Music

Oshawa Punk-Rockers PLZ RESPOND Release Scorching New Single “Gold Rush”

A group of four individuals in an indoor wrestling setting. One person in a lamp-shaped hat sits atop the ropes, while two others are positioned on the floor, with one kneeling in a hoodie and glasses. The atmosphere appears gritty and artistic, with a black and white filter.

Oshawa, ON: Plz Respond release their new single “Gold Rush” today, a raw, driving punk-rock track aimed at the economic systems that treat workers as expendable, and at the governments that let them get away with it. Written by frontman and drummer Galen Crampsey, produced by Logan Treaty, and mastered by Johnny Ross, the song is their most personal and politically charged statement yet, arriving as the latest in a run of singles from a band building toward something bigger.

This one comes from somewhere real. Six years ago, Crampsey was injured on the job when a door frame fell on his neck and fractured a bone in his spine. An injury he is clear could have been easily prevented. As a delegate to the Durham Labour Council, he has since given speeches on workplace safety to politicians, labour leaders, and community members across Durham Region. “Gold Rush” is what a speech cannot be: loud, unambiguous, and built to be played at full volume. “No one should have to gamble with becoming a statistic just to earn a living,” Crampsey has written. “It is unacceptable, and more people should be outraged.”

At the heart of the track is a tribute to the 26 workers killed in the 1992 Westray mining disaster in Pictou County, Nova Scotia, one of the most devastating examples of corporate negligence in Canadian history. Of the 52 charges eventually laid, 34 were dropped. That outcome, and what it says about who the system is designed to protect, runs through every line of the song. The band are explicit: neoliberal economic policy, across party lines, consistently prioritises profit over the people who do the work. “This isn’t new,” Crampsey writes. “Liberals haven’t been far behind in this regard.” Plz Respond do not traffic in partisan comfort. They name the pattern.

The song earns its anger through its specificity. “The bosses they make the rules / miners say the gold’s for fools / they won’t give their lives for jewels” strips the mythology of the gold rush down to its ugly core, while the recurring line “get back that 1950s Cadillac” carries deliberate historical weight: a longing not for nostalgia, but for the era of stronger unions, greater working-class security, and a society that had not yet been fully handed over to the market. The bridge drops any remaining metaphor entirely and addresses the audience directly on behalf of workers everywhere who died because safety training costs money and that money was never spent on them.

Plz Respond are Galen Crampsey (drums, piano/keys, lead vocals), Bryan Crouch (rhythm guitar, backing vocals), Brandon Smith (lead guitar, backing vocals), and David Bunn (bass, backing vocals). Rooted in Oshawa and drawing on the raw energy of the Ontario punk and alternative rock tradition, they play like a band with something real to lose and something urgent to say. They have shared stages at The Biltmore and the Bovine Sex Club, opened for Ill Scarlett, Lear Haven, and Excuses Excuses, and raised funds for the Durham Rape Crisis Centre and the AIDS Committee of Durham through benefit shows. Their politics are not a pose. They live where they write.

“Gold Rush” follows “Budgets and Bootstraps,” the band’s previous single and one of the most direct working-class punk tracks to emerge from the Ontario scene in recent memory. With several more singles on the way, Plz Respond are building a body of work that takes seriously the idea that rock music exists to say things that are true and that nobody else is saying loudly enough. “Gold Rush” is available now on all major platforms.

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