Fresh Pressed [new music friday] – 214
What better way to kick off a weekend than with new music? Featuring new tracks from Cheat Codes & All Time Low, State Champs, The Band CAMINO, and more.
What better way to kick off a weekend than with new music? Featuring new tracks from Cheat Codes & All Time Low, State Champs, The Band CAMINO, and more.
What better way to kick off a weekend than with new music? Featuring new tracks from All Time Low, New Found Glory, PVRIS, and more.
With words like “unprecedented” “disaster” and “what the actual hell?” floating around to describe this year, we’re going to attempt to distract from the overwhelming anxiety of today by taking a look at some other classic ways an apocalypse could topple 2020.
What better way to kick off a weekend than with new music? Featuring new tracks from Valencia, PVRIS, The Wonder Years, and more.
Back in April Angels & Airwaves released their single “All That’s Left is Love”, with the proceeds going to Feeding America’s COVID-19 relief funds. Now they’ve released the music video for the same song. Our love for this track has only gotten bigger. When talking about the song, frontman Tom Delonge said, “We never appreciate the connection we have with others until it’s gone, and although we may not be able to change this first part of this story, we can for sure change the ending.” “We never appreciate the connection we have with others until it’s gone, and although… Read more »
What better way to kick off a weekend than with new music? Featuring new tracks from A Day to Remember, Neck Deep, Hayley Williams, and more.
There were plenty of punk rock moments throughout the decade and we’ve put together just a few—three cheers for shaking things up, long may it continue.
Dive into all the moments over the 2010s that made the idobi staff go, What the F—?!:
Little Hurt is finally released out into the world so Colin came by to co-host with Suzy Shinn plus American Teeth and FARR called in!
The biggest compliment that could be given to blink–182’s new album NINE is that it doesn’t sound like “old blink.” That’s not an insult to the band’s previous albums either. This is an album that is enjoyable in its new-ness. We aren’t listening to something that is a throwback, reminiscent of another time, or that wants to live in another era. This is blink, evolved, older, established blink. Some people mourn the previous Tom Delonge incarnation of the band instead of celebrating that they have continued on with a fantastic addition. Seems like when a band changes their line-up the… Read more »