Gunz Extra: Michelle Branch
Michelle Branch has a clean slate and a reinvented sound with a brand new album on the books for April 7th, and she headed to The Gunz Show to talk about it.
Michelle Branch has a clean slate and a reinvented sound with a brand new album on the books for April 7th, and she headed to The Gunz Show to talk about it.
Knox Hamilton haven’t invented the wheel with their debut release, but they’ve made it fly. Not a moment on the album feels rushed, unclear, or unorganized. It’s the quality of work that sets Knox apart from the crowd.
Share some late night coffee with your friends on Man Of The Hour. The guys are living on the edge with evening caffeine, and making your week yet again.
This week on the Rock The Walls Podcast, Patrick Walford speaks with Suicide Silence vocalist, Eddie Hermida! The two talk in-depth about the band’s new self-titled album, the writing/recording of it, what pushed both Hermida and the band to change sound on the new album, recording vocals on the album and how it was different recording every track on the album start to finish on every take with no punching in and out of parts, working with producer Ross Robinson and more. Plus, does Hermida still consider Suicide Silence a deathcore band? Subscribe to the Rock The Walls Podcast here and… Read more »
Brett welcomes special guest Christina Ochoa (Grace, Blood Drive) to the show.
Brett welcomes special guest Emma Rose Kenney (Debbie, Shameless) to the show.
Hear Rioter Sam Devotta—who is as inquisitive and curious as the Baudelaire children themselves—give you her overview of the Netflix adaptation of Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events.
Babs Szabo (co-creator of Emo Nite) and Eden open up a bag of flaming hot nostalgia and spend most of the conversation snacking on emo-culture.
Hear writer Seanan McGuire chat about the importance of editing, fanfic, machine gun typewriters (it’s a thing), and why B-horror movie flicks can sometimes lead to a fear of pudding.
Following their 2015 debut, Never Happy, Ever After, I initially thought that As It Is might have a tough time with their sophomore release to rival it. But boy, I was proved wrong with okay.