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(09/28/20 12:19am)
It always feels like a “pink cloud summer” when Movements is turned on and the pain starts to wash away. The post-hardcore quartet has only been together for half a decade, but it’s created an EP and two LPs that outshine nearly everything released in any genre during the time.
(09/25/20 12:32am)
On the 25th episode of ‘Stay Tuned,’ hosts Bre Offenberger and Riley Runnells discuss the biggest winners from the Emmy Awards, BTS’ NPR Tiny Desk debut, the 2020 Billboard Music Awards nominations, how old actress Alexa Demie really is and more.
(09/22/20 12:51am)
Though more well-known for its iconic house-turned-meme than its own music, American Football deserves any and all attention it gets. The father figures of Midwest emo and math rock may have split up for a decade and a half after their critically acclaimed debut, but they came back as fresh as when they started, and it’s time to give credit where credit is due.
(09/20/20 9:54pm)
The album title’s a lie. Everything Movements has to give is good.
(09/20/20 9:50pm)
Knuckle Puck isn’t trying to impress anyone. All it wants to do is make music that fulfills its own cathartic desires — while also, hopefully, resonating with whomever gives it a chance. The five-piece from Illinois has been one of the faces of pop-punk since 2015’s Copacetic and, luckily, hasn’t strayed too far from its irreplaceable sound with its latest release, 20/20.
(09/17/20 10:41pm)
On the 24th episode of ‘Stay Tuned,’ hosts Bre Offenberger and Riley Runnells discuss reactions to the infamous Chris Evans picture, J.K. Rowling’s transphobic new book, Addison Rae being cast in the She’s All That remake, Lil Nas X’s upcoming children’s book and more.
(09/11/20 12:41am)
On the 23rd episode of ‘Stay Tuned,’ hosts Bre Offenberger and Riley Runnells discuss the ending of Keeping Up With The Kardashians, the boycotts of the live-action remake of Mulan, the “Travis Scott Meal” from McDonald’s, Naomi Osaka’s masks honoring Black victims and more.
(09/04/20 1:25am)
On the 22nd episode of ‘Stay Tuned,’ hosts Bre Offenberger and Riley Runnells discuss Twenty One Pilots’ Tyler Joseph being canceled, John Boyega roasting Disney, who is in talks to design the 2028 Olympics logo and more.
(08/31/20 6:49am)
PVRIS, starting as a metalcore group and gradually transitioning to a softer sound, knows just as well as anyone what it’s like to change its direction and watch its fans try to adapt to it. Its third and latest LP, Use Me, is a stark contrast from the last two, but when you have frontwoman Lynn Gunn’s irreproachable vocals paired with electro-pop bliss, it’s an easy idea to get used to.
(08/28/20 5:22am)
On the 21st episode of ‘Stay Tuned,‘ hosts Bre Offenberger and Riley Runnells discuss the biggest entertainment news during quarantine, a possible New Girl reunion, new albums from The Killers and Bright Eyes and much more.
(08/28/20 1:27am)
R.A. Thorburn, better known by his stage name, R.A. the Rugged Man, has already cemented his legacy in hip-hop — yet he’s only just begun.
(08/27/20 8:21am)
Here’s a mix of upbeat jams as well as soothing tunes for your walks around campus.
(08/23/20 8:35pm)
The Killers peaked with its debut album, and some may never move past that. 2004’s Hot Fuss — enveloping classics like “All These Things That I’ve Done” and “Mr. Brightside,” the latter of which you can never go to a party without hearing — will forever be remembered as one of the finest of the 2000s. Though there have been a few bumps in the road ever since, the latest, Imploding The Mirage, shows The Killers still has that flair for making irreplaceable gems.
(07/25/20 1:43am)
It takes precisely one second into No Pressure to be transported back to 2014, as Thalia, the same robot used on Logic’s Under Pressure, welcomes you to the show and flips back and forth between giving background information on how the album was made and making fans emo. Logic decided to end his career the same way he started it: with colorful, genuine lyricism and masterful production from No I.D., reminding listeners that despite the fame and fortune, he’s still the same Logic we met years ago.
(07/25/20 1:32am)
Just because Neck Deep is gradually changing its sound doesn’t mean it won’t forever be a staple of pop punk. Bands can’t be expected to remain the same forever — especially if you consider the heaviness of Neck Deep’s own debut EP, Rain in July — but the Welsh five-piece has made a statement with its latest album, All Distortions Are Intentional, or ADAI: when you refine your sound and fix the kinks without departing from the genre completely, magic happens.
(07/17/20 1:34am)
After “feeling under pressure” for nearly six years, Bobby Hall, better known as the rapper Logic, has announced his final album and retirement from the music industry.
(06/26/20 8:18pm)
Brothers Erik Paulson and Stephen Paulson were onto something when they released Remo Drive’s debut LP, Greatest Hits. The anthemic emo record, which includes the iconic “Yer Killin’ Me,” has a sense of vitality to it, breathing life into everything that’s good in music. After a sophomore LP that shifted away from its emo roots into more alternative rock and mostly falling flat, Remo Drive finds itself repeating those same mistakes, delivering a forgettable album where it’s somewhat difficult to distinguish between tracks.
(06/21/20 6:38pm)
Mike Kinsella’s solo project, Owen, is immaculate. Though more well-known for being the front man of the pioneering emo and math rock band American Football, among his handful of other bands, Kinsella is at his best when he’s composing the soothing, stimulative complexities of Owen.
(06/19/20 6:25pm)
Mike Kinsella is no ordinary man, and his one-man show under the moniker Owen is no ordinary project. Though it’s hard to pinpoint Owen to a genre — with its blend of emo, indie and probably anything else you could conjure up — Kinsella makes it work and never misses. His 10th LP under Owen, The Avalanche, is his most vulnerable yet, and that’s saying a lot for the most openly melancholic, self-deprecatory man in the industry.
(06/06/20 9:40pm)
With the release of its fourth LP, Notes On A Conditional Form (NOACF) — which also marked its third straight album to peak in the top five of the Billboard 200 — The 1975 doesn’t seem to be going anywhere any time soon. After all this time and continued success, it feels fitting to definitively rank every song our favorite British quartet has ever dropped.