Sweaty photos of fans in the pit at Outbreak 2023
- Text by Emma Garland
- Photography by Chris Bethell

As Aaron Bedard put it during Bane’s headline set at Outbreak 2023, there’s never been a moment quite like this in hardcore. From Turnstile being nominated for a GRAMMY, to The New York Times declaring a “renaissance,” to the long list of artists from Soul Glo to Militarie Gun giving things a genre-defying kick up the arse, hardcore has skyrocketed both in popularity and creativity. The shared DNA between punk and hip-hop genres has also evolved in recent years to erase many of the lines between scenes and sounds, ushering in a new era of cross-pollination that finds the subculture at its most diverse and, as a result, most interesting.


In the UK, nothing reflects this shift better than Outbreak. The DIY festival began in a youth centre in Sheffield in 2011 and has since grown into one of the best alternative events in the country, reliably pulling fans from all over Europe and the US. After celebrating its 10th anniversary in 2022 with a stacked line-up of international heavy-hitters including Turnstile and Touché Amoré, this year it made the jump from community and mid-level venues to Depot Mayfield – a 10,000 capacity former railway station in the heart of Manchester. The line-up switched things up to match and cast its net as wide as hardcore’s current Venn diagram, with alt rappers like Earl Sweatshirt, Denzel Curry and Armand Hammer joining scene staples like Trapped Under Ice and new gen revivalists like Scowl and Zulu.
Chris Bethell was there to capture the energy of the weekend from the belly of the beast, braving his equipment and also his teeth to photograph fans in the pit for Converge, High Vis, Denzel Himself and more.
Latest on Huck

Maryam El Gardoum is breaking new shores for Morocco’s indigenous surfers
The Amazigh Atlantic — Through her groundbreaking career and popular surf school, the five-time Moroccan champion is helping women find their places in the waves.
Written by: Sam Haddad

Youth violence’s rise is deeply concerning, but mass hysteria doesn’t help
Safe — On Knife Crime Awareness Week, writer, podcaster and youth worker Ciaran Thapar reflects on the presence of violent content online, growing awareness about the need for action, and the two decades since Saul Dibb’s Bullet Boy.
Written by: Ciaran Thapar

Volcom teams up with Bob Mollema for the latest in its Featured Artist Series
True to This — The boardsports lifestyle brand will host an art show in Biarritz to celebrate the Dutch illustrators’ second capsule collection.
Written by: Huck

A visual trip through 100 years of New York’s LGBTQ+ spaces
Queer Happened Here — A new book from historian and writer Marc Zinaman maps scores of Manhattan’s queer venues and informal meeting places, documenting the city’s long LGBTQ+ history in the process.
Written by: Isaac Muk

Nostalgic photos of everyday life in ’70s San Francisco
A Fearless Eye — Having moved to the Bay Area in 1969, Barbara Ramos spent days wandering its streets, photographing its landscape and characters. In the process she captured a city in flux, as its burgeoning countercultural youth movement crossed with longtime residents.
Written by: Miss Rosen

Tony Njoku: ‘I wanted to see Black artists living my dream’
What Made Me — In this series, we ask artists and rebels about the forces and experiences that shaped who they are. Today, it’s avant-garde electronic and classical music hybridist Tony Njoku.
Written by: Tony Njoku