Tag: Loma Vista Recordings

The Most Anticipated Albums Of 2021 (Part Three)

The Most Anticipated Albums Of 2021 (Part Three)

This is part three of four. If you haven’t read part two yet, check it out here.

While 2020 was shit, the albums we got that year were pretty tight. But some records were delayed for the sole purpose of releasing them when touring was given the “OK” to. As of now, touring is still off limits, but that won’t stop some bands from dropping new music this year. 

In 2021, we’re getting several great albums some several great bands and artists, but out of all the albums that are coming out this year, these are the ones you need to keep your eyes on. Here are the most anticipated albums of 2021, in no particular order.

Weezer – 'Van Weezer' review: pop-rockers throw up the the Devil horns

Weezer

Album: Van Weezer (Atlantic/Crush)

Release Date: 5/7

Tomorrow’s the big day! After the surprise release of their baroque-pop influenced album OK Human back in January, Weezer are following that record up with Van Weezer, an album packed with elements of stadium rock and power pop. If you’ve longed to hear Weezer playing songs with an extra emphasis to rock, you won’t be disappointed with this beauty comes out at midnight.

Rise Against Striking A Chord | Ernie Ball

Rise Against

Album: Nowhere Generation (Loma Vista)

Release Date: 6/4

Announced back in March, Chicago punk rockers Rise Against unveiled their ninth album Nowhere Generation. It will be their first album released via Loma Vista Recordings (Ghost, Manchester Orchestra, Show Me The Body). “I’ve come to realize that people want honesty and that music can be a catalyst for change,” frontman Tim McIlrath told 98KUPD on the record. “I think in many ways, we’ve been on a mission to rile people up, and I feel very lucky to be able to do that. Our hope on this record is to jostle people awake, even it if makes you uncomfortable.” And knowing Rise Against, they surely won’t disappoint.

Billie Eilish Announces New Album Happier Than Ever | Pitchfork

Billie Eilish

Album: Happier Than Ever (Darkroom/Interscope)

Release Date: 7/30

After making waves with her Grammy Award winning debut When We All Fall Asleep, Where Do We Go?, Billie Eilish has returned. She spent her time during the pandemic crafting tracks with her brother Finneas. So far, she’s dropped three tracks off of Happier Than Ever. Who knows if she can top the massive success her debut gave her when the album drops in late July.

Hear Oceans Ate Alaska's first new song in three years “Metamorph”

Oceans Ate Alaska

Album: TBA (Fearless)

Release Date: TBA

It’s been four years since the world got a new album from British prog-metalcore act Oceans Ate Alaska. But all of that changed when we finally got a new song from them back in November, “Metamorph”. The track marks the return of original vocalist James Harrison who left OAA in late 2016. While no word of a follow up to 2017’s Hikaru has been made, one has to hope that a new OAA record will drop sometime this year on Fearless Records (The Almost, NOT A TOY, Varials).

Drug Church - Pure Noise Records

Drug Church

Album: TBA (Pure Noise)

Release Date: TBA

I absolutely loved Drug Church’s last record Cheer. I put it as my favorite album of 2018. Three years have passed and no word of an album as announced (except the killer song “Bliss Out” dropping during the pandemic), until they told BrooklynVegan that LP4 was on the way. While announcing their upcoming EP Tawny, coming out May 28 on Pure Noise Records (Action/Adventure, Four Year Strong, Meg & Dia), the Albany post-grunge act said that a fourth album would be coming out in 2021. When? Who knows. Let’s see if it’ll be #1 on my list yet again.

Twenty One Pilots reveal details of next album: "There's definitely an  end-game"

twenty one pilots

Album: Scaled And Icy (Fueled By Ramen)

Release Date: 5/21

Scaled And Icy, the new album by alt-hip-hop duo twenty one pilots, seems to be picking up right after the end of their last record Trench. The title is an anagram for “Clancy Is Dead”, the main protagonist from Trench. While working on Scaled And Icy, Rolling Stone wrote, “Scaled and Icy was created largely while the two band members Tyler Joseph and Josh Dun were in Covid-19 lockdown in their respective homes. The two collaborated on the album virtually, with Joseph writing and producing in his home and Dun recording and engineering his drum takes from across the country.” So far, fans are loving the new songs that are dropping.

Senses Fail

Album: What The Thunder Said, Hell Is In Your Head and TBA (Pure Noise)

Release Date: TBA

Yes that’s right. We’re getting TWO Senses Fail albums coming this year on Pure Noise. The news about the two records came out back in September, along with announcements for vocalist Buddy Neilson’s other projects Speak The Truth…Even If Your Voice Shakes, Bayonet, Sweater Weather, remixes, and full acoustic renditions of Let It Enfold You and Still Searching. Are we strong enough to handle all of this post-hardcore awesomeness?

The Maine: Dissecting a Decade With the Band Before the Release of New  Album 'Lovely Little Lonely' | Billboard | Billboard

The Maine

Album: XOXO: From Love And Anxiety In Real Time (8123/Photo Finish)

Release Date: 7/9

The Maine were busy in 2020. As Alternative Press put it, “[they] have been working every possible second of 2020 to bring us a new record in 2021, which is crazy considering frontman John O’Callaghan got married and drummer Pat Kirch became a husband and father this year. While in quarantine, the band performed livestreams to say goodbye to their 2019 record, You Are OK, play through Forever Halloween for the first time ever and record a cover and music video for Harry Styles’ “Watermelon Sugar.” To keep that busy streak going, they worked on their eighth studio album XOXO: From Love And Anxiety In Real Time and are partnering up with Photo Finish Records (3OH!3, Handsome Ghost, SHAED) to help distribute it. O’Callaghan told AP, “It’ll be a concise record in that it’s exactly what we wanted people to hear. And I’m just really excited to finish the damn thing.”

Lorde

Lorde

Album: TBA (Lava/Republic/Universal)

Release Date: TBA

Fans of Lorde have been dying for a new record from the New Zealand alt-pop artist for years. Ever since Melodrama came out in 2017, we’ve been craving anything from Lorde. But the pandemic, as well as her Antarctic expedition in 2019 and the passing of her dog Pearl that same year, caused the making of her third album to be continuously delayed. She’s working on the album with longtime producer Jack Antonoff (fun., Lana Del Rey, Taylor Swift).

AFI share taste of forthcoming 11th album with two new singles

AFI

Album: Bodies (Rise)

Release Date: 6/11

Goth-punks AFI have returned and are releasing their 11th album Bodies next month on their new label Rise Records (Chapel, Flogging Molly, Make Them Suffer). From what we’ve heard so far from the album, it sounds like nothing the band has done before, and it’s a beautiful breath of fresh air from a band that’s been trucking along for the past 30 years. “Anyone who knows our catalog knows that no two records really sit together,” guitarist Jade Puget told Louder about Bodies. “Some sit a little closer, maybe. We do certain things, just by virtue of who we are, that are consistent, but those things come about organically. Every time we do something, I have to judge it on its own merits. Some fans are going to judge a new album, or a new song, based on what’s come before. But as artists, we can’t do that, because it would only hinder our creativity.”

Look out for part four which will come out soon!

Victory Records Bought By Concord Records

Victory Records Bought By Concord Records

Didn’t see that one coming.

Victory Records (Broadside, For The Win, The Tossers) has been purchased by Concord Records (Billy Gibbons, DeVotchKa, Esperanza Spalding) for millions of dollars, according to Billboard.

The entertainment media brand wrote that Victory had made “$4.5 million-$5 million a year in revenue and further estimates that Concord paid somewhere in the range of $27 million-$34 million for the Victory company.” With the purchase of Victory, Concord now owns “500 masters and 3,500 compositions to add to the 16,000 albums and 390,000 compositions it now owns through past past acquisitions.” Concord also now owns the Victory name, bulldog logo, and the entire Another Victory Publishing catalog.

With the purchase of Victory, Concord now owns the rights to past and present Victory Records bands like Thursday, We Were Sharks, Aiden, The Bunny The Bear, and Silverstein.

Victory Records Founder Tony Brummel wrote in a statement, “Concord has a great team, infrastructure and the financial backing and support to do great things with the music and entertainment assets that they represent. Victory and Another Victory’s great catalog of music and songs will be in caring and fantastic hands going forward. We’ve had a great run and with Concord it will only continue.” This means that Victory Records might no longer release new music under that name.

Victory’s catalog will be working under Concord’s Craft Recordings, who own the back catalogs for artists and bands like AFI, Social Distortion, and former Victory Records band Taking Back Sunday, who are currently signed to Hopeless Records (Doll Skin, Hands Like Houses, ROAM). As for future releases, Concord’s chief business development officer Steve Salm said in a statement, “to the extent that we put out new albums from existing artists, Fearless [Records] is the most likely home [to market such albums].”

The Chicago label will still have their 30 employees employed by Brummel. “My team at Victory will be remaining intact as we embark, going forward, on our new and existing business journeys,” he said. A new name for the company has yet to be announced.

Brummel also told Billboard that he wasn’t shopping Victory around to other labels, but couldn’t refuse Concord’s amazing offer. “Doing the deal is going to give me the option to do other things, including possibly buying some smaller labels,” he said. “There are three things that I will invest in out of the box and they are all music related.” Victory currently owns several smaller labels like StandBy Records (It Comes In Waves, Next Year, Unimagined), We Are Triumphant Records (Cemetary Drive, Gold Route, Thief Club), and Mutant League Records (AM Taxi, Chief State, Wilmette).

Concord has also bought labels such as Fearless Records (Eat Your Heart Out, Pierce The Veil, Underoath), Fantasy Records (Andrew McMahon In The Wilderness, Prophets Of Rage, Switchfoot), Loma Vista Recordings (Andrew Bird, Denzel Curry, The Revivalists), and Rounder Records (Dervish, I’m With Her, Logan Ledger).

Manchester Orchestra And The Front Bottoms Announce Co-Headlining Tour

Manchester Orchestra And The Front Bottoms Announce Co-Headlining Tour

Later this fall, alternative rock bands Manchester Orchestra and The Front Bottoms will go on a co-headlining tour together.

The tour will start November 21 at the Fox Theater in Atlanta, Ga. as part of Manchester Orchestra’s annual The Stuffing and will end December 18 in Lowell, Mass.. Tickets go on sale this Friday at 10 am est. You can buy tickets here.

Manchester Orchestra released their latest album A Black Mile To The Surface last June on Favorite Gentlemen/Loma Vista Recordings (Denzel Curry, Local Natives, St. Vincent) and The Front Bottoms newest record Going Grey dropped back in October of last year via Fueled By Ramen (All Time Low, E^ST, Panic! At The Disco).

Check the tour dates down below.

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Alternative Buffalo’s Fifth Kerfuffle Starts Summer Off Right

Alternative Buffalo’s Fifth Kerfuffle Starts Summer Off Right

For the past five years, Alternative Buffalo’s Kerfuffle has been a highlight for many Buffalonians during the summer, and this year was no different. With a lineup that featured up-and-coming acts like Mainland and Mansionair to beloved legends like Taking Back Sunday and Manchester Orchestra, this year rocked on hard.

The all-day festival at Canalside on June 16 started off with the Brooklyn based post-punkers Mainland. Sounding like a cross between Panama Wedding and Day Wave, the trio composed of vocalist/guitarist Jordan Topf (who wore a Buffalo Bills shirt during their performance,) bassist Alex Pitta, and guitarist/synth player Corey Mullee got the crowd going with their performance of “I Found God”. Topf personally thanked the radio station for playing their song and helping them gain some well-deserved attention.

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Family Of The Year didn’t let technical difficulties stop them from playing.

While performances for later acts like Australian alt trio Mansionair and former Prenatt’s Picks artist Marian Hill went smoothly, some technical issues sprung up. First, it happened briefly to Los Angeles indie rock group Family Of The Year, but their problem was quickly fixed. However, that wasn’t the story for Robert DeLong. The Kerfuffle veteran (he played The Kerfuffle Before Christmas back in 2014 along with The Airborne Toxic Event, Neon Trees, and Walk The Moon) suffered a major technical issue that caused a 15 minute delay, unfortunately cutting his set short. But that didn’t stop him from using his short amount of time to rock out, performing hit after hit like “Global Concepts” which had him busting out a drum solo and his duet with indie artist K.Flay “Favorite Color Is Blue”.

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Robert DeLong performing “Favorite Color Is Blue” with K.Flay (on screen) joining him “via satellite.”

Manchester Orchestra finally brought the rock to Kerfuffle. The radio station have been trying for years to get these Atlantans to play, and they succeeded. Guitarist/vocalist Andy Hull sounded incredible jamming out hits like “I’ve Got Friends,” “Cope,” and their newest song “The Gold” from their new album A Black Mile To The Surface which came out last July on Loma Vista Recordings (Ghost, Marilyn Manson, Sylvan Esso).

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Long Island emo legends Taking Back Sunday played mostly older material.

When emo legends Taking Back Sunday took the stage, I was expecting to see crowd surfing and mosh pits. Boy was I wrong. Even though the group played b-sides like “Error: Operator,” “You Know How I Do,” and “Better Homes And Gardens,” and classics like “MakeDamnSure,” “Cute Without The ‘E’ (Cut From The Team),” and “A Decade Under The Influence,” the audience seemed pretty calm. This bummed me out immensely since Adam Lazzara and crew were belting their hearts out onstage. It was nice to hear the crowd sing their hearts out to “MakeDamnSure” and “Cute Without The ‘E’ (Cut From The Team).”

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Matt And Kim brought out the big guns: humongous beach balls that could topple cities.

Even though AWOLNATION killed it as the headliners, there was another group who deserved to headline: Matt And Kim. Back after a year of no shows due to drummer Kim Schifino tearing her ACL, the duo formed up of Schifino and keyboardist/vocalist Matt Johnson, the two quickly tore up the stage, kicking off with “It’s Alright” and rolling along with other bangers like “Cameras,” “Hey Now,” “Daylight,” “Get It,” and “Forever,” a song that features Blink-182’s Mark Hoppus and punk band SWMRS as gang vocals. They brought out gigantic beach balls that caused the light post with the police camera to shake, confetti, and sex dolls that bounced across the crowd. Even the crowd was feeling the energy that Matt and Kim were radiating. If Schifino told the crowd to climb up on the porta potty, they would and did. There were mosh pits and a goddamn wall of death (Matt said it wasn’t a wall of death but the “wall of Kim’s vagina.”) Seriously, Buffalo loves Matt And Kim, and it’s damn clear that whenever they come to the Queen City they’re gonna have a great time.

While this Kerfuffle wasn’t my personal favorite (that would be last year due to Dashboard Confessional, OK Go, and Franz Ferdinand,) I would have to say it was a good one. Alternative Buffalo once again proved themselves that they’re the best radio station in Buffalo that books the best festival of the summer. Hopefully they can keep that promise when it comes to this year’s Kerfuffle Before Christmas.