When Music Becomes Art: The Visual Side of The Maine Experience
Sit back and immerse yourself in some of the visual art from The Maine experience all over again.
Sit back and immerse yourself in some of the visual art from The Maine experience all over again.
“Callwood at the Cooler” is a new bi-weekly column which will see me waxing lyrical about events in the news, pop culture and the etc.
Their highly anticipated third full length album Upside Down is out today, so there’s no better time than now to take a walk through memory lane and see how the band has changed over the years.
One thing became very clear when we had our chat with The Voice alumni Mike Schiavo: Our words don’t compare to the way he tells his story. So, we got out of the way, sat back, and listened.
It’s not all fun and games being in a ska band… Okay, maybe there is a lot of fun involved, but there’s also long nights of touring, a noise no headphones could cancel, and fear of being eaten alive in a tent—before we get to that, though, let’s introduce the world’s most skankin’ ska band, Reel Big Fish.
Since GK first strutted onto the scene in 2004/2005 it has become a symbol, representing the look of pop-punk but also, unexpectedly, the sound of alt-rock. But last year, just short of a decade later, the journey derailed. Today, Glamour Kills is fighting its way back.
Mike Ayley speaks with the same passion you would expect from a bassist whose band just moved from vans to trailers and from dive bars to venues, but Marianas Trench has been playing arenas since 2012.
We caught up with Lydia to talk about touring with PVRIS, meeting new fans, and why they love Toronto.
What’s the recipe for a chart topping, indie rock band that took over the world with one single? According to KONGOS, one part ironclad family ties and three parts growing up in countries across the world.
To celebrate Twitter’s tenth birthday, here are some of our favorite tweets of the decade.