Editorial
Fall Out Boy is Low Key the Best at Covert Ops
Here are some of the best moments when Fall Out Boy decided to go super cryptic on us and whip out some major surprises.
Here are some of the best moments when Fall Out Boy decided to go super cryptic on us and whip out some major surprises.
Queer music is going through a revolution of sorts right now, with LGBTQ+ bands and artists becoming bigger and louder than ever. Here is a small, diverse sampling of where to begin.
Don’t mind us if we start stutter-stutter-stuttering, we’re just excited about our latest idobi Session.
Don’t mind us if we start stutter-stutter-stuttering, we’re just excited about our latest idobi Session.
If you’re literally counting down the seconds to So What?! Music Fest like we are, The Gunz Show is bringing you interviews with the creator of the fest, and two bands reuniting just to join in on the festivities.
The boys are back, and they’re at that special age where it feels like a perfect night to dress up like hipsters.
[scrippet] FADE IN: EXT. HAWTHORNE FOOD CARTS – PORTLAND The Hawthorne food carts are a staple of Portland culture. Trying to manage the infamous “good morning” sandwich is proving difficult for comedian and SNL alum JON RUDNITSKY. The thing is a massive mess. JAKE NORDWIND, actor and endless ball of energy and punchlines, joins the table. The pair are touring together but still argue about whether a triad is a ménage à trois or Chinese organized crime—maybe it depends on where you’re from. More on that later… Rudnitsky’s breakthrough SNL sketch was a show stopping alternative performance of the famous dirty… Read more »
Despite being an electro-pop sensation, Lights is no stranger to acoustic albums.
Badanes and Maccoby are the co-founders of Emo Night Brooklyn, and every two months they relive the “heyday” of emo music at the Brooklyn Bowl.
The temperature outside the Skyway Theater the night of the Panic! At The Disco’s Minneapolis show was a frigid zero degrees with a wind chill plummeting into the negatives. But that didn’t stop the hardy concertgoers of the Upper Midwest from filing up the venue before the show even started – just in time for Brooklyn’s X Ambassadors and California’s The Colourist to ignite the frozen winter evening with a fire that didn’t die down until long after Panic!’s headlining set had ended.