(Un)covered: Kiss Me
Celebrate Valentines’ Day with a cover as sweet as candy conversation hearts. This week, New Found Glory cover “Kiss Me”, originally by Sixpence None the Richer.
Celebrate Valentines’ Day with a cover as sweet as candy conversation hearts. This week, New Found Glory cover “Kiss Me”, originally by Sixpence None the Richer.
Just in case you missed anything living under your rock, here’s all the insanity you can handle for January 26th.
We’ve got some great new songs new to the idobi Radio playlists this week! Check them out. New tracks from Fall Out Boy, Sleeping With Sirens, and more!
Dr. Brixx has been releasing new mashups featuring pop-punk/rock artists, including All Time Low, A Day To Remember, Taking Back Sunday, and more.
We’ve finally unveiled our top albums of 2014 — but how did we arrive at that list? Check out our staff’s individual lists of their favorite releases of the year.
It’s that time of year again where we’re faced with the near-impossible task of choosing our favorite releases from another stellar twelve months of music. After even more complicated math and science than last year, we’ve finally arrived at our top ten records of 2014—find out what made the list and why we fell in love with them!
Here are idobi’s Favorite Songs of 2014. Hear the idobi Megamix 2014 on Spotify now, and tune in to hear the Megamix air this Saturday at 12pm ET, and again on New Year’s Eve!
2014 was a wonderful year for music, but it was also a wonderful year for forgetting that it was 2014. With so many of this year’s releases wearing their nostalgia for musical eras past on their sleeves, it seemed easier than ever to pick up a record that immediately whisked you back to the decade of your choosing despite being less than twelve months old.
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?
When it comes to fan-artist interaction, where is the line? How much is too much?