How a Surprise Punk Gig in Guinguette de Tours Reignited My Sense of Home.
In a small French town, a surprise punk gig reminded me that music can transcend distance, language, and loneliness. Through sweat, sound, and strangers, I found connection, proof that sometimes the loudest moments bring the deepest sense of home.
Even though I’m so far away from home, there’s always home where the music is.
It’s like that Almost Famous quote: “If you ever get lonely, go to the record store and visit your friends”. That’s how I feel about live music.
After feeling isolated from being in a completely new country (I am from Australia originally) , live music really speaks to the soul. People’s warm bodies, dancing freely amongst each other,it’s such a beautifully human thing, so intrinsic to our beings.
And then, the Wine Lips came on the Guinguette de Tours stage, the evening sun gleaming behind them.
Wine Lips are known as a ferociously raw garage punk quartet from Toronto, who randomly added a live show to the very place I happened to be staying in France. The stars aligned. My friend found them through an app called Songkick, which helps you find local gigs wherever you are in the world – a goldmine for travelers who love live music and crave those gritty, spontaneous nights out.
They’ve got this distilled, adrenaline-soaked sound – sharp, sweaty, and immediate. They seemed to punch the audience square in the chest with mosh-inducing buzzes that ignite a kind of primal electricity. It reminded me of the surf-rock energy back home in Australia. I was genuinely surprised they weren’t Aussie.
Then the frontman gave a little nudge and the mosh pit cracked open.
“Honey, I’m home,” I thought, as I was launched toward the front of the pit, surrounded by strangers’ sweaty shoulders and heaving limbs.
Someone’s sunglasses flew past my face. A beer spilled down my leg. I lost a hair tie and a bit of dignity, but I gained something far more important: connection. It was messy, imperfect, and beautiful.
The mosh transcends borders or restrictions. I could go on and on about this — it’s almost a sacred ritual. A pulse of bodies crashing in time with the drums, where strangers become friends, lifting each other up with every fall.
It’s the heart of the crowd made visible, the sound of music becoming a living organism.
It goes beyond the physical body, beyond space and time. A young kid and an older woman were rocking out together , strangers, mind you, and I couldn’t help but laugh.
There’s something tribal about moshing across generations. Numbers blur. The only thing that matters is the fire burning in your soul for the music, and your willingness to throw yourself into it, entirely alive.





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