper covers the windows, keeping passersby from peeking in. Plenty of finishing touches remain, but they’re meticulously weighing every detail, always making their final decisions together.</span></p>
<p>“We’re basically the same person,” says Ayman, wearing wide-leg jeans and a Bad Brains T-shirt. “We always had the same everything—same clothes, same style, same friends.”</p>
<p>There are also clear-yet-complementary differences. For instance, Ayman prefers garments that are more crisp, clean, refined. “Bougie,” declares Osama, decked out in camo and Carhartt-style carpenter pants. “Whereas I don’t care if things get dirty. . . . But every single article of clothing is a conversation we have for hours. And while we’ve each got our own ideas, finding that overlap is what makes a good piece.”</p>
<p>Even together, that’s no small feat. For each collection, they start with roughly 1,000 custom designs, sometimes 20 versions of a single shirt. They deliberate over sizes, shapes, colors, materials. There are mood boards and mock ups, with their East Baltimore headquarters regularly stuffed to the gills with samples, temporarily turning their indoor skate ramp into a three-story closet. It takes them about six months to narrow down the looks. Changes are made until the very last minute.</p>
<p>“It’s a lot of work and a slow process—you’re experimenting with so much, playing with so many things, seeing what feels right,” says Osama. “We’re both very particular. Every single piece has to meet so many criteria.”</p>
<p>At the end of the day, the brothers are their own best barometer, leaning into bright colors, cartoon characters, hints of Arabic, and a host of inside jokes—their go-to slogan being “Carpet Sucks”—creating something both defiantly hip and highly approachable.</p>
<p>“We design for us,” says Ayman, and they’ve been trusting that instinct since their first collection—Season One.</p>
<p>In 2015, Carpet was born out of a friend’s grandma’s basement. After slinging skateboards for another brand, they decided to try their own thing. The original dream was making jeans. But shirts were faster, cheaper, easier, so they bought a screen-printing machine off Craigslist and taught themselves how to use it on YouTube. Their first run was 10 tees, just for their fellow skaters. Then they started printing boards, too, which got picked up by local skate shops. Within a year, their DIY looks were going viral. As for the name, it just sounded cool.</p>
<p>“One thing just led to another,” says Ayman. “You learn. You get better. You try new things.”</p>
<p>“Some of the most beautiful pieces we made came from figuring out how to fix something,” says Osama, no formal training necessary. “We found people weren’t really interested in perfection. They wanted something unexpected.”</p>
<p>To level up, they clearly needed more space. In 2019, they moved to Greenmount West and slowly but surely grew by word-of-mouth, luring in their favorite musicians and pro skaters for collaborations. Then in 2021, Nike came calling. It was a project that would change everything. With this iconic sneaker company, Carpet created a powdery blue pair of high-tops, offering an early glimpse into their clever imaginations. Beneath the leather were hidden details, only to be revealed through the literal wear and tear of skateboarding.</p>
<p>With that success, Osama and Ayman quit their jobs and bought the East Baltimore warehouse, their “HQ”—a crumbling laundromat topped with their logo, a C-shaped star. Projects with Vans soon followed, and the Baltimore Orioles, and, of course, local hardcore band <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/turnstile-profile-how-baltimore-shaped-the-worlds-biggest-hardcore-band/">Turnstile</a>, with frontman Brendan Yates being a buddy from those College Park skating days.</p>
<p>Last summer, they dropped a collection together at the Good Neighbor Design Garage in Hampden, with fans flowing down Falls Road all day.</p>
<p>“You’re always hungry, always pushing . . . not settling for the same ideas,” said bassist Franz Lyons to the brothers in an interview with indie magazine <em>Living Proof</em>. He wore nearly all Carpet to accept the band’s Grammys earlier this year.</p>
<p>Now, they’re in midst of rolling out their 21st season. Season 22 is already finished, and they’re onto 23. By the end, each season will include more than 100 designs, which will turn into some 20,000 individual pieces, and the brothers are ramping up to release even more.</p>

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			<h4 style="text-align: center;">“Their attitude is if you build it, they will come.”</h4>

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			<p>Beyond the <a href="https://www.carpetco.us/">web</a>, they’re stocked worldwide in 70-plus shops, from Los Angeles to London to Hong Kong, including 13 Supreme stores. Screen-printed by hand in Baltimore, the skateboards still come in small batches. It’s a labor-intensive undertaking, and their admitted loss leader, but core to the Carpet identity. For the rest of the lineup—finally including jeans, as well as jackets, bags, boxers, and anything-but-ordinary objects, like branded ashtrays, Nalgenes, Frisbees, dog bowls, and one fez- wearing nutcracker—Ayman and Osama work around the clock with factories overseas.</p>
<p>“Which sucks,” says Osama, thinking about those international calls with China, Pakistan, Turkey, Morocco, Egypt. “Sometimes you’re talking at two or three in the morning, and they’re asking what color you want a stitch to be, and I’m like, bro, at this point, I don’t care.” He pauses, flashes a wicked grin, then quickly adds, “. . .but it has to be yellow.”</p>
<p>If skating gave them creativity, their business skills might be thanks to their parents. Analyzing, multi-tasking, troubleshooting—that could be attributed to those short lived white-collar jobs, and therefore, their dad. (Seeing the hard work, he’s since come around to their unconventional career path.) Their street smarts and ability to stretch a dollar, though, comes from their mom.</p>
<p>“She’s a hustler,” says Ayman. “You can’t waste money—if you buy something, it has to keep its value.” Which was true when the brothers were teens trying to buy shoes.</p>
<p>“She’s like, ‘Are you going to just skate them and destroy them?’” he says, mimicking her Egyptian accent. “And we’re like, ‘No, and we think they’re going to go up in price.’ And she’s like, ‘Hmm, okay. I’ll allow it then.’”</p>
<p>To this day, every Friday night, during family supper, they seek her council for every big move, making her the unofficial consigliere of Carpet. Her no is their no, too. And she must be onto something, given the brand’s strategy is so savvy. They’re masters at building demand, whether that’s online—i.e. their impromptu announcements made with high production value, subversive humor, and the occasional cameo from a local dirt biker or Baltimore Club beat—or in their actual collections, which are limited-edition, meaning most items will never be seen again.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, their prices stay low, giving the next-generation skater kid a shot at snagging something. Sure, their silver necklaces and pony-hair coats are a bit higher, as is their first attempt at furniture—a candy-colored fiberglass stool that looks like a stackable baby toy meets a MoMA sculpture—but most items are less than a hundred bucks. And it should all be gone within an hour.</p>
<p>“Sure, we could sell more,” says Osama. “But making money has never been the goal.”</p>
<p><strong>A few years back,</strong> as Carpet started taking off, Osama and Ayman got to plotting their next move. At the time, they wanted to build a skatepark. Then that North Avenue bank went up for sale, and the brothers jumped at the opportunity. Other locations might’ve been fancier, with more foot traffic, but to them, Station North was the sweet spot—a real crossroads of Baltimore. Full of grit and gumption. An underdog, just like them.</p>
<p>“I remember riding through the city years ago with friends like, bro, if we had any money, this building would be ours,” says Osama. “We love this street,” says Ayman.</p>
<p>And it’s good timing. The slow-burning arts district is experiencing a new burst of energy, with the forthcoming redevelopment of the North Avenue Market, recently opened restaurants like Mama Koko’s, and the <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/soft-gym-public-art-installation-ynot-lot-station-north-inviting-light-wickerham-and-lomax/">Inviting Light installations</a>, curated by artist Derrick Adams. The Abdeldayems want Carpet to be a draw for the neighborhood, too, if not the entire city.</p>
<p>For that, the 10,000-square-foot flagship will be more than just retail. In addition to their own clothes, a curated inventory will feature other sought-after brands, including one exciting upcoming shoe collab. And they’re once again teaming up with Good Neighbor, opening an outpost of the design-forward coffee shop in the back, where community can linger over South Asian paratha flatbreads and coffee cups embossed with a metallic Carpet logo. Upstairs, they’ll also eventually open an art gallery, where it’s easy to envision packed openings featuring a who’s who from Baltimore and beyond.</p>

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			<div class="vc_single_image-wrapper   vc_box_border_grey"><img loading="lazy" decoding="async" width="2560" height="1707" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2026-03-30_Space_CARPET-33-scaled.jpg" class="vc_single_image-img attachment-full" alt="" title="2026-03-30_Space_CARPET 33" srcset="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2026-03-30_Space_CARPET-33-scaled.jpg 2560w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2026-03-30_Space_CARPET-33-1200x800.jpg 1200w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2026-03-30_Space_CARPET-33-768x512.jpg 768w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2026-03-30_Space_CARPET-33-1536x1024.jpg 1536w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2026-03-30_Space_CARPET-33-2048x1365.jpg 2048w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2026-03-30_Space_CARPET-33-900x600.jpg 900w, https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/2026-03-30_Space_CARPET-33-480x320.jpg 480w" sizes="auto, (max-width: 2560px) 100vw, 2560px" /></div><figcaption class="vc_figure-caption">Above: A look at the Good Neighbor outpost inside the Carpet flagship, featuring coffee cups and other interior touches that incorporate the Carpet logo. —Photography by Justin Timothy Temple</figcaption>
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			<p>“A lot of people follow in other people’s footsteps, but they’re marching to their own beat, and staying true to Baltimore,” says friend and legendary skate photographer Atiba Jefferson.</p>
<p>“For someone at their level to lay their mark on North Avenue, I think it’s going to be a tipping point,” says <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/homegarden/good-neighbor-shawn-chopra-falls-road-coffee-shop-home-goods-store-boutique-hotel-interior-design-community/">Shawn Chopra</a>, owner of Good Neighbor, whose wife is also Egyptian-American and introduced the creatives. “It shows how much they’re committed to this city, and how much their attitude is just, ‘If you build it, they will come.’”</p>
<p>For now, though, Osama and Ayman are staying humble—and despite their bleary eyes, not slowing down. They’re stocking the store, teasing their next drop, and getting their tightknit team ready to send it. Until just over a year ago, they were a two-man operation. Now, they have 18 people on payroll, not to mention all the homies who lend a hand.</p>
<p>“We tell everybody, ‘Yo, you’re gonna work hard, you’re not gonna get paid a lot, but this is a cool thing. If we grow, you grow,’” says Ayman.</p>
<p>They still don’t pay themselves, putting everything they earn back into Carpet, and it’s a point of pride to do it all on their own dime. They want to grow just big enough to hire their own in-house designers. And one day, if all goes well, they might even open another store somewhere—maybe Egypt.</p>
<p>“It’s awesome, and it’s scary, getting bigger and bigger—like man, does this last forever?” says Ayman. “The goal is to just keep building. . . . As far as the future, we’ll see what happens.”</p>

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<p><a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/carpet-company-baltimore-fashion-skate-streetwear-brand-opens-station-north-profile-brothers-ayman-osama-abdeldayem/" rel="nofollow">Source</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
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		<title>Turnstile Takes Off: How Baltimore Shaped The World’s Biggest Hardcore Band</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/turnstile-profile-how-baltimore-shaped-the-worlds-biggest-hardcore-band/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Lydia Woolever]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 07 Oct 2025 13:00:33 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[band]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brendan Yates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Daniel Fang]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Franz Lyons]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hardcore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Health Care for the Homeless]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Meg Mills]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pat McCrory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[punk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Turnstile]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wyman Park Dell]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/?post_type=article&#038;p=175421</guid>

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<h4 class="unit" style="padding-top:1rem;">
By Lydia Woolever
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Photography by Alexis Gross
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<h6 class="thin tealtext uppers text-center">Arts & Culture</h6>

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<hr/>
 
<h3 class="unit text-center">
By Lydia Woolever
</h3>

<h5 class="text-center clan">Photography by Alexis Gross</h5>

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<h6 class="thin uppers text-center" style="color:#23afbc; text-decoration: underline; padding-top:1rem;">October 2025</h6>
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<p>
<b>THROUGHOUT THE AFTERNOON</b>, a crowd had been growing in
the Wyman Park Dell. To the west, they scrambled down its hillsides
beneath the Baltimore Museum of Art, cutting through brambles and
over briars in search of a small clearing. To the east, they spread out
across the grass and shimmied up oak trees for a better view near Charles
Street. Looking south, there were people, and more people—old-head
punks, fresh-faced Hopkins students, parents shouldering earmuffed
babies—and high in the sky hung an almost-full moon, as if it, too, had
been lured here, on this warm spring night in north Baltimore.
</p>
<p>
In the center of it all stood an empty stage, built there this very morning,
its colorful paneled backdrop resembling those old off-air signals on early color TVs. And for a while,
everyone waited there. Then
finally, an hour before sunset,
the first line of ambient synth
began lilting out of those big,
black speakers. A hush fell over
the dell until, slowly but surely,
Turnstile appeared.
</p>
<p>
A single cheer swelled into
an all-out roar as the band’s five
members walked up onto the
platform and took their places.
Looking over the masses, lead
guitarist Pat McCrory rubbed
the back of his neck with a
bashful smile, while bassist
Franz Lyons went out to the
front, waving with every inch
of his limbs to the most faraway
fans. With his hand on the mic,
frontman Brendan Yates took a
pause, and then in an almost a
cappella tenor, let out the opening
lyrics of the title track off
their new album, holding the
last note of each line until he
couldn’t any longer.
</p>
<p>
<i>
Running from yourself now /
can’t hear what you’re told ...
Never let your guard down /
anywhere you go...
</i>
</p>
<p>
By now, a mosh pit had already
swirled into formation and, before long, a procession
of stage divers started lapping up around the band
and leaping off with euphoric abandon into the open
arms of strangers.
</p>
<p>
<i>In the right place, at the right time /
and still you sink into the floor...</i>
</p>
<p>
Then everyone joined in the chorus.
</p>
<p>
<i>It’s never enough / never enough / never enough / love...</i>
</p>
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<h5 class="thin captionPic text-center">TURNSTILE
ON STAGE IN THE
WYMAN PARK DELL
THIS MAY. <i>—ALEXIS GROSS</i>
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<p>
Ask anyone <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/turnstile-hometown-concert-wyman-park-dell-leaves-baltimore-dazed/">who was there</a>: In that moment, something
potent filled the air. Like the entire park was standing on
the edge of a cliff together. Like the biggest band to come
out of Baltimore in the last decade—maybe ever, and a
hardcore punk one at that—was about to take a massive
jump. And like they were bringing the city along with them.
</p>
<p>
Then Lyons, McCrory, and rhythm guitarist Meg
Mills unleashed their first chords, drummer Daniel
Fang dropped the beat with a thunderous punch, and
the show truly began, transforming the dell into a
billowing sea of bodies that didn’t stop moving for
the next hour.
</p>
<p>
“All I could do was be grateful, like, the whole
time,” says Lyons, remembering all the familiar faces.
“I don’t know if that’s a feeling that could ever be
replicated. And at the end of it all, it was just in our
neighborhood.”
</p>

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<p>
At one point, the band all lived nearby, and
largely still do, except for Mills, their most recent
addition, who resides in her native England. They
know the best skateboarding spots. They have their
go-to coffee shops. And they spent years imagining
a free concert in this tucked-away green space. So
with the help of friends, they finally hatched a plan,
having no idea how many people would actually
show up. Yates joked that it would be like a family
gathering.
</p>
<p>
Which, give or take a crowd of 10,000, he says,
“It was.”
</p>

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<h5 class="thin captionPic text-center">CLOCKWISE FROM TOP:
STAGE DIVING; PINT-SIZED
FANS; MORE
ATTENDEES IN
CHARLES VILLAGE. <i>—ALEXIS GROSS</i></h5>
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<p>
<b>A FEW MONTHS LATER</b>, during a hot spell in August,
Turnstile is back home in Baltimore, enjoying a
brief respite before launching into the first leg of their
new North American tour. They’ve already been across
much of Europe performing <i>Never Enough</i>, the band’s
fourth full-length album, which rolled out a few weeks
after the Wyman show, to their greatest fanfare yet.
</p>
<p>
In the swirl of its release, they debuted singles on
<i>The Tonight Show</i>, premiered a companion film at the
Tribeca Film Festival, graced the cover of <i>Pitchfork’s</i>
new print zine, and dropped a collection with their boys,
the Baltimore-based fashion brand <a href="https://www.carpetco.us/">Carpet Company</a>. By
the end of the month, they’ll have topped the <i>Billboard</i>
charts and recorded that NPR Tiny Desk concert—bringing
their ever-evolving hardcore sound to legions of worldwide
listeners. As pop-music icon Charli XCX predicted,
this was “Turnstile Summer,” after all.
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<p>
On the other side of that, the band is tired. They’re
not kids anymore—being well into their 30s now, minus
Mills (she’s 29). And most nights these days, Yates has
been needing at least 10 hours of sleep.
</p>
<p>
“Dude, my concept of time is so warped,” says Fang.
“Like all the stuff that we’ve done, all the shows that we’ve
played, have just been so overstimulating—in the best
way. I think we all knew we’d want to process the magnitude
of how special this was. It’s a lot to catch up on.”
</p>
<p>
For the most part, they’ve been keeping it low-key:
hanging at home, reading
books, riding bikes, going
for walks, seeing friends
and family. Breaks like
this are a sacred thing.
Even after 15 years as a
band, they still spend
most waking hours together,
including McCrory
and Fang’s weekly game of
Dungeons & Dragons. But
they also revel in their
alone time.</p>
<p>The other day, on his way to meet Yates, “I just found
myself driving through our old neighborhood, looking at old places,
feeling old feelings . . . and was like, you know what, I’m just gonna
hang here for a bit,” says McCrory.</p>
<p>Being on the road all these years,
he says, has kept “Baltimore in this perpetual honeymoon phase.”
</p>

<p>
Right now, many fans are finding Turnstile for the very first time,
creating the illusion of overnight success. But they burst onto the
national stage in earnest after their last album, <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/music-album-review-turnstile-glow-on/"><i>Glow On</i></a>, in 2021.
And long before that, they were a bunch of kids firing up crowds
from the DIY stages of Baltimore’s tight-knit hardcore scene. By the
time they were garnering Grammy nods and opening gigs for childhood
legends like Blink-182, they’d already been at this for over a
decade. Which is to say, when they became “one of the most popular
punk bands of [their] era,” per <i>The New York Times</i>, they were ready.
</p>

<p>
Everyone wants to know what happens next, after these scrappy
stage divers go full superstar. But Turnstile knows exactly where
they’re going. In large part because of where they come from.
</p>
<p>
“The biggest thing that Baltimore has given us,” says Yates,
“is the grace and the space to find ourselves.”
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<h5 class="thin captionPic text-center">FLYER FOR
NONSTOP FEELING
RECORD RELEASE,
2015. <i>—FLYER ART: CHRIS M. WILSON</i>
</h5>
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<p>
<b>YOU COULD MAKE THE CASE</b> that hardcore was born just
a few miles from Baltimore. In the late 1970s, as punk bands like
the Ramones and The Clash gained commercial success, a new subgenre
started brewing in American cities, including right down I-95
in Washington, D.C. There, a few District Heights kids formed Bad
Brains in ’77—considered the pioneers of hardcore—and within
a few years, Glover Park teen Ian MacKaye co-founded <a href="https://dischord.com/">Dischord
Records</a>, helping launch some of the aggressive new sound’s most
seminal acts: <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpJoeXZxpqQ&list=RDFpJoeXZxpqQ&start_radio=1">Minor Threat</a>, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Og7u3sKuegM&list=RDOg7u3sKuegM&index=1">Fugazi</a>, even his old pal Henry Rollins,
who went on to Black Flag fame on the West Coast.
</p>
<p>
Harder, faster, and more furious than its predecessors—full
of artery-busting vocals, breakneck drums, and blistering guitars—this underground music was steeped in the spirit of self-determination.
Often overtly political, it always gave the finger
to corporate America. And with that anti-establishment, fiercely
true-to-you attitude, its explosive live shows were the stuff of
magic for certain outcast youth in the beltway suburbs.
</p>
<p>
“I think what’s so appealing is that it’s just very real,” says Yates, who grew up in Montgomery County, discovering local
punk bands through mixtapes made by his older sister.</p>
<p>
More than just passively listening, so much of hardcore
is participating in this very physical, very human, very
pure—when you think about it—act of self-expression,
“letting out aggression, or experiencing joy,” explains
the soft-spoken, often quite serious lead singer. “Throwing
your body off a stage—while maybe people think it’s
crazy, the feeling is so connected, to the music and to the
immediate environment. You feel this trust that you can
just fly, and that you will be caught.”
</p>

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<p>
Yes, sometimes you might catch an elbow to the
face in the process, but the chaos is catharsis. Even
transformation.
</p>
<p>
That’s how it felt for Fang, who attended his first show
at age 11. Like Yates, he became a fan through his older
brother, who passed down CDs and filled the family computer
with LimeWire downloads in Prince George’s County.
Discovering Dischord helped him navigate the angst
and isolation of adolescence, and he felt particularly
drawn to the D.C. scene for its straight-edge ideology, do-it-yourself work ethic, and egalitarian community ethos.
Throughout its heyday in the ’80s and ’90s, anyone could
be a part of it. All you had to do was show up.
</p>
<p>
“I thought that was this bygone era that didn’t exist
anymore,” says Fang, who, despite his blood-sweat-and-
tears style of drumming, comes off as the band’s
sweetheart. “[It] set an ideal, like, wow, things can be
done this way. . . . Then finding it later in Baltimore
was a full-circle thing.”
</p>
<p>
Before that, though, Turnstile’s story really begins
in Yates’ middle-school basement. There, he started
playing music with his neighbor, Brady Ebert. Those
practices soon led to performances at local community
centers and area churches. By high school, they
were coming to Baltimore, where, in waves, bands like
Gut Instinct, Next Step Up, and Stout had established
the city’s rough-and-tumble hardcore scene, centered
around its own particularly powder-keg sound.
</p>
<p>
It was intense and intimidating, at times breaking
out in violence—and yet also surprisingly intimate. At
hole-in-the-wall venues like Charm City Art Space on
Maryland Avenue, shows were all-ages, and often dirt
cheap, thus lowering the bar for entry. And on the floor
or a propped-up sheet of plywood, bands of every skill
level performed right in the thick of it, blurring the line
between audience and artist. It was all a revelation for
these young musicians. Not only did it now seem wildly
possible to start a band. But the entire scene was also
suddenly so simple.
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<h5 class="thin captionPic text-center">BASSIST
FRANZ LYONS
PERFORMS WITH
THE BAND, 2014. FRONTMAN
BRENDAN YATES
CATCHING SOME AIR
AT THE CHARM CITY
ART SPACE, 2014. <i>—ELENA DE SOTO PHOTO</i>
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<p>
It was just “this collective, shared experience,” says
Yates matter-of-factly. “And next time I’d see that person
I was in the pit with, I would feel a sense of connection,
even if I hadn’t met them yet. There’s this unspoken
bond that forms over time. . . . Then before you know it,
you realize you’ve made a lot of close friends.”
</p>
<p>
In those salad days, one especially formative
friendship was Justice Tripp, an Essex musician in
his late teens, whose crew took many of Turnstile’s
future members under their wing.
</p>
<p>
“We kinda adopted Brendan,” recalls Tripp fondly.
“We’d see him around and were just obsessed with
this group of little kids—they were already super talented,
and it was like, ‘Why are these children making
music like this?’ Just smoking all the adults.”
</p>
<p>
After graduation, Yates moved north to attend Towson
University, which is where he befriended Fang, dropping
out shortly after. You see, Tripp’s band, Trapped
Under Ice, was getting major buzz—quickly becoming
one of the genre’s most influential new acts, evolving
beyond its tough-guy brashness with deep grooves and
dynamic melodies—and they were about to head out on
a globe-trotting tour. They wanted him to come and play
drums, his first instrument.
</p>
<p>
“It was my favorite band—and my peers, and my
friends—asking me to join,” says Yates, which back then
felt like being recruited by Metallica after <i>The Black Album</i>.
It gave him permission to go all-in, and presented
all kinds of worlds that could be imagined, “when the
community around you is your biggest inspiration.”
</p>
<p>
Back home on break in 2010, he regrouped with Ebert
and started working on new music. After teaming up
with Fang—already a wunderkind drummer—they also
looped in Lyons, another drummer, who’d hopped in the
Trapped Under Ice van after a show in his hometown
Ohio and now ran the Baltimore band’s merch. In this
new outfit, he’d play bass, while Ebert handled guitar
with another local friend, Sean Cullen. That put Yates on
the mic, now as the frontman of a band named Turnstile.
</p>



<p>
“Pure energy.” That’s how Lyons remembers their
first show in early 2011, when nerves kept him toward
the back of The Sidebar on Lexington Street, then considered Baltimore’s own CBGB. It’s hard to imagine today,
given his ecstatic, charismatic stage presence, at times
almost defying gravity. But in this baptism by fire, his
bandmates urged him on, as a small but amped-up
crowd kicked around the pit and threw their fists into
the air. Then and now, he says, “[We’re] gonna play
like it’s the last thing we do on the face of this earth.”
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<p>
That spring, Turnstile released their first EP on
Myspace, <i>Pressure to Succeed</i>, followed by 2013’s <i>Step
2 Rhythm</i>, on Bandcamp—both brimming with rambunctious
gut-punches that made their live shows
barely last 20 minutes. It was around this time, as the
band worked their way to the top of local bills, that
fellow musician Paris Roberts first saw them.
</p>
<p>
“You literally just had to be there—everybody in
the crowd singing every word to every song, moshing
through the entire set,” recalls the Catonsville native
and frontman for more recent Baltimore hardcore
bands Truth Cult and No Idols. “It was an energy that
didn’t stop. From the minute they set up, people just
stage diving to the feedback, before they even started
playing. Back then, you didn’t see many bands get a
response like that except for Turnstile.”
</p>
<p>
That both intensified and took a turn after 2015’s
full-length debut album, <i>Nonstop Feeling</i>. Following
in the footsteps of Trapped Under Ice and other hardcore
innovators, they started stretching the muscular
edges of their early sound, revealing a band of musical
polymaths with an ear for everything from punk
elders like Madball and Agnostic Front to pop-leaning
boundary-pushers like Tyler The Creator, Prince, and
Beach House. After all, most of them came up on
hometown heroes like <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Og7u3sKuegM&list=RDOg7u3sKuegM&index=1">Bad Brains</a>, who infused their
groundbreaking hardcore with reggae, and Rites of
Spring, the progenitors of emo.</p>
<p>Loosening the genre’s
grip even further, Turnstile now openly embraced those
myriad influences, incorporating playful frills from
hip-hop to surf-rock, while Yates’ punchy vocals drew
comparisons to Rage Against the Machine’s Zack de la
Rocha. All of which, of course, pissed off a few purists.
</p>
<p>
“But art constantly evolves,” says Tecla Tesnau,
owner of Ottobar in Remington—one of Baltimore’s many venues with wide-ranging lineups, where the band
was able to see first-hand how their city’s sound contained
multitudes. “Did Picasso just stay in his Blue Period?”
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<p>
By 2016, Pat McCrory completed the picture—the
band’s clincher, if you will. The Carney native was already
a good friend, being a fellow Towson alum and part of
Tripp’s experimental follow-up, Angel Du$t, which has
included multiple members of Turnstile. He joined on
rhythm guitar after Cullen’s departure, blending seamlessly
on their even more expansive follow-up, 2018’s
<i>Time & Space</i>, which featured a surprise appearance from
Diplo and was released via the Warner Music Group’s
Roadrunner Records.</p>
<p>Back then, “It was like, alright,
you knew these guys,” says McCrory, who exudes a disarmingly
boyish charm and, according to friends, has
a world-class sense of humor, “but now we’re gonna be
together every single second—until the end of eternity.”
</p>
<p>
Turnstile was coming into their own, with each new
record suggesting in real time both their impressive
ambitions and increasing introspection. And then came
that third album.
</p>
<p>
It’s a rare thing these days, in this era of solo prodigies,
for a band to make it big, let alone a punk one. But
in 2021, <i>Glow On</i> was Turnstile’s <i>Nevermind</i> moment,
which in the ’90s catapulted both Nirvana and Seattle
grunge into the mainstream. And while this new LP
bottled that urgent fervor of their hardcore upbringing
in Baltimore, its collection of newly lush, liberating,
arena-ready anthems also gave them boundless appeal.
</p>
<p>
In an instant, they shot from underground royalty
into rock-music stardom: Think <i>Rolling Stone</i> hosannas,
Coachella stages, Converse collaborations, that Blink tour, and, of course, those Grammy nominations—four
in total, for “Alien Love Call,” “Holiday,” and “Blackout,”
twice. (In the ultimate flex, the band was even invited to
throw out an opening pitch at Camden Yards, with Mc-
Crory, a lifelong Orioles fan, fittingly doing the honors.)
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<p>
But it wasn’t just snazzy riffs and state-of-theart
production. On closer listen, you could also hear
something else.
</p>
<p>
Take the opening track, “Mystery.”
</p>
<p>
<i>There’s a clock in my head / is it wrong, is it right?</p>
<p>I know you’re scared of running out of time /</p>
<p>But I’m afraid, too</i>
</p>
<p>
This was deep stuff, and they were not afraid to go
there, exposing some of their (and our) most existential
questions—about time, about the future, both the unknown
and the inevitable. No wonder so many people,
from scene faithfuls to curious newcomers, were now
paying attention.
</p>
<p>
“I think it definitely changed all of our lives,” Yates
told local arts writer Lawrence Burney in <i>Pitchfork</i> earlier
this year. “But, simultaneously, it didn’t. . . . This
band has existed for so long, we’ve just been doing the
same thing, and constantly growing, and growing [in
the] understanding of what we wanna do.”
</p>
<p>
Later in the album, another track is emblematic of
that evolution. On the fever pitch that is “T.L.C.,” it’s
all there—the classic pit-stoking choruses reminiscent
of Trapped Under Ice days, the imaginative Sly and the
Family Stone references showing off their amassed musical
fluency, the Baltimore Club-suffused outro (with D.C. go-go beats also making an appearance elsewhere on the album—both a hat tip to the DMV).
</p>
<p>
“I want to thank you for letting me be myself!”
shouted Yates, over and over, at the time seeming
like a clever hook.
</p>
<p>
These days, it sounds more like a prophesy.
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<h5 class="thin captionPic text-center">FROM LEFT: TURNSTILE
FLYERS FROM THE
FREE YNOT LOT
SHOW, 2019; THE
STEP 2 RHYTHM
RECORD RELEASE
SHOW, 2013; THE
WYMAN PARK DELL
SHOW, 2025. <i>FLYER ART FROM LEFT: —ANDY NORTON; MARINA INOUE; ALEX FINE</i>
</h5>
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<p>
<b>ALL THE WHILE</b>, back home, Baltimore was also
undergoing big changes.
</p>
<p>
Over the years, its hardcore scene had ebbed and
flowed. Bands broke up. Venues closed, with the loss
of the Charm City Art Space in 2015 leaving behind
one of the biggest voids. Turnstile was a buoy in the
years that followed, luring their fans out of cramped
basements into bigger pits like the Baltimore Soundstage,
as well as carving out their own spaces through
free outdoor shows at the Ynot Lot and Clifton Park
Bandshell, often giving their opening slots to other
up-and-coming local acts.
</p>
<p>
“How’s that saying go?” says Che Figueroa, co-owner
of Baltimore-based hardcore label Flatspot
Records. “A high tide lifts all ships.”
</p>
<p>
But the coronavirus pandemic would be the tipping
point. As the live-music industry <a href="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/baltimores-independent-music-venues-fight-for-their-lives-coronavirus/">lamented its
potential demise</a>, a new generation of bands was
about to boil over—Jivebomb, Sinister Feeling, Doubt,
Erode, Gasket, Pinkshift, Fightback, the list goes
on—channeling that pent-up energy into the next
hot-blooded chapter of Baltimore’s hardcore legacy.
</p>
<p>
Right now, the scene is experiencing quite the renaissance,
newly enriched with the omnivorous tastes
and creative liberties of kids raised on the internet. Like
End It—one of the city’s most in-demand acts, formed in 2017 and now dropping their debut album—recently
covering both “Big Shot” by Billy Joel and <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0oVsC-PexA">“Could You
Love Me?”</a> by Maximum Penalty, a genre deep-cut.
</p>
<p>
“There’s definitely something in the air,” says
their drummer (and McCrory’s old roommate), Chris
Gonzalez. “After the lockdown, the shows were crazy.
It was like, ‘Where did all these people come from?’”
</p>
<p>
And a whole crop of venues has been eager to
greet them: Holy Frijoles, House of Chiefs, Ema’s Corner,
the occasional skate park. In fact, Metro in Station
North finds itself counting on hardcore shows,
which are consistently packing rooms and drawing
an increasingly diverse crowd.
</p>
<p>
Older dads, teen skateboarders, musicians from
other scenes, people of color, lots of women, says Metro
co-owner Emily Gordon. “Which is awesome to see, because
when I was growing up, it was always boys, boys,
boys,” she says—and mostly white ones. “Everyone is so
positive and accepting these days. The general feeling
is just excitement. People want to see what all the fuss
is about. They know they’re in an important moment.”
</p>
<p>
That was undoubtedly part of the pull at Wyman
Park this spring. At this point, Turnstile is big
enough to play any stage in Baltimore, and for a
profit at that. Instead, they stayed true to their roots:
Not only was it a free show, with no barricade, and
no sponsors beyond the band themselves, it was also
a benefit, like the last few hometown stops before it,
using on-site QR codes to help raise nearly $50,000
for <a href="https://www.hchmd.org/">Health Care for the Homeless.</a>
</p>
<p>
“Those are all very crucial aspects of the hardcore
punk ethos,” says Mike Riley, co-founder of the Charm
City Art Space. “It’s always been much more about how
you operate than how you sound.”
</p>
<p>
Though announced only a week in advance, planning
for the show started back in January, with upward
of 70 people playing a part, including veteran organizer Dana Murphy of <a href="https://www.unregisterednurse.com/"></a>Unregistered Nurse Booking</a>, who worked
closely with city officials, neighborhood associations, and
surrounding businesses to make it all happen, as well as
Ottobar’s security team, which ensured that everyone stayed
safe. Hardcore pits can seem like a dangerous melee, but
there’s an inner-circle code that usually keeps the disorder in
check. Still, everyone knows so much could’ve gone wrong,
right down to the weather.
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<p>
“We were all just so unbelievably proud,” says Murphy.
She and the band recall there being a sort of collective
consciousness in the dell that day, from the first truck full of
equipment through the final song that night. A few attendees
even showed up the next morning to help clean up.
</p>
<p>
“That’s maybe, in a single day, in a single moment, the
most connected we’ve ever felt to the city,” says Fang, who
handed out high-fives and drumsticks before leaving the
stage.</p>
<p>“And that’s kind of shocking. Because growing up, being
here all the time, going to shows and playing Baltimore, and
playing Baltimore again the next weekend, and then again the
next weekend, it’s like you absorb this one place. But then you
go on tour, and then years go by, and you kind of feel a little
far, a little distant, from the community that you came from.
You realize that you’re older, and there aren’t the same kids
going to shows anymore, and the people that you used to see
there have families now. So to come back in 2025 and play a
show like that and have it feel like this actual culmination of
our entire [lives]...”
</p>
<p>
He drifts off, almost lost in thought, then adds, “It sparked
a lot that I’m personally still trying to process. But it definitely
makes me want to be home even more.”
</p>

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<h5 class="thin captionPic text-center">FROM LEFT:
VOCALIST BRENDAN
YATES, RHYTHM
GUITARIST MEG MILLS,
BASSIST FRANZ LYONS,
DRUMMER DANIEL
FANG, AND LEAD GUITARIST
PAT MCCRORY. <i>—ALEXIS GROSS</i>
</h5>
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<p>
For Mills, the night took on its own meaning, it being her
first official show with the band—after informally hopping in
on the Blink tour, after meeting them across the pond years
earlier, after being a fan even before that. However surreal,
she felt truly welcomed. So much so, that at the end of the
set, she took her very first stage dive.
</p>
<p>
“When I think back on it, I almost view it through the lens
of everyone else that was there,” says Mills, who would be
compelling with her cool nonchalance and wicked style even
if she didn’t play a mean guitar. “Not necessarily as someone
who was on stage playing . . . but every teenager, every kid,
every small child who was there experiencing that, thinking
how crazy it’s going to be for them to grow up and always
have that as a formative experience.” (Google <a href="https://www.tiktok.com/discover/turnstile-is-for-the-kids">“Turnstile is
for the kids”</a> to see what she means—those little boys at
Wyman were legends among us.)
</p>
<p>
Of course, every band comes from somewhere, but not all
of them return this way. In July, they popped back into town
for that Carpet Company drop. In Hampden, they painted a
block of garages their signature rainbow colors, hung with
friends and family, and met fans who spilled down Falls
Road, signing their T-shirts and <i>Never Enough</i> vinyl like an
old-school Tower Records release party, Baltimore-style.
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<p>
Recorded at the iconic Laurel Canyon studio of producer-to-the-stars Rick Rubin, and featuring guest spots like Paramore’s
Hayley Williams, this new album picks up where <i>Glow
On</i> left off, unveiling a constellation of poignant, if not profound
reveries that embody all that the band’s been through
from then ’til now. (This includes Ebert’s departure in 2022.
They don’t really talk about it, but on Instagram at the time
wrote, “We are deeply grateful for our time together.”)
</p>
<p>
Yet while Turnstile has fully blown up, <i>Never Enough</i>
seems to say: We’re still figuring it out. It’s an ongoing process,
and an imperfect one at that. Time continues to be elusive,
as the title implies. But each track is digging in, going
deeper—attempting to capture some intangible feeling. At
times, in the album’s wide-open spaces, they let themselves
just sit with all of it. Always, though, at the core, they’re out
there looking for a sense of connection, for something real,
same as in those crowded pits years ago.
</p>
<p>
As for the future, who’s to say. But come what may,
Baltimore remains a constant. And for that, it’s the star
of their prescient music video for “Look Out for Me,” the
album’s halfway mark. Directed by Yates and McCrory—the
band is full of film buffs—this cinematic ode opens with a
“Greatest City in America” park bench, then cruises around
town in Lyons’ Volvo station wagon, picking up friends
from rowhomes and busting a few doughnuts, before pulling
up in the belly of Wyman.
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<p>
At this point, the rip-roaring rager burns out into another
Baltimore Club beat, beneath which a clip from <i>The
Wire</i> drifts off into the ether like some kind of dream: “You
promise? You got my back, huh?”
</p>
<p>
“When something is home, I don’t think that really
changes,” says Yates. “As much as we’ll travel and spend
time playing music to the depths of the world . . . Baltimore
will always be home.”
</p>
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