The Get Up Kids return from hiatus with new album
Seven years after the band released its last full length, these Kansas City emo darlings are back with There Are Rules.
Seven years after the band released its last full length, these Kansas City emo darlings are back with There Are Rules.
[imgfull] [/imgfull] Tim Armstrong is the latest music mogul we’ll learn about on First Person. We’ll start at the beginning and wind our way through the punk rock pioneer’s career.
At long last, You, Me and Everyone We Know has released the full length album that everyone has been waiting for since 2006 and it is exquisite.
Many times switching labels involves a jump to what many call a ‘major’ and the re-release of an album to a much larger audience, this is not the case with The Wonder Years.
If you are ready to drink and dance and enjoy some good new-fashioned rock and roll, then give The New Bedfords a listen.
Occasionally, when a musician and his former band part ways, it can be detrimental; but in some cases it can cause three like souls to find one another and create something that has been burning within them all this time.
[imgfull] [/imgfull] There’s so much new music on the latest episode of First Person we might just burst (and we know you will). Sky Ferreira, Minature Tigers, Kanye West, Noise Machine, and more take turns rocking the show.
New Politics ultimately sounds formulaic; it eventually lacks the initial pep that draws you into what this Danish band potentially has to offer. The songs are textbook from beginning to end; they are decent for what it’s worth, but there is no noticeable sheen in them. Many of the tracks, such as “Love is a Drug,†have their introductory moments of catchy beats or great bass lines, but that spark gradually fizzles.
California’s kings of summery rock anthems have released their third album just in time to beat the inevitable heat, and with Eureka the band have once again proven their ability to craft a timeless record collection of fun-in-the-sun jams.
The band mostly known for a cover of Lil Wayne’s “Lollipop†has released its sophomore album, and unfortunately the original tunes fall a little short.