Tag: You Me At Six

The Most Anticipated Albums Of 2024 (Part Three) 

The Most Anticipated Albums Of 2024 (Part Three) 

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

In 2024, 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 2024, in no particular order.

Sum 41
Album: Heaven :x: Hell (Rise)
Release Date:
3/29

After 28 years, it all comes down to this. The final album from Canadian pop-punk/metal legends Sum 41. Their eighth album Heaven :x: Hell combines the two genres Sum 41 are best known for: pop-punk and heavy metal, a style they’ve been pulling off since the 2010s. It’s their only release on Rise Records (Alkaline Trio, Harper, You Me At Six,) after spending the later half of the 2010s with Californian independent label Hopeless Records (Hey Violet, PVRIS, The Wonder Years.) Whether you’re a fan who’s nostalgic for their old school pop-punk days, or a fan of their modern heavy hitting metal sound, Heaven :x: Hell will be the best of both worlds.

Jon Snodgrass
Album: Barge At Will (Thousand Islands)
Release Date: 3/29

Jon Snodgrass is getting a little help from his friends. He spent the recording process for his upcoming album Barge At Will at his home in Fort Collins, Colo., and at The Blasting Room, a studio owned by Bill Stevenson (All, Black Flag, Descendents.) Stevenson played the drums, while his other friends Chris Wollard (Hot Water Music), Chris Cresswell (The Flatliners), Peter “JR” Wasilewski (Less Than Jake), and Scott Reynolds (All,) helped in their own ways. Barge At Will began with of all things, writing a new jingle for a Colorado Rockies podcast. “At the end of the podcast I said, ‘you guys need a new jingle. This thing that you have it is fucking terrible.’ So, I wrote a new jingle for them,” Snodgrass told New Noise Magazine in an interview. “Then when that happened and they aired the thing, they made a comment, ‘so this guy’s a cool guy. He says he likes making up these songs on the spot.’ Hit him up, you can get a jingle. I ended up having to tell them a week or so later, ‘you don’t have to say that anymore because I’m kind of backed up with work.’” Thus he had all these songs, and with Bill’s help, and some help from friends, Barge At Will was born. It’s good to have friends.

Dustin Kensrue
Album: Desert Dreaming (Vagrant)
Release Date: 4/5

Let me be honest for a sec. I honestly didn’t know Vagrant Records (Alexisonfire, The Get Up Kids, Reggie And The Full Effect) was still kicking. The only bit of life I saw from the legendary emo label was a 25th anniversary show last year featuring numerous alumni. So color me surprised when I saw that Thrice frontman Dustin Kensrue was dropping his fifth solo album (his first of original music since 2015’s Carry The Fire) ─ Desert Dreaming ─ next month on the label. From what I’ve heard so far, it’s some classic Americana, possibly the only Americana album I’ve ever put on this list. Long live Vagrant and celebrate its history with the charming tunes of Dustin Kensrue.

Aaron West And The Roaring Twenties
Album: In Lieu Of Flowers (Hopeless/Loneliest Places On Earth)
Release Date: 4/12

The sad and miserable tale of everyone’s favorite underdog continues. Aaron West And The Roaring Twenties, the beloved character study from the mind of The Wonder Years’s frontman Dan Campbell, is back in the saddle with his third album In Lieu Of Flowers. According to a press release, ILOF “picks up”picks up where Routine Maintenance left off” and has Mr. West “tend to the wounds he’s ignored for over a decade.” I can’t wait to hear more of Aaron’s story. Possible album of the year contender right here. We love you, Aaron, you poor bastard.

Cloud Nothings
Album: Final Summer (Pure Noise)
Release Date: 4/19

It’s a new era for Cloud Nothings. First, they left longtime label Carpark Records (@, Ducks Ltd., Rui Gabriel.) Second, they joined Pure Noise Records (The Amity Affliction, Galactic Empire, Koyo.) And third, their new album Final Summer drops April 19. “We’re really glad to be working with Pure Noise. It’s exciting to be on a label with so many great punk bands, and it’s going to be inspiring to see our music standing alongside the myriad sick records that Pure Noise has released,” frontman Dylan Baldi said in a press release.

The Ghost Inside
Album: Searching For Solace (Epitaph)
Release Date: 4/19

Four years have passed since The Ghost Inside unleashed their comeback album The Ghost Inside to the world. It was worth the wait after their fatal bus crash back in 2015. In the nine years since the accident, they’ve grown closer than ever before, and have sounded tighter than ever. With this momentum, they’re pushing themselves further with Searching For Solace, the band’s sixth album. “People always ask me how I remain positive,” frontman Jonathan Vigil tells Knotfest. “I’m realizing now that there’s never really a time where you reach that point of ‘happiness.’ It’s a constant journey. I know that life is hills and valleys. You must be willing to embrace new things, stand up for yourself, and adapt. Because the goalposts just move further away. The search for solace never ends.” The comeback is over. Now it’s time to continue right where they left off.

Frank Turner
Album: Undefeated (Xtra Mile)
Release Date: 5/3

Frank Turner is truly undefeated. After spending a decade with major label Polydor (Belters Only, Elbow, The Rolling Stones,) Frank’s going back to where it all started: indie labels. His old label Xtra Mile Recordings (Beans On Toast, HalfNoise, Rob Lynch) have snatched him up to release Undefeated in early May. “After the pandemic, back in the independent world, with a new drummer, I feel proud, grateful and pleasantly surprised to be putting out a record that I love with all my heart, that I think might be one of my best,” Frank writes on his blog. “It’s a defiant, energetic record about growing old disgracefully and making peace with that. I’m still standing up, still have something to share with the world, and I’m excited to let you know about it.” Ten albums in, Frank still shows that he has a lot left to prove, and with killer songs to boot. He was influenced heavily by The Hold Steady and Loudon Wainwright III, muses he’s called “people who write about adulthood.”

Knocked Loose
Album: You Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed To (Pure Noise)
Release Date: 5/10

Is it too soon to say album of the year? Knocked Loose are ready to break bones and created mosh pits again with their long-awaited third record, You Won’t Go Before You’re Supposed To. Produced by Grammy nominated producer WZRD BLD aka Drew Fulk (Disturbed, For All Those Sleeping, Lil Wayne,) YWGBYST picks up right after their beloved sophomore effort A Different Shade Of Blue and their EP A Tear In The Fabric Of Life. After gracing the stages of Coachella and Bonnaroo, Knocked Loose are bigger than ever, so the album has to be equally bigger than ever. As Blabbermouth.com puts it, “[Knocked Loose] have honed in on a diverse, cohesive and savagely aggressive album that sums up the massive strides they’ve taken during their decade as a band, and asserts their boundless potential going forward.” The album has features from Poppy and Chris Motionless of Motionless In White (KL frontman Bryan Garris appeared on MIW’s song “Slaughterhouse” from their 2022 album Scoring The End Of The World.)

Say Anything
Album: …Is Committed (Dine Alone)
Release Date: 5/24

Only a band like Say Anything could make a meta record. The first track on their comeback record …Is Committed is literally titled “Introduction To The Reunion Record.” “[…Is Committed]’s a satire of everything our band was, and the idea of every emo band coming back after five years, going back to basics and grasping for the fanbase they discarded so callously by diving headfirst into their fans’ wants and needs, instead of gorging on major label cash and then still trying to be the next Animal Collective or Strokes despite what their band actually sounds like, to be thwarted every time by indie gatekeepers,” the group wrote on social media. Produced by Brad Wood (Better Than Ezra, Placebo, Touché Amoré,) who also produced their 2007 double album In Defense Of The Genre, …Is Committed was written by frontman Max Bemis, according to an interview with Alternative Press, “…during a period of such searing trauma and loneliness that not having my parental BFF by my proverbial side felt like an affront even if my mom was just trying to deal with other issues that come with being a child-soul with grown-person decisions to make.”

Mayday Parade
Album: TBA (Self-Released)
Release Date: TBA

Mayday Parade are doing things on their own terms this time with their upcoming album. For the first time since the band’s debut EP, they’ve fully independent. While no word has been officially made, the band have posted photos on social media of them in the studio. So far we have gotten a few singles as well as a collaboration with lo-fi artist Less Gravity called Mayday Parade Lofi featuring lo-fi remixes of classic MP songs.

Part four will come out next week!

The Most Anticipated Albums Of 2023 (Part Two)

The Most Anticipated Albums Of 2023 (Part Two)

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

In 2023, 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 2023, in no particular order.

Andrew McMahon In The Wilderness

Album: Tilt At The Wind No More (Nettwerk)

Release Date: 3/31

Andrew McMahon In The Wilderness’s fourth album Tilt At The Wind No More spent years in the making. Releasing March 31 via Nettwerk Music Group (BANNERS, John Butler Trio, San Cisco,) and produced by McMahon, Tommy English (Carly Rae Jepsen, Poppy, Set It Off,) and Jeremy Hatchet (Florence + The Machine, Lizzo, Ricky Montgomery,) it will be McMahon’s first release under the Nettwerk label. His last record, 2018’s Upside Down Flowers came out on Fantasy Records (BAILEN, L.S. Dunes, Tedeschi Trucks Band). The album may be about “pure nostalgia,” as stated by McMahon when talking about the album’s debut single “Lying On The Hood Of Your Car.” He said in a statement, “I made a conscious decision when I was writing it to imagine a whole world of important figures in my life lying next to me on the hood of that imagined vehicle. In one breath it’s a song about young love and in another it’s about those nights out with friends. Nights that ended in parking lot conversations about lives you might lead one day and places you might escape to if you could. I rarely build imagined worlds when I write songs but something about this one feels very much like a memory to me.”

Blink-182

Album: TBA (Columbia)

Release Date: TBA

Reunited and it feels so good. After spending seven years absent from the band, original guitarist/vocalist Tom DeLonge has returned. 2023 is going to be a big year for Blink-182. A massive world tour alongside Turnstile, Rise Against, The Story So Far, and Wallows, is about to take place, they’re headlining When We Were Young with Green Day, and a new album is on the way. DeLonge promised us back in December that Blink’s ninth album is coming out “in a few months.” Specifically when is still up in the air. But a new Blink record with Tom back in the group is gonna be promising.

Metallica

Album: 72 Seasons (Blackened)

Release Date: 4/14

When Metallica announces a new record, everyone listens. The metal band are about to unleash their eleventh album 72 Seasons in two months. Produced by Greg Fidelman (Adele, High On Fire, Sick Of It All,) 72 Seasons is a concept album dwelling about the first 18 years of someone’s life. From what we’ve got from the album so far, it’s gonna kick ass.

Story Of The Year

Album: Tear Me To Pieces (SharpTone)

Release Date: 3/10

Making their debut with new label SharpTone Records (Broadside, Miss May I, We Came As Romans,) post-hardcore vets Story Of The Year are ready to give you an album packed with “heartache, desperation, motivation, toxic relationships, pain, loss, anger — all of the essential ingredients of the classic Story Of The Year sound…”Guitarist Ryan Phillips told Blabbermouth, “I think this album will be a defining moment in our career. When our fans hear it, they’ll be, like, ‘Oh, shit, these dudes are ready to go!’ This is the sound of a band putting everything into it. If a new band came out with this album, I’d be texting everyone in my band about it.”

Now More Than Ever

Album: Creatrix (Creatrix/Thirty Tigers)

Release Date: 3/17

Let’s get this out of the way before people panic. No, The All-American Rejects aren’t dead just because frontman Tyson Ritter is focusing on this new project: Now More Than Ever. In the 2023 edition of Prenatt’s Picks I’ll go into more detail about Now More Than Ever, but just know this for now; Now More Than Ever just wanna make you dance your ass off. That’s the goal of their upcoming debut record Creatrix. Consisting of nine tracks, Broadway World puts it best. “Now More Than Ever shimmers with a spirit of freedom, its nine tracks gracefully surfing the peaks of the past four decades of pop and rock. These are the kinds of songs that used to be on the radio and certainly still should be today – the ones that make you dance, shake your ass and forget about everything else for a while.”

The Bouncing Souls

Album: Ten Stories High (Pure Noise)

Release Date: 3/24

The last time The Bouncing Souls dropped an album was seven years ago, back when the legendary NJ punks were on Rise Records (Flogging Molly, Polyphia, You Me At Six.) Now on Pure Noise Records (Galactic Empire, Samiam, Year Of The Knife,) TBS’s 11th record Ten Stories High is as classic of a Bouncing Souls album as you can get. Produced by Will Yip (Balance And Composure, La Dispute, Quicksand,) TBS wanted to craft an album inspired by their fans’ very own stories. They used Patreon and Zoom calls to chat with their fans, using their conversations to shape Ten Stories High. “The technical side of doing the songwriting was pretty strict,” vocalist Greg Attonito said on the subject. “We’d do these 30-to-40-minute Zoom calls with the person and just try to get to know them. They were all massive Souls fans, but they were all so different. We’d just try to have a conversation and I would take notes…something would usually pop out and I could see it as something to focus on in a song, whether it was more literally or even just a kernel that would spin off into something totally different.”

My Chemical Romance

Album: TBA (Reprise)

Release Date: TBA

Nothing has been stated on whether or not a new MCR album in on the way, but no way they aren’t making a new album. The beloved rock band reunited back in 2019 and shocked the world with their first new song in over a decade last year called “The Foundations Of Decay.” All we can do is wait, and pray.

August Burns Red

Album: Death Below (SharpTone)

Release Date: 3/24

“It’s no secret that the past few years have been extremely dark and challenging,” guitarist JB Brubaker told Blabbermouth when discussing August Burns Red’s upcoming tenth album. “Death Below is here as a result of that time in each our lives and the emotions that came with it. We were motivated by uncertainty, fear, outrage, and triumph. I feel this is the darkest, most personal album we’ve ever written, and I couldn’t be more proud of what the five of us made together.” The album is the first ABR record to feature numerous guests, starring Jesse Leach of Killswitch Engage, J.T. Casey of ERRA, and Spencer Chamberlain of Underoath.

See You Next Tuesday

Album: Distractions (Good Fight)

Release Date: 2/17

15 years ago, Midwestern death core/mathcore troupe See You Next Tuesday released their second album Intervals. That album ended with the sounds of a ticking clock, which originally was put there to push the record’s length past the 30-minute mark, as well as to have it lead into their third album. But that never happened as CUNT went on an indefinite hiatus in 2009. As of 2023, we can officially state that the clock has stopped ticking. Coming February 17 is CUNT’s long-awaited third album Distractions, being released by their new label Good Fight Music (’68, Boys Night Out, Eighteen Visions.) Will it be worth the wait? You’ll have to wait until the 17th to find out.

John-Allison Weiss

Album: The Long Way (Get Better)

Release Date: 2/17

Singer-songwriter John-Allison Weiss was doing pretty well for themselves a decade ago. They were on SideOneDummy Records (Big D And The Kids Table, CLIFFDIVER, Plasma Canvas,) played the Vans Warped Tour in 2013 alongside Citizen, William Beckett of The Academy Is…, and Kevin Seconds of 7 Seconds, and was living in LA. But things changed in 2018 for the Georgian musician when SideOneDummy folded. Then they came out as non-binary and began exploring themselves, going through a “second puberty.” Weiss told Alternative Press, “Living in this scene and staying authentic is a battle, and over the last decade, a lot of my needs got clouded by this industry. You get caught up in it, and it colors the standards you hold yourself to. That’s when I made some of my favorite art. I wanted to work out how to get back to that shameless teenage feeling with the brain of an adult.” All these changes helped shape their long-awaited fourth album The Long Way, their first album since 2015’s New Love. It’s also their first album with new label Get Better Records (Alice Bag, Full On Mone’t, Noods.) With all these changes in Weiss’s life, The Long Way is going to be a very interesting follow-up.

Part three will come out next week!

<strong>The Academy Is…, Enter Shikari, girlfriends, More To Play Slam Dunk Festival 2023</strong>

The Academy Is…, Enter Shikari, girlfriends, More To Play Slam Dunk Festival 2023

The UK’s number one pop-punk/emo festival is back for its 17th year.

Slam Dunk Festival 2023 unveiled its first wave of acts, including Enter Shikari and The Offspring as the first two headliners. Other acts announced include Maggie Lindermann, Bowling For Soup, Creeper, girlfriends, Less Than Jake (performing Hello Rockview in full), Grayscale, Four Year Strong, Zebrahead, Charlotte Sands, and a special reunion performance by American pop-punk band The Academy Is….

Check out the current lineup below.

Digital tickets can be purchased from the festival’s website.

Slam Dunk Festival 2023 will take place Saturday, May 27, at Hatfield Park, and Sunday, May 28, at Leeds Temple Newsman.

The festival began in 2006 and has featured bands like Hellogoodbye, Beat Union, Sonic Boom Six, The Ghost Of A Thousand, Hit The Lights, 3OH!3, I See Stars, The Early November, A Loss For Words, You Me At Six, Panic! At The Disco, Goldfinger, Every Time I Die, Saves The Day, McFly, and Hot Mulligan.

Juice WRLD Dead At 21

Juice WRLD Dead At 21

Young rapper Juice WLRD has passed away. He was 21. 

The Chicago born rapper whose real name is Jarad Anthony Higgins died after suffering a seizure this morning at Chicago Midway airport, according to TMZ. 

TMZ reported that the rapper “was still conscious when he was rushed to a hospital. However, he was pronounced dead a short time later at the hospital.”

Juice WLRD first gained prominence with his 2018 single “Lucid Dreams,” which sampled Sting’s 1993 song “Shape Of My Heart.” He would later sign with Interscope Records (BLACKPINK, Louis The Child, Playboi Carti,) dropping two albums. His latest was Death Race For Love, released back in March. 

The rapper collaborated with artists like Travis Scott, RM and Suga of BTS, Lil Yatchy, Ellie Goulding, and Future, with the latter teaming up to create the mixtape Wrld On Drugs. He’s toured with Ski Mask The Slump God, YBN Cordae, and Nicki Minaj, and performed at festivals like Made In America 2019 (Cardi B, Dominic Fike, Rosalía,) Camp Flog Gnaw 2019 (The Internet, Solange, Tyler, The Creator,) and Reading And Leeds 2019 (The 1975, Charli XCX, You Me At Six.)

What’s eerie about his passing is that he apparently predicted his young death in his song “Legends.” In the track he raps, “What’s the 27 Club? We ain’t making it past 21.”

Several musicians like Billy Martin of Good Charlotte, Andrew McGuire of Afterlife, and Zedd, tweeted their reactions and thoughts after hearing of his death.

Prior to his passing, Higgins was facing a lawsuit from defunct pop-punk outfit Yellowcard, who said “Lucid Dreams” was copying “melodic elements” from their 2006 song “Holly Wood Died.” They were suing the rapper for $15 million. Yellowcard’s attorney Richard Busch issued a statement reading:

“This was not a lawsuit [Yellowcard] wanted to file. They put all of the parties on notice a long while ago and gave them every opportunity to try to resolve it. That notice was pretty much ignored leaving them with no real choice. As alleged in the Complaint, this is not just a generic Emo Rap song, but is a blatant copy of significant  original compositional elements of “Holly Wood Died” in several respects. Beyond that, everything we have to say is in the Complaint.” 

Rest In Peace Juice WRLD.