THE RATS – Belgian Punk Dogs Show Their Teeth On Bloodcurdling Debut LP ‘BOXING DAYS’

25 March 2026

Band: THE RATS
Who: Post-punk dogs from
Ghent, Belgium ready to attack.

Album: BOXING DAYS
Their debut.

Press info: While the first releases focused on mechanical grooves, their debut
album, Boxing Days, has become a distinct guitar album. The nonconformist approach
to songwriting, however, remained: in eight tracks clocking in at just over half an hour,
it ranges from raw, back-to-the-roots punk to the closest they’ve ever come to a ballad.

There are echoes of Wire and Gang Of Four, alongside contemporary references like IDLES, Shame, and Viagra Boys, but The Rats never resort to imitation. What prevails is a radically unique identity: that of a band that never chooses the easy way out and doesn’t follow trends.”

The cover artwork features Albert Laperre, the great-grandfather of the album’s
graphic designer Stan Tijtgat, an amateur boxer who went down often but always
came back fighting.

Emile Dekeyser (frontman) adds: “It’s a fitting image for an album that, despite its title,
isn’t about fighting or winning. Boxing Days is about survival, about learning how to remain standing, even when you can’t quite keep up with the punches.”

TUTV: The rat race is on, folks. Time to get up, stand up, and fight for your right to start
a moshpit whenever and wherever you are, the moment Boxing Days torpedoes your ears. This debut is, without a shadow of a doubt, a longplayer that will last for a long time. For its sharp-teethed punkiness (British Racing Green / Won’t Stand For It / Muck And Bullets and the flabbergasting The Wrong Day), for its bloodcurdling execution, and for its overall KO horsepower in 8 rounds.

But it’s not only about the stupefying noizzz
and the turbulent spit-and-sneer excorcism.

The Rats, led by vim and vigour by motormouth Emile Dekeyser, offer barbed-wire songs with body and balls, with heart and soul, with vivacity and a jagged joie de vivre. Every uppercut stands loud and proud on its own feet.

A striking example is Boxing Day. A burning torch that moves like a snake chases
her helpless prey, slowly and viciously, until the fatal attack. Goosebumps.

Another standout, according to my enthusiastic ears, is the bone-chilling closer, called Stomper. A sort of aftermath meditation on what the fuck happened here, what
did we do, where will we go. Its ominous pace and out-of-your-Emile-mind finale is no
less than startling.

The Rats are a well-oiled rock machine wasting no time on arty-farty superfluity
and/or bombastic overproduction. 32 minutes of brutal honesty is what we get.

Great debut albums are the ones everybody remembers long after their release,
no matter how many followed, because of their uncalculated directness, their
primal, innocent discharge, and their everlasting tunes. Boxing Days undeniably
belongs to this coveted category

The Rats‘ message is crystal clear.
They’re here to stay. Join them.

STREAM/BUY ALBUM HERE


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BOXING DAYS on Spotify – Instagram – Linktree

THE RATS Will Punch Really Hard With Debut LP ‘BOXING DAYS’ On March 20th – Hear The 3 Knock-Out Singles Here

6 March 2026

Band: THE RATS
Who: Hungry punks from
Ghent, Belgium ready to explode.

Album: BOXING DAYS
Out on March 20th.

Press info: While the first releases focused on mechanical grooves, their debut
album, Boxing Days, has become a distinct guitar album. The nonconformist approach
to songwriting, however, remained: in eight tracks clocking in at just over half an hour, it ranges from raw, back-to-the-roots punk to the closest they’ve ever come to a ballad.

There are echoes of Wire and Gang Of Four, alongside contemporary references like IDLES, Shame, and Viagra Boys, but The Rats never resort to imitation. What prevails is a radically unique identity: that of a band that never chooses the easy way out and doesn’t follow trends.”


Album artwork

Emile Dekeyser (frontman): “Despite the title, Boxing Days isn’t about
fighting or winning. No, the record is about survival, about learning to stay
upright, even when you can barely keep up with the punches.”


Frontman Emile – Photo by Turn Up The Volume

TUTV’s ears already had the opportunity to dive into the album.
It’s gonna be a riff-roasting rat race. You’d better check your
brave stereo for the upcoming KO punches.

These 3 tasters will get you in the moshpit mood.

– MUCK & BULLETS –
Mean machine missile
motorized by manic drums.


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– ROLLING WITH THE PUNCHES –
Schizo guitars, frenetic percussion
and an angry young man in the middle.


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– BOXING DAY –
A sonically softer Rats jam.
Well, until the fuming finale.


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All 3 on Spotify.


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Instagram – Linktree

THE RATS – Badass Belgian Punk Grinchs Drop Xmas Firecracker ‘BOXING DAY’

Daily electricity to load your batteries

22 December 2025

Band: THE RATS
Who: Hungry punks from Ghent, Belgium who have
released their smashing debut EP Disco To Disco
last year.

New Track:
The first single of their upcoming
debut album, baptized Boxing Days.

Press info: “Boxing Days” is their first release with new guitarist Eno Meulenbergs.
This line-up change opened up a renewed sense of creative freedom. You can hear it immediately on single Boxing Day, which begins in an unusually melancholic tone carried by sweeping guitars and drums, spoken word vocals and delicate strings. Once the track explodes, it’s clear the band hasn’t lost an ounce of intensity.

Lyrically, the single sits comfortably in the Fairytale of New York tradition:
Christmas as a backdrop for regret, self-reflection and resolutions that start
crumbling the moment they’re spoken aloud.

The repeated closing line “I promise next year it will get better / I promise next
year I will be better”
sounds more like an attempt to convince oneself than
a reassurance for someone else.

Emile (frontman) “If Christmas is for the
family, then Boxing Day is for your mates.”

TUTV: After a moody guitar/drum intro, all hell breaks loose. No silent night with The Rats. Boxing Day is a fierce, snail-paced torch that slowly but surely heads towards a volcanic eruption. You can feel the ominous tension in the air.

Emile is joined by Lewis Duffin of British indie band Hotel Lux and Jasper De Petter of Belgian noiseninks Ronker for a louder than war finale. Your Xmas will never be the same again, folks. Watch your back for these unhinged punk grinchs.

STREAM


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BUY


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