I’ve always been a fan of a solid outro, and this track from Matthew Good Band’s hugely successful album, Beautiful Midnight, has a pretty great one.
I’ve always been a fan of a solid outro, and this track from Matthew Good Band’s hugely successful album, Beautiful Midnight, has a pretty great one.
I present concrete proof that pop-punk can make any scenario (including zombie outbreaks) seem much more fun than you’d expect.
A really sweet blues-rock tune from The Black Keys’ fourth album, Magic Potion.
Another example of the live version really bringing a song to another level.
The studio version of The Jack is your everyday blues jam about STIs. Toss 65 000 fans into the mix though, and you’ve got yourself a sing-along burlesque show, starring a middle-aged man in a schoolboy uniform.
I didn’t listen to a ton of German metal growing up, but for some reason, I always enjoyed this song.
It also holds the honour of being the first MP3 that I ever downloaded.
This Celtic rock gem from Scottish band Big Country, never fails to make me think of Canada.
I wholeheartedly salute whoever decided punk music could do with more trombone.
This particular track’s the lead single off The Mighty Mighty Bosstone’s major label debut, Don’t Know How To Party.
This song reveals the greatest superpower of all: The Power….to move you. Also, mind bullets.
For their second album, The Darkness went into full-on Queen mode. Specifically, the multi-tracked vocals had multi-tracked vocals. The fact that they had the producer of Queen’s biggest albums (Roy Thomas Baker) on hand helped just a bit.
A little bit of U2 bringing that punk rock sound in 1983.