Tag Archives: corruption

Bulgarian hardcore music veterans bring defiance to ‘Hills of Rock’

A bald man with tattoos passionately speaking into a megaphone while performing on stage at a music festival.
Dobromir Ganchev of Bulgarian hardcore band Urban Grey uses a megaphone during their Hills of Rock 2025 performance in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. Photo by Diana Nikolova, used with permission.

At Hills of Rock 2025, Bulgaria’s premier rock and metal music event that takes place annually in Plovdiv, Sofia’s hardcore veterans Urban Grey transformed a festival set into a statement of defiance. In a country where corruption scandalsrising costs of living, and mistrust of institutions regularly send people into the streets in protest, their music channeled those frustrations into a blend of raw sound and rallying cries.

A male vocalist passionately performing on stage, energetically engaging with the audience, while wearing a graphic t-shirt.
Dobromir Ganchev, vocalist of Bulgarian hardcore band Urban Grey, performing at Hills of Rock 2025 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. Photo by Diana Nikolova, used with permission.

Formed 25 years ago by guitarists Nikolay “Bebo” Berberov and Chavdar “Chavo” Valchev, the band has spent more than two decades building a reputation for independence. “We live here, we’re children of the city…[we call ourselves] Grey, because we don’t try to make ourselves visible at all costs,” Bebo once explained. Their choice to stay outside the commercial music machine has gone a long way to keeping their message uncompromised.

A guitarist with a shaved head passionately playing an electric guitar on stage during a rock concert, wearing a graphic t-shirt.
Nikolay “Bebo” Berberov, guitarist of Bulgarian hardcore band Urban Grey, performing live at Hills of Rock 2025 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. Photo by Diana Nikolova, used with permission.

That message often takes aim at Bulgaria’s realities. In “The Solution is the Problem,” from their 2014 album Age of Awareness, vocalist Dobromir Ganchev spits, “Banks, bills, taxes — we’re debt slaves for life.” The song echoes the widespread frustration over the country’s low wages and predatory lending patterns. Songs like 2014’s “Freak Show” tackle financial manipulation, while 2022’s “Control” warns of authoritarian tendencies — themes that resonate in a country still reckoning with democratic backsliding and concentrated media ownership.

Even earlier tracks, such as “Behind the Mask of Justice” (2008) and “Treachery” (2014) confront political deceit, offering a critique that has remained relevant through years of corruption scandals and mass protests, including the anti-corruption demonstrations of 2020.

A male vocalist passionately performs on stage, captured in mid-action, with tattoos visible on his arms and wearing a shirt that reads 'SLAPSHOT'. The background features a blurred array of lights and sound equipment.
Dobromir Ganchev of Bulgarian hardcore band Urban Grey punctuates the beat with a hard stomp on the Na Tumno stage at Hills of Rock 2025 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. Photo by Diana Nikolova, used with permission.

On the Na Tumno stage, a phrase that roughly translates to “in the dark,” suggestive of the more underground and intimate experience it offers as compared to the Main Stage, these themes became a setlist designed for impact: “Freak Show”, “P.I.G.”, “Compromised,” “Control,” “Behind the Mask of Justice,” and “Treachery.”  For longtime fans, this was more than entertainment — it was a musical version of protest slogans shouted in unison.

A bassist passionately playing on stage, with hair flying, captured in a black and white photograph.
Sonja Traussnig, bassist for Bulgarian hardcore band Urban Grey, performs on the Na Tumno stage at Hills of Rock 2025 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. Her hair whips through the air in mid-motion as she leans into the performance, bass guitar angled forward. Photo by Diana Nikolova, used with permission.

One hardcore music fan, Redji, summed it up as “expressing the everyday problems you see on the news — road deaths, political theatre in parliament, rising prices, and above all the constant injustice in the air.”

A crowd of music fans during a heavy metal concert, showcasing a young boy immersed in the energy of the performance, with various attendees expressing enthusiasm and wearing band t-shirts.
A young audience member jumps with a fist raised during Urban Grey’s performance at Hills of Rock 2025 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. The black-and-white image captures the intensity of the Na Tъмno stage crowd, with fellow hardcore and metal fans immersed in the moment. Photo by Diana Nikolova, used with permission.

Such injustice has been a recurring flashpoint in Bulgaria, from demonstrations against corruption to public anger at lenient sentences for violent crimes. At Hills of Rock, the crowd’s response — fists raised, voices joining Ganchev’s megaphone shouts — emphasized how Urban Grey manages to seamlessly bridge music and message.

A couple enjoying a music festival, the man with a mohawk and beard embracing the woman who has a unique hairstyle and is laughing joyfully.
Fans enjoy Urban Grey’s performance at Hills of Rock 2025 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. The black-and-white image captures a man with a mohawk and beard, wearing a band shirt, with his arm around a woman in a harness-style top and bold makeup. Both are smiling and singing, reflecting the energy and camaraderie of the hardcore and metal community. Photo by Diana Nikolova, used with permission.

For the band, the connection begins with sound. Bebo believes that “true art happens when a band follows its own ideas,” explaining, “Modern trends are fleeting. What lasts is authenticity.” The band members see themselves less as political actors and more as musicians whose style naturally channels rebellion. Just as death metal bands embrace gore, Urban Grey use hardcore to amplify resistance.

A crowd of hardcore music fans at a festival, raising their fists in the air in a show of solidarity and excitement.
Fans at Urban Grey’s performance on the Na Tumno stage at Hills of Rock 2025 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, raise their fists and shout along to the music. The black-and-white image captures the intensity and solidarity of the hardcore and metal crowd, with audience members of various ages fully immersed in the moment. Photo by Diana Nikolova, used with permission.

Their music has gathered a community that treats concerts like rallies. “Awareness of human values, and never giving up on your goals” is how Redji describes the ethos. The band agrees, urging younger musicians to first focus on rehearsals, then “say everything you think — experiment, be brave.

A male singer passionately performing on stage, dressed in a black t-shirt and cargo shorts, with tattoos visible on his arms. He is holding his fist up in an expression of intensity, while a female vocalist is seen in the background.
Dobromir Ganchev, vocalist of Bulgarian hardcore band Urban Grey, raises his fist mid-performance on the Na Tumno stage at Hills of Rock 2025 in Plovdiv, Bulgaria. The black-and-white image captures an intense and emotional moment, with Ganchev’s expression and body language conveying the raw energy of the band’s politically charged set. Photo by Diana Nikolova, used with permission.

At Hills of Rock, that ethos resonated with their biggest audience yet. For Urban Grey, the sound always comes first, but in Bulgaria’s climate, the message is impossible to ignore.

Find a playlist of Urban Grey’s music below and to see more eclectic music from around the world, check out Global Voices’ Spotify account.


This article was written by Diana Nikolova and originally published by Global Voices on 20 August 2025. It is republished here under the media partnership by Shouts and Global Voices.

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Corruption And Betrayal In Puerto Rico: New EP From Yuca Brava (Interview)

Shouts regulars and all around hard working activists/musicians Yuca Brava are releasing a new EP today, Friday the 14th. Previously we have interviewed Felix Castro, the vocalist of the band, about their music and activism.

This time I spoke with Carlos Anglada, the producer, drummer and the other half of the band. Carlos told me about the new album and how it covers the betrayal by the Puerto Rican government of their people.

Halldór: What is going on today in your surroundings?

Carlos Anglada: On January 6 & 7 of this year (2020) Puerto Rico was struck by two earthquakes. The tremors destroyed hundreds of homes, leaving thousands of people in the Southwestern region of the Island homeless. The quakes also damaged close to 300 public schools, which have been declared as unusable.

As it turns out, a geological fault (the Punta Montalva Fault) slashes across the entire Sounthwestern part of the Island. After the fault became active, there have been close to 3,000 additional aftershocks or replicas to date. People in the region live in an unrelenting state of anxiety. Refugee camps have people living in tents, not unlike the refugee war camps we have seen elsewhere. We have begun losing people who have chosen to take their own lives, unable to find any hope in their dire situation.

Adding insult to injury, on January 18th, an independent journalist caught the authorities attempting to empty a warehouse holding a substantial number of supplies that had not been distributed since Hurricane Maria and that could have been used to serve the refugees from the earthquakes. Further investigation revealed that close to a dozen other such facilities were located all across the island, all of them holding potable water, baby formula, cots, portable showers, etc. In addition, when you see politicians holding out on emergency supplies so that they can repackage them with campaign flyers, you know you have seen the height of callousness.

In summary, we’re currently dealing with the fallout of yet another round of gross negligence and mismanagement of a natural event by our so-called “government”. In the meantime the Fiscal Oversight Board (Junta de Control Fiscal – Ley “Promesa”) is pressuring the government to agree to a plan to repay our debt which would deepen our already grave financial situation by extending stronger repay guarantees to stockholders based on inflated growth forecasts.

Halldór: What is this EP about?

Carlos: We touch on a number of issues: the hollowing out of the Island to make room for the wealthy elite (“Bitcoin Messiah”), state and social violence against women (“Cobardes & Escarlatas”), and the constant lying and deceit carried out by our “government” (“Huele a Traidores” & “Status Quo”). However, the overarching theme is the utter and complete betrayal of the people of PR by the current administration.

Halldór: What is driving you or motivating you, today, to pen down some lyrics or create some beats and riffs?

Carlos: Neoliberal and austerity policies have real victims who experience real pain and suffering. Sometimes we fall in love with our own buzzwords and jargon and language and forget that we need to make this oppression real and visible to the people who we know need convincing to see the whole picture. In that sense, we are continually trying to make our perspective understandable and relatable.

Halldór: How is this EP different from your previous projects? In regards to both the recording and the creative process?

Carlos: The Micro Sessions is kind of an experiment in remote collaboration. Felix (vocals) lives in Phoenix, AZ and I live in PR. When Felix was still living here on the Island, we would write apart and once we had good working demos worked out, we would head to the studio and work there together.

Felix had to leave the Island after Hurricane Maria, since his employer was closing up shop locally. Moving to AZ was a huge change for him, and the adjustment period was hard on him and his family. We wanted to keep making music, since it’s quite cathartic for us, but Felix had not yet found how to record, so we had chosen to use the scratch vocals straight from his cellphone in the final tracks.

Our platform is your platform. Anything else you’d like to shout from the rooftops?

Carlos: We’re still a colony. That needs fixing. Urgently.

Video Of The Day: Ayo Burn by Nuka ft. Kaam Bhaari

The video of the day is by Indian artists who are tired of their government, like so many. The song was written around two years ago but released in the first days of this new decade.

According to Wild City the artists, Nuka and Kaam Bhaari “rap in English and Hindi, respectively, as their weapons of choice to lash out against the government and the apathetic, apolitical populace, as they address subjects such as marital rape, environmental destruction, data privacy, misogyny, farmer suicide, corruption, education and much more. Put together, it’s a glimpse into the country’s current affairs, and an urgent call to action.