The Inbox Jukebox is the new column bringing you fresh new tunes and bands. This week features new tracks from Ray Hodge, Separations, M1LDL1FE, Jonny Lang, The King’s Parade, The Tambo Rays, Awake At Last, and Anjulie.
Check out our picks of what you should be watching this week—featuring Legion, 13 Reasons Why, Rick and Morty, and more.
What better way to kick off a weekend than with new music? Featuring new tracks from blink-182, State Champs, The Chainsmokers, and more.
Mime Game, the new project of Josephine Collective’s Dillon DeVoe, has just repainted the picture of pop rock, and added in some pretty spectacular highlights.
Pop punkers, we are officially old. This week, Blink-182’s Take Off Your Pants and Jacket turned fifteen years old. In honor of its birthday bash, the idobi crew got together to recount our favorite lyrics (and memories) from the monumental album. Check out what we had to say below, and join us in bracing yourself for the album’s Sweet 16 (maybe MTV will revive My Super Sweet Sixteen just to throw it the best celebration ever.) — Blink-182 loves your mom…but your mom most likely wouldn’t love Blink-182. Which is one of the main reasons why Blink appealed to me… Read more »
Though the exact memory from ten years ago might be a little fuzzy, we all do remember loving every moment spent with this record. Well, who didn’t love this one, right? Everything in Transit is about as perfect as records come.
Live and Direct host Kraddy has crafted the ultimate EDM playlist from 2015 to get you celebrating what a year it was for music, and stoked for what’s to come in 2016.
Ah, modern love. Long gone are the delicate romanticisms of ye courtships of olde, replaced with a shockingly complex system of digital signals—both literal and figurative—to express your feelings for someone in the 21st century.
Talking In Your Sleep crushes all uncertainties and proves this powerful collaboration, with a brazen aptitude for musical experimentation, is certainly a force to be reckoned with.
The Punk Goes Pop series is six volumes deep at this point, celebrating the release of its most recent compilation this week — but what if we were able to flip the script and pull in artists from the world of mainstream pop to take on music from our scene?