Camp Cope have released the new song “Jealous.”
Read More “Camp Cope – “Jealous””Mark Hoppus Six Months Cancer Free
Mark Hoppus had his six month post-cancer scan and it came back clean.
Read More “Mark Hoppus Six Months Cancer Free”Camp Cope have released the new song “Jealous.”
Read More “Camp Cope – “Jealous””Mark Hoppus had his six month post-cancer scan and it came back clean.
Read More “Mark Hoppus Six Months Cancer Free”Bright Eyes have shared a cover of Elliot Smith’s “St. Ides Heaven” featuring Phoebe Bridgers.
Read More “Bright Eyes Cover Elliot Smith”PUP have released a video for “Totally Fine.”
Read More “PUP – “Totally Fine” Video”Weezer performed “A Little Bit of Love” on Kimmel.
Read More “Weezer Perform on Kimmel”Lollapalooza have released this year’s lineup.
Read More “Lollapalooza Announces 2022 Lineup”Hatchie has shared a video for the new song “Lights On.”
Read More “Hatchie – “Lights On” Video”Boxfish have released their new video for “Bend (Break).”
Boxfish are a band out of Boston, MA, and they will be releasing their new EP, Leap of Faith, next month. Keep your eyes peeled for that and follow the band on social media if you like what you hear.
Read More “Boxfish Release New Video for “Bend (Break)””Just when you think the days of surprise album releases are over, Oso Oso comes through in the clutch to deliver to their fourth studio album called Sore Thumb. This collection of 13 cohesive songs flows brilliantly from start to finish, and features a variety of tempos, feelings, and emotions throughout the record. The band is just coming off of their most successful (both commercially and critically) album to date in 2019’s Basking in the Glow, and had a lot of positive momentum going in their favor leading up to this album cycle. However Jade Lilitri, the only permanent member of the band, experienced a heartbreaking loss around this time last year when his touring guitarist Tavish Maloney passed away tragically at the age of 24. Lilitri does his best to honor his late contributor with one of this year’s best emo records, and one of this year’s best artistic statements to date.
Read More “Oso Oso – Sore Thumb”Lil Durk has the number one album in the country:
Lil Durk scores his second No. 1 album on the Billboard 200 chart (dated March 26) as 7220 debuts in the top slot. The rapper previously topped the list with The Voice of the Heroes, a collaborative set with Lil Baby, for one week in 2021.
7220 launches with 120,500 equivalent album units in the U.S. in the week ending March 17, according to Luminate, formerly MRC Data – Lil Durk’s best week for a non-collaborative project. 7220 was released on March 11 via Alamo Records.
Twenty One Pilots have released a video for “The Outside.”
Read More “Twenty One Pilots – “The Outside” Video”Spanish Love Songs have released a video for “Losers 2 (Etc. Version).”
Read More “Spanish Love Songs – “Losers 2 (Etc. Version)” Video”Travis Barker will be part of the All-Star Band at this year’s Oscars.
Caracara has released the new song “Colorglut.”
Read More “Caracara – “Colorglut””Will Butler has left Arcade Fire. He wrote this op-ed in The Atlantic last year:
Read More “Will Butler Leaves Arcade Fire”I have another concern that’s hard to shake. After this pandemic year, I’m more aware of the responsibility I have not only to the people who buy tickets, but to the driver making deliveries to the show and to the family of the woman working arena concessions, people who really don’t care about what I’m doing onstage. Vaccination numbers will grow, and the pandemic will end, God willing. I’m not worried about the spread of the coronavirus in particular. But these links of responsibility remain. The analytical part of my brain turns off when touring starts. Before scrambling back to normalcy, I want to make sure that this sense of connection becomes embedded in how I think. I would really love to just be a musician—but I’m also an employer and a player in an industry that has chewed up and spit out plenty of people, especially in this past year.
My hesitations are all about shows, though, not music. Over the past year, I’ve rarely played music with others—a few practices and filmed performances; work on the new Arcade Fire record in November; a handful of Zooms with bandmates to help a school’s PTA fundraiser or support a candidate in the city-comptroller race. But in all of those instances, I’ve experienced an ease, a rightness to the communication—not through the screen with whoever was listening, necessarily, but the people I was playing with. That connection felt restorative, like having a night of deep sleep that repairs parts of yourself you don’t know how to access.