Browsing Category

Best Rock Music Blog

It is almost impossible to imagine Western society without the influence of rock n roll; the artists that became renowned as (rock)gods, the aesthetic, the culture that so many live and breathe, and of course, the music that became the soundtrack to our lives. Many of the greatest artists of all time are of some rock inclination; whether that be Buddy Holly, Nirvana, or The Rolling Stones – the charts simply wouldn’t be the same without the unpredictable and volatile genre.

Rock started to emerge in the 1940s through the masterful rhythm of Chuck Berry and his contemporaries. Twenty years later, The Rolling Stones became the true face of rock n roll as they advocated for sex-positive youthful rebellion; this controversy became synonymous with rock which took the genre to brand-new cultural heights. By the 70s, artists started to push rock music into heavier, darker territories. At the same time, hard rock and metal were behind conceived; Pink Floyd gave rock trippier, more progressive tendencies with their seminal album, Dark Side of the Moon. Another major move in alternative music happened in the 70s as punk artists, such as The Clash and The Sex Pistols extrapolated rock elements and fused them into their punk sound.

The 80s was the era for sleaze rock, indie rock and college rock bands, while the 90s delivered the grunge movement with Nirvana, Hole, Soundgarden and Pearl Jam chomping at the aggressive discordant bit. Mainstream rock artists from across the globe became part and parcel of the music industry at the start of the 90s, but with the death of Kurt Cobain, the popularity of alternative music took a nosedive – despite the best efforts of Limp Bizkit, Staind, Puddle of Mudd and The Red Hot Chilli Peppers.

In any definitive guide of the best rock bands of all time, the rock artists that made their debut in the 21st-century are few and far between. But regardless of how much you want to pull the plug on the life support of rock, it isn’t quite dead – yet. For irrefutable proof, you only need to consider Black Midi, Yungblud, Greta Van Fleet, Highly Suspect, The Snuts, and Dirty Honey, who are all bringing in the new wave of classic rock – in their own way.

Contemporary rock may not sound like it used to, but that is one way in which rock has remained consistent over the past eight decades – it never has sounded like it used to. Each new generation of artists has found room for expressive and experimental manoeuvre.

Maverick Smith walked with garage rock giants in ‘Holding On’

Maverick Smith’s seminal single ‘Holding On’ homages an epoch when rock ruled with a raucous yet refined hand while moving far beyond pastiche. Featured on the collaborative album ‘With Friends & Imperfections’, born between the synergy of 22 rock legends in their own right, the single synthesises elements of power pop and proto-punk, steeped in the nostalgic vibes of the 60s and 70s.

The keys dance with an uplifting tempo reminiscent of the 70s pop-rock scene, while the gritty guitar chords transport you to the nascent proto-punk streets of New York City as surf-pop harmonies swell in the background, bringing a taste of the Beach Boys with a sprinkle of Cheap Trick’s feel-good panache.

Emerging from a decade-long pause, Maverick Smith, steered by the renowned Sean Boynes, reinvented their approach to music creation. The album, recorded live in the Ohio Valley, harnesses an organic sound that modern digital productions can seldom mirror. This collection of tracks, brought to life by a cadre of Grammy laureates and indie rock veterans, is less about technical perfection and more about the palpable, unrefined energy of friends feeding off each other’s fervour. You couldn’t ask for a more potent rock-licked serotonin fix.

With Friends and Imperfections was officially released on October 1st. Stream the collaborative LP in full on Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

ManiSol stood at the vanguard at dusk as desert rock pioneers in ‘Last Pursuit at Sundown’

ManiSol

ManiSol, the Austrian duo known for their always-in-flux soundprint, have returned with Last Pursuit at Sundown, a dusky desert rock vignette which invites the airwaves to approach the Western Front at twilight. As you sink into the throes of the scriptless saga, your imagination will meet the minds of the relentless innovators.

As post-rock Titans who continually redefine their sound, this latest entry is true to immersive form; by dripping psychedelia into the dynamic fusion, a vivid auditory landscape unfurls through which ManiSol builds a Western panorama where riffs replace pistols at dawn.

The track commences with a quiet stir of bass notes, escalating into a crescendo of clashing brashy chords which reverberate through the dusky hues of sundown in the sprawling sonic scene. Winding back down from the aural apex, each note is crafted to prolong the moment, allowing the music to slither through the emotionally charged atmosphere and inviting the listener to partake in a sublime encounter with instrumental introspection.

ManiSol’s ability to reinvent themselves remains evident as they don instruments like psychedelic rock armour; each release from the duo showcases their relentless pursuit of creative expression and ability to challenge expectations with each note.

Last Pursuit at Sundown will hit all major streaming platforms, including Bandcamp, Spotify & Tidal, on October 17.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Conversations in Sound: An Interview with Insomnia on their Artistic Evolution and Ethos

Joining us at A&R Factory today is the band Insomnia, known for their introspective exploration of profound themes through a unique sonic palette. As they continue to expand their influence beyond San Diego, the band share the essence of their sound, marked by a dynamic range and the integration of deeply personal and universal lyrical content. Their approach invites listeners into a reflective auditory experience, resonating with themes of isolation, grief, and morality. This discussion sheds light on how their music serves as a narrative conduit for both the personal and the collective.

Insomnia, welcome to A&R Factory! It’s a pleasure to sit down with you to discuss the ethos and pathos that pulse at the heart of your music and performances. What kind of reputation have you amassed in San Diego and beyond?

Insomnia feels we have ascertained a dependable and influential reputation due to our ability to push boundaries with both our lyrical styling and entertaining performances. Venturing outside of our hometown has brought us success in the form of new audiences that are now excited to see us and Rat Pope take the stage whenever possible.

What’s an essential component of the Insomnia sound?

An essential component of the current iteration of the Insomnia sound would have to be our use of a loud-quiet dynamic to convey the tone of our storytelling within a song.

How has your sound evolved since your debut and what has inspired these shifts? 

Over time, our sound has been able to evolve greatly thanks to the ability to get comfortable performing our music in front of audiences. Their reaction delivers great feedback letting us know what works for them. To coincide with this, their reactions also allow us to understand what boundaries we can push in order to keep things interesting for all.

The lyrical themes in your music scratch far beyond the surface; what do you hope to achieve by exploring introspective avenues in the vein of isolation, grief and morality? 

Insomnia loves to explore what many consider to be “heavier” topics in a way that is accessible and relatable in order to not beat listeners and audience members over the head with it.

In some instances, we’re able to use our instrumentation to covey tone while in other cases we can make those more unsavory topics digestible by using metaphors and/or accompanying them with poppier sounding musical backing as a means to almost desensitize listeners so they’re able to take in the depth and complexity of our lyrics.

How have your personal experiences shaped your lyrical style?

As the lead songwriter of Insomnia, Noah employs many aspects of his personal experiences when creating lyrics for the band’s music. Topics such as fear of death and distaste with overbearing societal expectation are often found within Insomnia’s lyrics as these are struggles that he has had to tackle in his life. Aside from this, Noah loves to base songs around small bits of poetry and/or short stories he has written almost giving them a new life in the form of song. At the end of the day, Insomnia’s songwriting is meant to be almost ambiguous as the group prefers listeners attach their own personal meaning rather than professing their own defined message.

How do you balance personal vulnerability with universal relatability in your songwriting?

In order to make Insomnia’s songs retain their personal vulnerability while also remaining universally relatable, the band makes use of metaphors and double entendre statements as a way to allow the listeners to search for the “true” meaning.

Can you elaborate on the genesis of the rat pope and what the mascot represents in the context of your music?

The Rat Pope was never meant to be a physical being represented at our shows, but rather an idea based on a disdain for religious hypocrisy. The album art for Easter Sunday showcases an animated form of the figurehead which was then adapted to a live mascot of sorts parading around the stage at shows in order to draw relation for the audience between the message and the song itself.

You are known for your intense and emotionally charged live shows. How do you prepare for these performances, and what do you hope your audience takes away from these experiences?

We don’t do much in the vein of preparing for shows. We prefer to approach every show as if it is our last, leaving all the energy we have on the stage showing the audience and other bands sharing the night with us that it is okay to dive head first and have fun. As far as what we hope the audience takes away from the night, we aspire to be memorable and for the audience that night along with our streaming listeners to follow along with our evolution.

What does an idealistic future look like for Insomnia? 

An idealistic future for Insomnia entails the band being able to expand their audience reach beyond their home state. The band aims to test the limits of how the people could categorize Insomnia and evolve their sound and performances to be as impactful as possible.

Are there any new releases lingering in the pipeline?

Insomnia is deep in the works on a new single entitled Garbage Day perhaps hinting at a future larger release. Suffice to say, it’s not so much for us to say what lies ahead, it’s simply for the audience to stick around and find out.

Stream Insomnia’s discography on Spotify.

Connect with the band on Instagram.

Interview by Amelia Vandergast

Rearview Romantics delivered a new testament of rock n roll with ‘The Preacher’

Out of Philadelphia, the raw force known as Rearview Romantics slashed through the rock scene with their stormer of a single, ‘The Preacher’.

The unapologetic throwback to the 60s – 80s rock epochs erupts with crunchy, overdriven guitar riffs that could summon spirits from rock’s golden age. The vocals carve a niche between Metallica’s gritty resonance, the anthemics of New York Dolls and The Cramps’ punk eccentric ferocity, creating an uncompromising voice for the band. The production crackles with an electric fervour, each note and beat engineered to grip your soul and shake it awake.

The manifesto of rebellion dictates a relentless pace that dares listeners to keep up. As a rock anthem, the track ticks all the boxes, bridging the gap between classic sensibilities and potently explosive energy.

With their larger-than-life live shows marked by magnetic stage presence, Rearview Romantics are quickly becoming the act to watch. Coupled with a consistent stream of videos and tracks, the rock n roll reverent renegades are proving they’re destined for bigger stages.

The Preacher was officially released on September 26th; stream the single on YouTube now.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Insomnia – Fleabag: Demonically Distorted No-Wave Grunge

Insomnia’s latest onslaught, ‘Fleabag’, is a ferocious synthesis of no-wave grunge and unrelenting hardcore punk rhythms. The standout on their LP ‘Idiosyncrasy‘, is a caustic celebration of noise, embodying the spirit of grunge pioneers with a fresh, chaotic twist. The guitars screech with electrifying distortion, while hardcore punk drums thrash out a beat that pummels listeners into submission, offering no respite from the band’s sonic fury.

In the eye of this storm are the vocals—raw, unfiltered, and dripping with disdain, they transmit a message of ‘we’re all mad here’ vindication for anyone wrestling with the chaos of the human psyche.

Undeniably, Insomnia, hailing from San Diego, has mastered the art of avant-garde obscurity. With the cultivated approach of Glenn Branca’s compositions fused with the brashy energy of Napalm Death, the breakthrough band injects listenability into their sound while ensuring their deliverances of no-wave are unfeigned, unfiltered and unafraid to descend into the sonic abyss. Imagine what Pavement would sound like if they were demonically possessed and you’ll get an idea of what is in store when you hit play.

Stream the Idiosyncrasy LP in full by heading over to Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Melia delivered a rock-licked anthem of vindication with ‘The Horse You Rode in On’

The prodigal daughter of rock, Melia, has returned with her sophomore LP, ‘FERAL‘, delivering an indomitable hit of empowerment with the standout single, ‘Horse You Rode in On‘.

With the overdriven guitars, the fiery manifesto for anyone who has endured the arrogance of the misguided resurrects retro rock aesthetics as Melia’s powerful, crystalline vocals slice through the mix with mesmeric clarity. As the percussion injects adrenaline into the track like fuel to a flame, Melia asserts herself as a rare diamond in the mundanity of modern rock. Knowing exactly how to pay homage without assimilating, her future is as promising as her sound is powerful.

The single is highlighted by one of the year’s most electrifying guitar solos, redefining what it means to command the six strings. It’s a potent reminder of why Melia continues to collect accolades, including multiple Indie Music Channel Awards.

Recorded at Dreamland Recording Studio with the esteemed Kevin Killen, ‘FERAL’ echoes the defiant spirit of Melia’s musical journey. From her early days, ignited by a Green Day concert, to sharing stages with icons like Steve Vai and Judas Priestess, Melia’s path has been anything but ordinary.

Stream the Feral LP in full by heading over to Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Tariq.B entered the melodic rock pantheon with his single, You Keep My World Alight

Tariq.B joined Eddie Vedder and Chris Cornell in the pantheon of rock evocateurs with his latest melodic rock emotional awakening, You Keep My World Alight, which will unearth feelings you didn’t know lingered in the sediment of your soul.

The song’s title cleverly underplays the vivid romanticism and raw pop-rock melodies that pulse at the heart of this panorama of raw, vulnerable passion which once and for all proves that romance isn’t dead in our era proliferated by strands of superficial connection.

You Keep My World Alight is an undeniable attestation to how the Pakistan-born, Southwest London-residing artist has mastered the art of acoustic sensitivity; every guitar chord hits a raw nerve as the progressions flow with cinematic sepia-tinged imagery and the warm glow of alt-90s tones.

Famed for his live performances across the UK, international airplay and plaudits from BBC Introducing, Tariq.B is well on his way to filling stadiums as wholly as he fuels souls with his sound. He’s a rare artist who instantly makes you feel at home in his honeyed and honed vocal timbre.

You Keep My World Alight is now available to stream on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

Kickstart your rhythmic pulses with Scott Cook’s alt-rock kaleidoscope of poetic innovation, The Author

With ‘The Author’, Montreal’s Scott Cook served an electrifying synthesis of gritty guitar riffs reminiscent of the Manic Street Preachers and the ethereal synth overlays akin to Suicide’s ‘Dream Baby Dream’. In the cacophony of the saturated with banality modern music scene, the single is a rare slice of accordance.

Cook’s voice, an instrument in its own right, weaves through the tight instrumental arrangement, anchoring and elevating the melodies with his poetic lyricality which is just as sharp as his guitar hooks in the track which filters the colour of psych pop-rock harmonics into the alchemic cocktail which invites you to lose yourself in its euphonic bliss.

The arrangement’s dynamism is palpable, with ebbs and flows that create eager anticipation for the next burst of momentum and the catharsis it bestows.

Scott Cook proves with ‘The Author’ that his musical evolution is not just ongoing but accelerating. Drawing on an eclectic palette that spans genres and eras, he reflects on contemporary life with a candour that Morrissey would struggle to match. If he released this hit in the 90s, he’d be at the top of the charts.

The Author was officially released on September 23rd, stream the single on all major platforms, including Spotify.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

The Simpletone is back with vengeance in their darkly kinetic alt-rock anthem, Circles

The Simpletone

After amassing renown for the intensity of their live performances following their 2010 inception, releasing three critically acclaimed LPs, gaining a cult following, winning the Cambridge Band Competition, joining New Model Army on tour and being revered by Classic Rock Magazine, The Simpletone broke their fair share of hearts when they split in 2017.

After a six-year hiatus, The Simpletone sound is sharper than ever; their comeback track, Circles, which teases what’s to come in their upcoming fourth LP, The Eternal Now, dares you to imagine the veins of blues rock running through a sonic love child conceived between Sisters of Mercy and Queens of the Stone Age.

The shadowy rock licks bring the arcane atmosphere as the rhythm section intravenously injects kinetic energy into the anthem, which proves that The Simpletone weren’t down and out in 2017; they were priming for one of the most scintillating artistic reinventions the UK alt-rock scene has seen in the past decade.

Circles will be available to stream on all major platforms from October 4th. Hear the single on YouTube and follow The Simpletone on Instagram and Facebook to stay up to date with all future releases.

Review by Amelia Vandergast

The renegades of shoegaze revolution, interail, emerged as an unreckonable outfit in their debut single, red

With their debut single, red, the independent alt-rock outfit interail went beyond dropping the first track in their repertoire. The Northwest UK-hailing four-piece collective established themselves as the renegades of rock’s impending revolution, impending under their juggernautical volution.

Undercurrents of grungy shoegaze permeate the artfully chaotic tour de force, guaranteeing that getting swept up in the tides of red is non-optional as piercingly tumultuous percussion punctuates the laments of the distorted guitars beneath the vox, which oscillate between emulating everyone from Julian Casablancas to Thom Yorke to Orlando Weeks before heightening the evocative sting of the unique inflexions as the track gears towards its viscerally intense hardcore-tinged outro.

Not one moment of red allows you to feel comfortable within the progressions; the dynamic chameleon shifts in pace and tone are enough to leave your nerves frayed and your rhythmic pulses in knots.

The bar couldn’t have been set higher with their debut track; if you’re sick of assimilation-driven shoegaze, prepare to be adrenalised by the walls of sound in red.

Stream red on Spotify now.

Review by Amelia Vandergast