Garage Pop

New Arrivals

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    The Joiner Inners
     
    The Time is Now
    15 years in the making 'The Time is Now' is a sonic sucker punch in the face delivered as only the Joiner Inners, America's great unknown rock band, can deliver it. Loose, loud, fearless and amazing: 'The Time is Now.'
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
     
    monopoly
     
    a cup of tea
    a goofy and poignant album you can make up your own mind about because I sure don't know.
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
     
    The Simple Pages
     
    To Affinity And Beyond
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
     
    Little Pieces
     
    Vampires Fill Their Waterbeds With Blood
    The band and EP is just the right blend of hooks, muscle and out-there imagination. Six songs to turn up and drive to the beach to.
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
     
    Fairmont
     
    The Meadow At Dusk - VINYL!
    The follow up to Fairmont's 5th studio album, this new limited edition vinyl record for the first time features new vocalist Sam Carradori as a counterpart to the lead vocals of Neil Sabatino. Also comes with a limited edition poster and MP3 download Free
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
     
    The Sorrys
     
    Neanderthal Cell Phone
    Power-pop with pot and rough edges and sparks and droll swagger. And a bit of seething through grins.
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
     
    Garry Gust
     
    2 Jays Cafe (Second Edition)
    Soft Rock
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
     
    The Absurd Heroes
     
    Pushing Rocks Uphill at Night
    A quasi-concept album that blends bright, punchy, up-tempo indie-alternative rock with slower, darker, brooding ballads.
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
     
    Perpetual Drifters
     
    Hopelessly Devoted
    Roots rock that cast the world in hues of burgundy romance and gray loneliness
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
     
    Bob & Sally
     
    Songs for your X Lover
    Breakup Songs: X Lovers sing about how much they hate each other.
    Pop: Garage Pop
     

    Top Albums

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    The Saltshakers
    Lights Out
    Spring-loaded power pop melodies from start to finish with a sound reminiscent of ‘60s garage rock and the punk movement that followed it.
    Despite the title, the Saltshakers’ new album LIGHTS OUT is illuminated with spring-loaded power pop melodies from start to finish. This time, though, the band has a more urgent sound reminiscent of ‘60s garage rock and the punk movement that followed it. Chad Curtis has grown into his voice, and on LIGHTS OUT he sounds deeper and fuller than before—like a young Pat DiNizio of the Smithereens. New member Nick Woods’ tenacious guitar solos are highlights of “This World Can Wear Us Down” and “How When and Why.” Fellow newcomer Jamie Owart plays bass like a prize fighter—he goes for the body like a champ but is nimble enough to pepper in some jabs with well-placed runs in songs like “Please Don’t Walk Away” and “Take You With Me.” LIGHTS OUT is about new love—the period when the flame is strong, but worries over trust and vulnerability threaten to douse it. “It’s too early to tell if we will stand the test of time,” Curtis sings on lead track “Please Don’t Walk Away,” but “I think we’re worth the fight.” The battle against insecurity is also waged with lyrics like “Let’s not overthink this” (This World Can Wear Us Down) and “I wanna hear you say ‘Cool it—it’ll be okay’” (Bedhead). Album standout “Californ-i-a” is an ode to a girl lost to the sunshine state, leaving her would-be Romeo confused but vowing “to remember April and May, not November.” The chorus’ layered vocals recall the Mamas and the Papas dreaming of L.A.; and when electric piano, soft organ, and a mandolin-like guitar line join in, the resulting crescendo is as poignant as lost love itself. Perhaps the loss of that girl explains why, in the following song “The West Coast,” Curtis shouts “The West Coast needs to go” like he’s mad King Lear bellowing for cataracts and hurricanes to destroy England, and the whole band calls down a superstorm on the region. Squalling guitar opens the song, like waves crashing in from an angry Pacific; Jon Strelecki’s double-time bass drum and floor tom portend earthquakes; and Woods’ searing guitar brings lightning to the party. By the third verse, Curtis’ distorted vocals sound like he’s taken refuge and is singing over an emergency radio band. Rarely have the Saltshakers sounded this muscular. Closing track “Every Day Of The Week” is a rompin’ stompin’ anthem of youthful aimlessness that, both sonically and lyrically, would fit perfectly on an Oasis album. And it’s so good, it may have even made the Gallagher brothers’ last album listenable. On Ramones-meet-Beach Boys rocker “Holiday,” Curtis sings of breaking big and selling a million records. Despite the song’s ambivalent attitude toward that level of success, LIGHTS OUT is a collection of songs that could shake booties from coast to coast…assuming they’re both still there.
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
    Glenn Rowlands & Robert Powell
    Red Road
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
    The Brilliant Inventions
    Have You Changed
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
    Goldenboy
    Blue Swan Orchestra
    Pop: Garage Pop
     
    M.O.T.O.
    Single File
    Pop: Garage Pop
     

    Editor's Picks

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      Top Songs

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      1.
      Bad to the bone
      francis
      Pop: Garage Pop
       
       
      2.
      Back Down Blues
      Loose Diamonds
      Pop: Garage Pop
       
       
      3.
      Intro
      8-Foot Tender
      Pop: Garage Pop
       
       
      4.
      Butterscotch
      8-Foot Tender
      Pop: Garage Pop
       
       
      5.
      Problems
      8-Foot Tender
      Pop: Garage Pop
       
       
      6.
      Help Me
      8-Foot Tender
      Pop: Garage Pop
       
       
      7.
      Freedum
      8-Foot Tender
      Pop: Garage Pop
       
       
      8.
      Reach Up High
      8-Foot Tender
      Pop: Garage Pop
       
       
      9.
      Flip Flop
      8-Foot Tender
      Pop: Garage Pop
       
       
      10.
      Unwanted
      Elizabethan Report
      Pop: Garage Pop