LADYGUNN LOCKDOWN: WEEK FIVE ROUNDUP
Happy Wednesday Ladygunn's and gents! We hope you had a good week and are staying safe and warm. With both good and bad news scorching the headlines, we're starting to…
Happy Wednesday Ladygunn's and gents! We hope you had a good week and are staying safe and warm. With both good and bad news scorching the headlines, we're starting to…
In the world of followers and internet influence, what does it really mean to think individually? The new single, âToo Much Too Soon,â brought to us by punk-pair, Dancing Tongues,…
ï»ż photos / Phoenix Johnson story / Koko Ntuen Nashville-based artist Liza Anne has written the breakup anthem that will get us all through heartbreak. It's an ode to the…
It was a dark and stormy night. The wind tossled through the trees ripping their golden leaves from the roots, empty whisky bottles rattled the sidewalks and a fire burned…
photos /Â KRISTY BENJAMIN Â story / ARIANA TIBI Copenhagenâs post-punk band Ice Age have released their fourth album, Beyondless, tipping the hat to their past with a mature, enlightened…
ï»ż Listening to The Tenth is a very nostalgic 90s indie feeling when music was made straight from words scribbled in your diary while sitting in your bed with…
SWMRS’ ‘Berkeley’s On Fire’ is full of far-reaching and right-in-front of you ideas. The band want to be role models, and they want this album to be your soundtrack.
Emo Nite started in Los Angeles, as an event started by three friends: Babs Szabo, T.J. Petracca and Morgan Freed at a small dive bar where they simply just âwanted to play their favorite music.â âWe honestly thought Emo Nite would be a one-time event at a small dive bar where 15 of our friends would show up,â Babs says. Little did they know, the event would morph into a huge monthly event, bringing together people who share the love of emo rock music from the 90’s, 2000’s, and today â changing the idea of what a music event can be. In itsâ original format, Imagine that downstairs (letâs say at The Echoplex in Los Angeles) youâve got some of the biggest names from the original emo-era like Mark Hoppus of Blink 182, DJing remixes of your favorite emo songs. Then, upstairs (possibly at The Echo) emerging bands like I DONâT KNOW HOW BUT THEY FOUND ME are playing some of their first shows