New Music Fridays: Imperial Mammoth, "Little Earthquakes"

New Music Fridays: Young Maverick, "Running Around"

New Music Fridays: Fear Of Men, "Descent"

New Music Fridays: The Janoskians, "Real Girls Eat Cake"

New Music Fridays: Tanner, "Come Alive"

New Music Fridays: The Number Ones, "Heartsmash"

Song Of The Day: Nina Nesbitt, "Stay Out"

From 2013, here's Nina Nesbitt with "Stay Out."

Enjoy!

Seven Questions In Heaven With Unicycle Loves You



Today we're spending Seven Questions In Heaven with Unicycle Loves You lead singer/guitarist Jim Carroll:

Describe your music for our readers who may not be familiar with you.
I've found that "Noise Pop" is probably the most accurate description when asked this question by somebody. If that seems to perplex them, then I just tell them we like Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr.

Who are your musical influences and idols?
I don't really idolize my major influences because they always end up doing or saying something stupid to fuck up my admiration for them. I guess the stuff that really influences my own music is the stuff that moves me in the same way that it did when I was a teenager. I can throw an old record on by The Swirlies or Eric's Trip and it still sounds like the best thing in the world to me.

What was the first album, cassette, or CD you bought with your own money?
The first cassette I bought with my own money was, in fact, Bon Jovi's Slippery When Wet. I was eight with no older siblings, so cut me some slack.

Song Of The Day: Snap!, "The Power"

From 1990, here's Snap! with "The Power."

Enjoy!

Seven Questions In Heaven With Stargroves



Today we're spending Seven Questions In Heaven with Stargroves' Teddy Watson:

Describe your music for our readers who may not be familiar with you.
I'd say our music falls into the category of indie pop. Basically we try to write really catchy melodies while keeping the orchestration interesting and different.

Who are your musical influences and idols?
Stars is my biggest personal influence, and I try my best to sound like Torquil Campbell. I'm also super into Sigur Rós, The Innocence Mission, Freelance Whales, and a lot of indie pop bands.

What was the first album, cassette, or CD you bought with your own money?
Hmm... probably a Stars CD, or maybe four all at once.



What was the strangest gig you've ever played?
There have been a few really good ones this year. One really memorable one was a festival in Albany. We'd never played Albany before, and I'd been told not to expect much and that it's really tough for out of town bands to draw in Albany. On top of that we hit crazy traffic and got there 5 minutes before we had to go on. When we started playing there was nobody near the stage, but by the time we finished the place was crowded and the crowd was super receptive/energetic.

What's the first thing you look for when you hit a new town?
I get pretty anxious before I show so we usually head straight to the venue so we can get as much prep time as possible, not too exciting but it's the truth :-P

If they named an ice cream flavor after you, what would be the name and why?
Haha idunno maybe something with nerds because for some reason people always say I'm a huge nerd. Also nerds are great and now I want to know what they're like on ice cream.

Final question: You're the opening act of a music festival. You can get any five artists, living or dead, to perform on the bill with you. Which five do you choose and what song do you all perform as the final jam?

Hmm gotta have Torquil Campbell and Amy Milan, Jonsí, Emily Hanes, pre-motorcycle crash Dylan. But then I'd prolly just wanna watch lol. Hmmm what's a good jam song. Something super long and indulgent like "Dry The Rain" by The Beta Band. Yeah that sounds good :-P

More Stargroves: Official | Facebook | Twitter

Song Of The Day: Bel Biv Devoe, "Poison"

From 1990, here's Bel Biv Devoe with "Poison."

Enjoy!

New Music Fridays: Charly Bliss, "Love Me"

New Music Fridays: Beach Day, "All My Friends Were Punks"

New Music Fridays: King avriel, "Judgment Day // Valley Idols"

New Music Fridays: Yann Tiersen, "A Midsummer Evening"

New Music Fridays: KAV, "Dance In A Panic"

New Music Fridays: FREEMAN, "The English And Western Stallion"

New Music Fridays: Allison Weiss, "Giving Up"

New Music Fridays: Unicycle Loves You, "JAWS"

New Music Fridays: Wrongchilde, "Gold Blooded"

This is the coolest lyric video EVER!!!

Song Of The Day: Stargroves, "Hats In The Air"

From 2013, here's Stargroves with "Hats In The Air."

Enjoy!

Foxy Shazam's Eric Nally: The Culture Brats Interview



On May 27th, Foxy Shazam will launch a massive summer tour in support of their fifth (and totally awesome and totally free) album, Gonzo. But first, singer Eric Nally was nice enough to drop by and talk to us about the tour, the album, recording with Steve Albini, balancing his career with fatherhood, and Twisted Sister.

You're going to be launching your summer-long Gonzo tour next week in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. What can fans expect from the upcoming shows?
Well, we're definitely challenging ourselves as a band with this tour. We're taking ourselves to a new place musically and physically and everything. We're going to bring an all-new show. We're going to play Gonzo in its entirety first. We're going to play about a half an hour, the whole record, front to back in sequence. We're going to take a break, go offstage, come back on and play the older songs that we have.

Larry And His Flask will be opening on the first leg of the tour. What led you to choose them?
I've always been extremely particular with a live band. I don't come across very many bands, even if I like their music, where I'm watching them live and I'm saying, "Wow, this is really entertaining." Where on top of liking the music, I'm being visually entertained. I don't see that very often. Even the bands that I go see that I really like sometime bore me when I'm watching them. I'd rather just be at home in my comfort zone listening to their record.

But with Larry And His Flask, that's not the case at all. Their show has always impressed me and we toured with them on the Warped Tour and that's where we met them. I remember thinking how fun they were to watch, on top of them being great music. Foxy's somebody who takes the show very seriously and we wanted to take it to the next level for our fans and I think Larry And His Flask's a band that does that. Putting a package together like this is basically just trying to give people a great ticket.



Let's talk about Gonzo. I love the album, especially "In This Life" and "Don't Give In."
Cool!

You dropped the album with very little fanfare. There were hints on your Facebook page that new music was coming, but that was about it. Why did you just basically say, "Here's Gonzo. Enjoy it. You can have it for free."
I wanted to break down the wall between our band and our fans and new fans and anybody who can access the music. I wanted it to be as easy as possible for people to find Foxy Shazam and to listen to them and hear what we're doing and what we stand for. I feel like Gonzo is the record that best defines Foxy Shazam so far in our career. For us to give it away for free and make it available so easily for people, it was important to me because it's really what we are and I want people to be able to access that easily without having to save money or talk their parents into buying it. Any obstacle you could possibly come across, I didn't want that to be in the way. And at the same time it lets people know we're not in this for money. I want to make a career, I have to because I've got to support my family, but the core of this whole thing isn't because of that. It's not because of money. It's because I love to play music and I want to spread my music to everybody.

What drew you to Steve Albini? Was it one album he worked on in particular or his entire body of work?
I liked his attitude towards the artist. In this business, it's hard to believe but there's very little respect towards someone who's an actual artist. That part of it has been kind of lost. In the industry, it's not about the art, it's more about the business. With Steve, reading his interviews, it seemed like he was someone who really supported the art of something and he just lets you do your thing.

And he did I'm assuming?
Oh yeah. He just did his thing which is record our album. We just brought it to him. We got everything ready. We produced it ourselves. The album was done before we even stepped foot in the studio. When we got there, we just literally played the album straight through and he recorded it. I just think he's really good at doing that. He's good at capturing what you're good at.

Yeah, I wanted to ask you about that. You recorded the album live, in order, all in the same room, and during Halloween. Was there any particular reason?
When we were writing the record in our practice room, we would always say to ourselves, "With computers nowadays, you can add as much as you want after the fact." Your songs are done and then you can go back in and add anything you can possibly think of. Even if you don't play it, you just add it. For us, I wanted it to be the meat and potatoes. I wanted people to hear the power of our music in its purest form, in its most minimal form, but it would still exceed the bigness of any record that we made in the past. We would say, "This is how it's going to sound. We're not going to add anything. This is it. What we're hearing now is how it's going to be, so let's perfect this. Let's make this as strong as it can possibly be." And that's the reasoning we did it all live because it sounded the way we wanted it to in that state.



You mentioned that the music is a bit toned down this time around. Was this done intentionally to give the lyrics, which are great and more heartfelt than your previous albums, the chance to have the main focus?
Yeah. I kind of wanted to tell a story a little bit and hone in and focus a little bit. For me, it's weird when I think of Gonzo being toned down because I had to take it up so many notches to get that out of myself. I think musically, it does come across as a little bit of a softer record but I think content wise, there's definitely more energy and more force than I've every applied before.

Yeah, I was mainly talking about the layers of music and the lack of big background vocals and all that.
This record, I'm not hiding at all. There's no part of Foxy Shazam--and I'm speaking for myself and everybody in the band--nobody's hiding behind anything. What you see is what you get.

When you spoke with USA Today about your new video for "Tragic Thrill," you said "I have to fight hard to preserve that sense of reality so as to bring up my children." I loved that. How do you balance being a musician and touring and success with being a father?
It's pretty hard because there's places I've gone in my head mentally that my kids haven't been yet. When I go to these places, I'm excavating and I'm writing about it. I'm basically mapping parts of my brain and parts of the things that I figure out as I get older. I write about that and some of that is heavy stuff. Sometimes I feel scared to just put that all out there and let my kids hear it. This album has a lot of emotional issues that I dealt with my father. It's not just my kids, it's every kid that hears the record. I just want to go these places in my head and document what I find there, but I don't want people to think that they have to go there themselves. That's a scary part about being a father and being an artist because sometimes it's not always happy, it's not always good. But the fact that I'm able to get it out in an art form and not in some other destructive way, that's what I try to get my kids to focus on.

It's hard balancing that. That was a quote from Marlon Brando that I took. He's a way different artist than me but I feel he was talking about the same things. I feel very connected to what he said there. I feel you have to get certain things out of yourself as an artist but at the same time you got to be considerate how people might perceive that if they don't understand where you're coming from.



Finally, we have one question we ask every guest. You're in charge of a music festival and get to pick five other artists, living or dead, to appear on the bill with you. Who do you choose?
Oh wow. Gosh. That's a hard one. I'm gonna go with Van Morrison. He would be the headliner. Paramore, just to put a little relevance in there. Queens Of The Stone Age would be cool to put on there because I love a lot of their records. Do you remember this band called OMC? They sang that song like "How bizarre, how bizarre. Da-na-na-na." They're a New Zealand band. The singer, Polly, he died a long time ago but they're a great band and I've been into them lately. I'd have OMC. I think Richard Pryor would open the night and just put a little funniness there.

What song do you all perform as the finale?
"Unstoppable" because we'll never stop.

We actually asked the music festival question to Dee Snider and he picked Foxy Shazam as one of the five acts to appear on the bill with Twisted Sister.
Really? Wow. Hang on...

No take backs!
Okay, okay. I would invite Dee just to hang out and he'd just have the night off and he could relax and have fun.

More Foxy Shazam: Official | Tour Dates | Facebook | Twitter

Song Of The Day: OMC, "How Bizarre"

From 1996, here's OMC with "How Bizarre."

Enjoy!

Jem And The Holograms Coming To A Theater Near You

I was always more of a She-Ra girl back in the day but I had my fair share of girl pals who were really into Jem And The Holograms. Since everything '80s is hot right now, there is of course a live action Jem film is in production. Here's the kind of weird announcement from the director. Incidentally, Scooter Braun, music mogul, is Justin Bieber's manager. (I'm ashamed I know that but the name Scooter kind of pops out.)





This week they've announced that Molly Ringwald and Juliette Lewis are involved in super secret ways. Yay? At least they're ladies that sing.

Any fans of the original cartoon really jazzed up about this?

New Music Fridays: Jackpot, Tiger, "Caught In Love"

New Music Fridays: Priests, "Doctor"

New Music Fridays: The Bots, "No One Knows"

New Music Fridays: Jeremy And The Harlequins, "White Star Bright Love"

New Music Fridays: Ella Eyre, "If I Go"

New Music Fridays: The Griswolds, "Beware The Dog"

New Music Fridays: The Toxic Avenger, "Say My Name"

Song Of The Day: Boys Boys Boys!, "We Like To Move"

From 2014, here's Boys Boys Boys! with "We Like To Move."

Enjoy!

First Look: ABC's Galavant

All of the networks have been killing off programming (BOOOOX FOX for killing Almost Human. DOUBLE BOO to NBC for killing Community!) to make room for the next season of new shows so a slew of new show trailers have been released in the past week. The one that jumped out at me, because it's kind of weird is ABC's new show Galavant. It's being billed as Spamalot meets The Princess Bride. Here's the first look:


My first reaction: Lassie from Psych is working! Nice! My second thought: what the what? How...? Who...? What?

Thoughts? Comments? Anyone psyched (pun intended) to tune in to this one? Any new shows I should check out?

Janelle Monae Covers David Bowie

Two of my favorites - Janelle Monae did a cover of David Bowie's "Heroes" for a Pepsi thing and I'm loving it. Enjoy!


New Music Fridays: Sizzy Rocket, "Girls"

New Music Fridays: Priests, "Right Wing"

New Music Fridays: Spider Bags, "Back With You Again In The World"

New Music Fridays: Old Man Canyon, "Phantoms & Friends"

New Music Fridays: Bang Bang Bang, "Shake Shake Shimmy"

New Music Fridays: The Head And The Heart, "Summertime"

New Music Fridays: American Hi-Fi, "Allison"

New Music Fridays: Garbage feat. Brody Dalle, "Girls Talk"

New Music Fridays: Unicycle Loves You, "Falling Off"

New Music Fridays: Landlady, "Dying Day"

New Music Fridays: Wrongchilde feat. Gerard Way, "Falling In Love Will Kill You"

Song Of The Day: Johnny Gill, "Rub You The Right Way"

From 1990, here's Johnny Gill with "Rub You The Right Way."

Enjoy!

Song Of The Day: Glenn Tilbrook, "Everybody Sometimes"

From 2014, here's Squeeze's Glenn Tilbrook with "Everybody Sometimes."

Enjoy!

Cover Song Of The Moment: Pomplamoose, "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go"

From 2014, here's Pomplamoose with their cover of Wham!'s "Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go."

Enjoy!

Song Of The Day: Biters, "So Many Nights"

From 2014, here's Biters with "So Many Nights."

Enjoy!

Gag Me With A Tweet!: John Cusack, Rick Springfield, Vince Neil, And More

Here's the latest Gag Me With A Tweet, our weekly look at some of the best tweets from some of our favorite '80s musicians, actors, and celebrities!









Song Of The Day: Blessid Union Of Souls, "Hey Leonardo (She Likes Me For Me)"

From 1999, here's Blessid Union Of Souls with "Hey Leonardo (She Likes Me For Me)."

Enjoy!

New Music Fridays: Beverly, "You Can't Get It Right"

New Music Fridays: WATERS, "Got To My Head"

New Music Fridays: Phia & Josh, "As The World Falls Down" (Bowie Cover)

New Music Fridays: The Kickback, "Sting's Teacher Years"

New Music Fridays: The Feed, "Rexy"

New Music Fridays: Jeremy And The Harlequins, "Cam Girl"

New Music Fridays: Grouplove, "Let Me In"

New Music Fridays: Ariana Grande feat. Iggy Azalea, "Problem"

New Music Fridays: 1,2,3, "When The Levee Broke At The County Fair"

Song Of The Day: The Sundays, "Here's Where The Story Ends"

From 1990, here's The Sundays with "Here's Where The Story Ends."

Enjoy!

Song Of The Day: Andy Taylor, "Take It Easy"

From 1986, here's Andy Taylor with "Take It Easy."

Enjoy!