Montreal’s teenage punk trio General Chaos are back with “The Idiots Have Taken Over,” a blunt, mid-tempo gut punch that doubles down on the band’s growing sense of purpose. Released via Stomp Records on April 10, 2026, the track serves as the second advance single from their upcoming album Can’t Please ’Em All, arriving May 8.

Trading speed for weight
Where earlier material leaned into velocity, “The Idiots Have Taken Over” finds General Chaos tightening the screws. The band dial back the pace in favour of a heavier, more deliberate swing, built on driving downstrokes, a locked-in rhythm section and layered vocal harmonies that keep the track grounded without softening its edge.
The result sits somewhere between the punch of Rancid, the grit of Social Distortion and the snarl of Radio Dead Ones. It’s controlled, but it hits hard.
No metaphors, no filter
Lyrically, the track wastes no time dressing things up. “The Idiots Have Taken Over” is rooted in frustration with political dysfunction and unchecked power, delivered with a directness that borders on confrontational.
Lines land as statements rather than slogans, with the chorus repeating like a warning siren rather than a singalong hook. It’s a deliberate contrast, pairing biting, no-frills commentary with a tight melodic structure that keeps everything from spilling over.
A band growing up fast
Formed in 2022 when they were just twelve years old, General Chaos have wasted no time carving out space in Montreal’s punk circuit. From early appearances at Pouzza Fest to all-ages venues across Québec and Ontario, they’ve built momentum quickly.
By fifteen, the trio had already released their debut LP Outta My Way, working with Ryan Battistuzzi to establish themselves as more than a curiosity. That same urgency carries into Can’t Please ’Em All, recorded in just three days at Le Stuzzio with Battistuzzi and produced by Fred Jacques of The Sainte Catherines.
Carrying a legacy forward
General Chaos exist within a long lineage of Montreal punk, following in the footsteps of bands like The Nils, The Asexuals, Planet Smashers and Banlieue Rouge. But rather than reviving the past, they sound intent on pushing it forward.
First flagged by La Presse as a generation “running punk on Kool-Aid,” the trio have quickly turned that early attention into something more substantial. “The Idiots Have Taken Over” doesn’t ease in or compromise. It plants its feet, calls things out plainly, and lets the distortion carry the message.
With the single out now and Can’t Please ’Em All on the horizon, General Chaos are proving that age has little to do with conviction.




















