Shinedown
Shinedown blends post-grunge grit, Southern intensity, and emotional catharsis to craft anthemic, stadium-ready rock. With every album, they push boundaries, making music that resonates deeply and never loses its raw, urgent power.
Shinedown blends post-grunge grit, Southern intensity, and emotional catharsis to craft anthemic, stadium-ready rock. With every album, they push boundaries, making music that resonates deeply and never loses its raw, urgent power.
Artist Bios Stone Temple Pilots Stone Temple Pilots (STP) are an American rock band formed in San Diego, California, in 1989. The band’s classic lineup consisted of Scott Weiland (vocals), brothers Robert DeLeo (bass, backing vocals) and Dean DeLeo (guitar), and Eric Kretz (drums). Emerging during the early ’90s grunge explosion, STP distinguished themselves with…
Van Halen’s music is an electrifying blend of hard rock and virtuosic guitar, with Eddie Van Halen’s iconic shredding leading the charge. Fast, fiery, and full of swagger, their songs combine infectious hooks, explosive energy, and high-flying solos, defining ’80s rock with a mix of fun and precision.
Cheap Trick, the legendary power-pop band known for their catchy melodies and electrifying live performances, was formed in Rockford, Illinois, in 1973
The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here Alice In Chains Hollow (2012) Alter Bridge Addicted To Pain (2013) Avenged Sevenfold Hail To The King 2013 Chevelle Face The Floor (2011) Disturbed The Sound Of Silence (2015) Sonic Highways Foo Fighters Something From Nothing (2014) Walk (2011) Ghost Dance Macabre (2018) Greta Van Fleet Highway Tune (2017) Halestorm…
Prior to the 2010s women in Rock were scarce. A female fronted band was usually treated as an oddity. But Halestorm, The Pretty Reckless, Paramore, Florence + The Machine and Wolf Alice, among others, changed that. Halestorm (frontwoman Lzzy Hale pictured above) delivered “The Strange Case Of…” in ’12 featuring “Love Bites.” That same year…
If the songs sometimes feel like they’ve been beamed in from different decades, that’s by design. There’s no genre purity here—power pop gets into a bar fight with garage psych, soul shows up in a three-piece suit, and blues limps in with broken teeth.
Baroness gave the record a tense, uneasy beauty. You won’t walk away humming the whole thing, but certain moments will cling to you—half-heard, half-felt. Gold & Grey doesn’t aim to be perfect. It aims to be real. And in its tangle of glory and grit, it succeeds.
*Father of the Bride* is Vampire Weekend at their weirdest and most open—sunny melodies masking existential dread, West Coast ease clashing with quiet chaos. It’s a sprawling, pastel-tinted album full of contradictions that somehow feels at peace.