rock
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I’m not sure if you’ll see a stranger music video than this in the month of March. Unknown Mortal Orchestra has dropped some visuals for the track “Swim and Sleep (Like A Shark),” which is a cut off the band’s latest record, II. The video takes no
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420 love songs (second 40) by obama You may remember that about a month ago we posted the first 40 in what a collective of underground musicians are hoping will be 420 love songs. This time, the project has expanded to make room for a lot of new faces; bringing
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The Aussie garage rock outfit known as the Drones has a new album that just dropped titled I See Seaweed, and “How To See Through Fog” is an incredibly dramatic single from it. The band seeks to hit listeners emotionally with some forlorn pianos and downtrodden vocals. Enjoy!
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Modern day psych and stoner rock heavyweights Kylesa have a new album on the way titled Ultraviolet coming in May, and the band saw fit to drop a track from it last week. “Unspoken” may not be the heaviest songs in this style, but the track’s burning guitar solos
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On their latest release, Grave Babies take a gothic and lo-fi approach to the worlds of shoegaze and post-punk. WATCH THE REVIEW
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Stop Breathing by Donovan Wolfington Donovan Wolfington is a rock group from New Orleans whose music works in a lot of layers. There’s a heavy sense of angst flowing throughout a lot of the tracks, but they groups never loses sight of essentials like melody, memorable riffs, and just
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Baltimore rockers Roomrunner have a track track out, teasing toward the group’s full-length debut in May, and it’s a helluva song. With an earworm riff and some youthful male vocals, it’s an absolute barnburner. I’m loving it, and I hope you do, too!
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On this debut Atoms For Peace LP, Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke uses this new band of his to continue honing the electronic style he’s been toying with since 2006’s The Eraser. Stylistically, it’s almost a sequel to Radiohead’s The King of Limbs, and this just happens
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Low drops another track from the legendary indie rock band’s latest album, The Invisible Way. The album is looking at a March release on Sub Pop records. A lot like the previous track to drop from this album, Low has a knack for giving soft, pretty sounds the kind
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Iceage’s sophomore full-length brings the same downtrodden, depressive ferocity that the band’s last album did, but with a bit more length and diversity. While it’s not exactly progressive, it’s still a blast–just like the debut LP. WATCH THE REVIEW