Frankie Blueberries
Dream Team
- Jan 27, 2016
- 9,414
- 10,992
This song is much better than anything on Daisy IMO. Sounds like they are going back to their pop-punk roots.
not worthy of its own thread
not worthy of its own thread
not worthy of its own thread
invictus said:Have you listened to Deja Entendu? I think that was the record that they got big off of.
IDK, some of the bands that get their own dedicated thread around here... Brand New are one of the bigger rock acts around.
I think I did at one point, but not recently enough to remember it. I'll probably pass this time, given what people have said.Have you listened to Deja Entendu? I think that was the record that they got big off of.
I listened to "The Devil and God are Raging Inside Me" the other day and I really don't get the critical appeal of this band. They sound very generic (and similar to other bands that seem to get more flack than praise) to me, yet I keep seeing it show up on top lists.
You're completely right, but I'm curious how that works without having ever heard them? You mean just based on reputation/fans?I've never heard them but I would have fell out of my chair if you liked them. There's just no way.
You're completely right, but I'm curious how that works without having ever heard them? You mean just based on reputation/fans?
Got it. Honestly, I have no idea what image bands have-- I just keep seeing it show up on "best of" lists and assumed it was a classic of some sort.Yes, pretty much. They're described as a pop punk band. A modern-ish one. Possibly "mall punk". (Though I'm just guessing at that label) Shirts probably sold at Hot Topic. Just doesn't add up.
Yes, pretty much. They're described as a pop punk band. A modern-ish one. Possibly "mall punk". (Though I'm just guessing at that label) Shirts probably sold at Hot Topic. Just doesn't add up.
Not even close. Try not to generalize bands without ever hearing them. You might be able to categorize their very first album like that, but everything they've released since then is closer to post-hardcore or old school emo (see: Sunny Day Real Estate) than pop-punk.
"Mall punk" :