Born out of being 'forced' together by their school headmaster, Dutch band TAPE TOY have come a long way in the last two years.
Introducing: Deepshade
Energetic post-rock and space grunge meets more trippy psychedelic influences in the intoxicating sound of Wigan's Deepshade, who promise "a genuinely sonic experience that delivers something fresh to the British music scene."
Introducing: Evil Edna
Something a little different to our norm today, as we introduce you to the raucously rambunctious fusion of rockabilly, 'trash-gyspy' rock and booze blues - aka Gypsybilly Rock Blues - that is London's Evil Edna. We're also fairly sure this is the first band we've covered to feature a harmonica - and certainly that does... Continue Reading →
Introducing: Neverlanded
If you like your rock grungey and laden with dirty fuzzy guitars then you are in exactly the right place with London trio Neverlanded.
Introducing: Things That Need To Be Fixed
We're going to chance our arm here and guess that you've not heard of too many German punk-rock bands, and almost certainly none as good as Munich five-piece Things That Need To Be Fixed.
Introducing: Overthrone
Exciting new Birmingham metal act Overthrone offer an intriguing sound of sheer heaviness with a melodic edge. But the first thing that you will notice is that these guys are heavy - seriously heavy.
Introducing: DLVRR
Lincoln newcomers DLVRR summarise their latest single Caution to us as: "An absolute jamboree of cleans, screams, chugs, chords, harmonies and melodies."
Introducing: Come At The King
London rock trio Come At The King are bringing the British attitude and swagger to the American blues-rock and garage rock sound of the early 2000s.
Introducing: Louder Than Words
In almost three years of running this blog, we've yet to discover a single band that hails from the gambling capital that is Las Vegas. But today that all changes with Louder Than Words, a band that oozes the raw emotion of classic pop-punk.
Introducing: Kurokuma
Any band that provides Jamiroquai's Deeper Underground with a doomy, sludgy ten-minute-long metal makeover gets a firm thumbs up from us - so let us introduce you to Sheffield's Kurokuma.