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Jimmy Eat World – “Place Your Debts”
Our future possible selves are transmitted through the atmosphere of the latest single from the emo rock veterans.
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Jobber – “Heel Turn”
The final preview from the Brooklyn rockers’ debut EP, ‘Hell In A Cell’, pits us against our selves.
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dazy – “On My Way”
For a song that feels like it’s on the verge of critical mass and about to implode, dazy hold it together pretty well.
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blink-182 – “EDGING”
The return of the Mark, Tom and Travis show is all about the fun factor on the band’s first original lineup single in a decade.
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Recommended Album: Palm – ‘Nicks and Grazes’
The third album from the Philadelphia band is pop extracted from every high and lull of emotion, but unlike one meant to imitate anything beyond the moment its consumed.
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![Boy Harsher – “Burn It Down [Rework]”](https://rcmndedlisten.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/boyharsher.jpg?w=800)
Boy Harsher – “Burn It Down [Rework]”
Boy Harsher resurrect ideas from their earliest demos with a new origin story in mind that captures the terror and thrill of a dangerous love.
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Recommended Album: The 1975 – ‘Being Funny In A Foreign Language’
It’s funny how a less tryhard form of sincerity works just as well in the alternative pop-rock band’s favor on their sixth studio effort.
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Dry Cleaning – “No Decent Shoes for Rain”
The latest preview off ‘Stumpwork’ is just whatever, at its most astute observation.
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Recommended Album: Enumclaw – ‘Save the Baby’
After breaking through obscurity and a hometown burnout scene last year with their ‘Jimbo Demo’ EP, the Tacoma four-piece are learning to reconcile where they come from with where they’re going on another impressive collection of saccharine indie rock.
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Modern Color – “Greener Grass”
Hitting play on the latest single from the California rock distortionists feels like you’re sinking through both sides.
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Soul Blind – “Tribe”
The second preview from the New York heavy gazers’ debut LP, ‘Feel It All Around’, is the sound of hell being unleashed by the mind’s own doing.
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Dougie Poole – “The Rainbow Wheel of Death”
Sometimes, microdosing on nihilism can be its own kind of comfort food, especially when it sounds like this Dougle Poole’s cosmic country.