bands
Rock n' roll, boy bands, jazz trios, and more; the greats, newbies, and forgotten icons who create our favorite groups.
BlackPink's New Music Video Is Here!
BlackPink's comeback has finally arrived! The music video for Ddu-du Ddu-du was released on YouTube about one hour prior to the time of this publication, and the expectations were not only surpassed, they were left in the magical, technicolor dust!
By Krista Almazan8 years ago in Beat
The Cultural Impact of the Beatles
No band has stood the test of time quite like the Beatles. Almost everywhere you go someone has heard of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr in one way or another. They have become so easily distinguishable because of their longer hairstyles and pristine suits just as they are by their voices and hit songs.
By Shandi Pace8 years ago in Beat
Get to Know BLACKPINK
1. JiSoo Kim JiSoo is 23, the oldest member of the group. She is also the only native Korean member. She began training with YG in 2011 and continued training for five years until BLACKPINK's debut in 2016. Not only is she a talented singer, but she also can play drums and piano.
By Krista Almazan8 years ago in Beat
Can Greta Van Fleet and Birdy Bardot Save Rock?
It was September 2017 and I was barreling through the 5 North to Clairmont, listening to San Diego’s Rock 105.3 when suddenly I heard a primal, raunchy, 70s-esque guitar riff. Musical Deja Vu hit as the guitar sounded insanely familiar, yet couldn’t be, for I would have remembered listening to such a Riff. Once you get past the ripping electricity of the guitar, you hear the most Robert Plant-like howl this side of Zeppelin II, and after another triumphant, roaring guitar part, the real fun commences. Bashing drums, unpolished blues guitar notes, underlying bass lines, and lyrics of driving through the highways with his special girl, the average listener would genuinely believe they’ve stumbled on an unreleased track off of Houses of the Holy or a deep cut off of Zeppelin III. But in fact what I and thousands of Americans were listening to was the track "Highway Tune" by Greta Van Fleet.
By Logan Mang8 years ago in Beat
Deap Vally's Guttural Feminist Tunes
The guttural feeling of familiarity, empowerment, and dread are ever present, as they always have been, within Deap Vally’s latest album Femejism. A couple of self-described valley girls out of California, Julie Edwards and Lindsey Troy have been musically taking on the patriarchy over the past 7 years, beginning with their debut album Sistronix from 2013. Featuring “Gonna Make My Own Money,” a powerful track as the name suggests, is of a conversation between a daughter and her parents. Women around the world will be familiar with this expectation from their family, being told their whole lives they need to marry a man who will support them, a rich one if they can. Deap Vally spins this story on its head and insists they will be self-sufficient, make their own money and buy their own land, burying the stereotype of a damsel in distress needing a man to save them. Breaking out of Sistronix for me is “Walk of Shame” which takes back the stigma of a woman making her way home from a one-night stand, owning her sexuality and walking with pride and her head held high. Stories like this of shattering old-school societal expectations of gender norms and sexuality on Sistronix prove provocative, empowering, and enlightens the audience—even younger generations of women—to the true power and autonomy of a woman, and specifically these women. None of these themes change from Sistronix to Femejism, they only get more intense. Once I found out that the drummer Julie Edwards, was not only pregnant during most of the recording but she also toured and played shows for Femejism while pregnant, it became more clear than ever that these women are not just down to earth but they love their craft enough that they will stop at nothing to share their intense messages with their hard hitting grooves.
By Practical Stunts8 years ago in Beat











