Editorial
A Journey Worth Taking: How an Unlikely Trio Became the Band They Are Today
Worth Taking’s frontman Jerod McBrayer talks with me about the band’s background, their latest album Hangman and what’s next on the horizon for them.
Worth Taking’s frontman Jerod McBrayer talks with me about the band’s background, their latest album Hangman and what’s next on the horizon for them.
Episode 4 playlist for First Person w/ Josh Madden: Ramones – Pinhead The Clash – Train in Vain (Stand by Me) The Runaways – Cherry Bomb Death – Politicians in My Eyes Social Distortion – Another State of Mind Circle Jerks – Back Against the Wall The Dictators – Baby, Let’s Twist Minor Threat – Good Guys (Don’t Wear White) Bad Brains – I Against I Black Flag – Rise Above Misfits – Static Age Bad Religion – suffer Bikini Kill – Reject All American Dead Milkmen – Punk Rock Girl Pinhead Gunpowder – Big Yellow Taxi Descendents – Nothing… Read more »
Dave Grohl has been in the rock business for more than 20 years now, and during that time, he’s seen many so-called “musical movements” come and go. Thus, he’s particularly amused by the current generation of emo-punk acts bounding across stages worldwide. After all, he’s been doing this for so long that he remembers emo the first time it came around.”I have a funny relationship with emo,” he said. “I’m from Washington, D.C., and in the mid-’80s, the hardcore scene changed from what it was – Bad Brains and Minor Threat and the Dead Kennedys and MDC – to a… Read more »
When writing the lyrics for “From Under the Cork Tree,” Fall Out Boy’s Pete Wentz, far right, shifted his focus from a romance gone horribly wrong to a more introspective vew of the world. After writing an album’s worth of lyrics about a girl who shattered his heart, Pete Wentz realized that the world is a bigger place than a cold-hearted woman and he needed to pen tunes that reflected that – a world where tsunamis could devastate parts of Asia, a war in Iraq could affect people on a global scale and the Molly Ringwald vs. Samantha Fox debate… Read more »
We know Metallica and Limp Bizkit will headline the Summer Sanitarium Tour, but what we don’t know is who will be in those bands. Or do we? “We got Yngwie Malmsteen,” Fred Durst deadpanned Wednesday at a press conference to announce the tour, which also features Linkin Park, the Deftones and Mudvayne. “Oh man, he was next on my list,” Lars Ulrich said of the Swedish metal guitar virtuoso. “I’ll take Steve Vai and give you him,” Durst shot back. Of course, Durst and Ulrich were joking. Metallica’s bassist slot and Limp Bizkit’s guitarist slot remain vacant. The latter band… Read more »
The Riot grrrl movement began in the early 1990’s at the forefront of feminism, punk music, and political commentary. It was a genre built out of anger, frustration, and rage entirely crafted by badass women. These women aimed to express emotions considered acceptable for male songwriters at the time, but far less common for women. Growing out of the Pacific Northwest but quickly spreading across the country, acts like Bikini Kill and Sleater-Kinney paved the way for many bands to come in the future. Speaking on topics like sexual assault, domestic abuse, anarchism, and female empowerment, the movement was much… Read more »
Summer is almost here and idobi Radio, idobi Howl and idobi Anthm has all of the freshest music to soundtrack your long days in the sun.
Vote and keep watch, my friends, for this is only the beginning.
Two Black best friends and their Latino roommate go into crisis mode when they find a mysteriously unconscious white girl in their house…
Often, when we celebrate Black History Month we think about the Civil Rights leaders and activists of long ago. I remember being in elementary school and feeling like racism was a thing of the past because of the way it was taught. It would be great if we could just talk about social injustices as something that happened long ago but no longer. However, the fact that just this weekend I saw a “White Lives Matter” shirt at an event, means that people still aren’t understanding. All of February, we see quotes from Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X.… Read more »