By now, most of you probably know the story with Tills Du Dör, but here’s a quick recap if you don’t: Stockholm, Sweden’s Mob 47 formed in 1982, dropped a stone-cold classic 7” EP in 1984 (along with some scattered cassette-only releases and compilation appearances), popped up with another 7” in 2008 that was surprisingly strong, and in 2024 they finally released their debut full-length, Tills Du Dör, to near-universal acclaim. I’ll join that chorus… this is a scorching record. Most people take pains to point out that Tills Du Dör isn’t just better than expected, or merely good for a bunch of older guys. Maybe it’s the strange path they’ve taken as a band, but both the band and the audience seem unburdened by Mob 47’s older material… it doesn’t stalk them like an albatross in the way it can for some “legacy” bands. Tills Du Dör sounds like that 1984 EP in a lot of ways, but it sounds just as much like that band with 40 more years’ experience. Mob 47 has toed this line where their legacy informs them without smothering them. Tills Du Dör has all the things that make Mob 47 great—the blistering speed, catchy riffing, impassioned politics—but the band is also tighter and the recording is certainly clearer. Mere mortals can only aspire to such supreme levels of self-awareness and actualization. No matter who made it, I think Tills Du Dör would have been lauded as one of the best hardcore punk records of 2024, so the fact that it extends the legacy of Sweden’s most legendary punk bands is merely a bonus.