Features
Photos: Day In The Life of I the Mighty
idobi photographer Audrey Lew spent the day with I the Mighty before their show at Webster Hall.
idobi photographer Audrey Lew spent the day with I the Mighty before their show at Webster Hall.
idobi photographer Audrey Lew spent the day with gates before their album release show at Mercury Lounge.
Back in the early 1980s, punk scenes started to develop in California. Bands like the Germs, Black Flag, X, and the Avengers took what they were doing seriously but appeared to be having more fun than punks from other cities. And one of the originals was Geza X.
When you think true-blue, rock’n’roll roots punk, you think DIY ethics. Whiplash inducing guitar work and gnarly vocals filled with passion (or resentment) have always gone hand in hand with flyering for your own shows, loading your own equipment, and making unfiltered music with no one’s opinion but your own.
idobi photographer Audrey Lew had the chance to spend the day with Davey Muise of Vanna when they stopped on Long Island.
There is a veil that exists between the artist and the audience. Most of the time we only see the finished product—a record, a show, or even a music video.
Just in case you missed anything while living under your rock, here’s all the insanity you can handle from June 30th – July 6th.
After years of trucking it out as an independent band, California’s From Indian Lakes teamed up with Triple Crown Records for their latest effort Absent Sounds; we checked in with frontman Joey Vannucchi on the pros and cons of going the label route after being independent for so long in this week’s Tuesday Ten.
Mike “Fish†Fishkin, of idobi Radio’s Gone Fishkin, talks Warped Tour with former All Time Low tour manager and new idobi hire, Matthew Flyzik. Flyzik elaborates on everything from advice for bands on their first Warped summer to memories of the tour growing up.
Having recently wrapped up a tour with Every Time I Die and letlive, Pittsburgh’s Code Orange Kids are returning to the studio to record one of 2014’s most anticipated albums. idobi Howl writer Alex Rudisill spoke with the band’s drummer/vocalist Jami Morgan about where the hardcore group is heading next.