David Anthony
The Sidekicks' New Video Will Make You Dance, Even if They Don't Feel Like It
Watch "Don't Feel Like Dancing," from their new album 'Happiness Hours.'
Hop Along Is Finally Embracing Its Feminine Voice
Frontwoman Frances Quinlan talks about how the band's new album 'Bark Your Head Off, Dog' sees her finding confidence in her identity.
Braid’s ‘Frame & Canvas’ Was Too Ahead of Its Time for Its Own Good
On the band’s 1998 album, Bob Nanna and company created a template that ended up being a test run for emo’s mainstream breakout.
After Six Years, Maps & Atlases Return with “Fall Apart”
The Chicago band's first album since 2012 is called 'Lightlessness Is Nothing New,' and is out on June 1 via Barsuk Records.
Rank Your Records: Piebald’s Travis Shettel Picks the Lemons Out of His Band’s Catalog
The frontman plays favorites with the on-again-off-again band's five LPs.
20 Years Ago, Kid Dynamite Reshaped Pop-Punk in Just 27 Minutes
On their debut LP in 1998, Dan Yemin's post-Lifetime project fused hardcore and pop-punk together in a way that would be copied for years.
Stream of the Crop: 8 New Albums for Heavy Rotation
Albums from Rezzett, Charlotte Day, Starchild & the New Romantic, and Towkio top this week's list of essential new projects.
Stream of the Crop: 8 New Albums for Heavy Rotation
Albums from Rezzett, Charlotte Day, Starchild & the New Romantic, and Towkio top this week's list of essential new projects.
Turnstile Are Here to Save Hardcore, LMAO JK They Don’t Give a Shit
Vocalist Brendan Yates spills the details on how the band approached 'Time & Space,' why they signed to Roadrunner, and that Diplo collaboration everyone’s confused about.
Get Thoroughly Disoriented by This Video from The Armed Featuring Converge’s Ben Koller
With "Witness," from their new album 'ONLY LOVE,' the band proves there are still boundaries left to be pushed in hardcore.
Dead To Me Spring Back to Life with “Fear is the New Bliss”
Chicken and co. are working on a fourth album and have dropped this sneak peak.
AVAIL's 'Over the James' Taught a New Generation of Bands How to Exist
Twenty years ago, the Richmond band released the gold standard of melodic hardcore that would often be imitated but never topped.