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Lonesome River Band Find the Ache of Home on New Single “There Where the River Rolls Around”

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Lonesome River Band have a gift for finding the emotional center of a song and building an arrangement around it with quiet precision. Their second Mountain Home Music Company release of 2026, “There Where the River Rolls Around,” is a prime example, a track that balances old-time structure with modern arrangement touches and lands with real resonance.

The song comes from longtime collaborator Billy Smith, who previously delivered LRB staples “Hobo Blues,” “Tears In My Tracks,” and “Crazy Heart.” Banjo player and group leader Sammy Shelor describes how it came together. “As we listened to the song one late night going down the road in the bus, the arrangement just fell into place and we began working on it. A haunting song about leaving home searching for more and longing to be back.”

That arrangement is worth paying attention to. Damped rhythmic guitar chords provide a contemporary underpinning beneath a melody that traces the outline of a classic old-time fiddle tune. After each chorus, banjo, fiddle, mandolin, and guitar carry the full melody forward in a simple, sonically rich statement that rewards close listening.

Lead singer and mandolinist Adam Miller delivers the lyrics with a laconic, wistful quality that suits the song’s themes of longing and displacement perfectly. It’s a track about chasing dreams and paying the cost, told without melodrama and all the more affecting for it.

Rodrigo y Gabriela Mark 20 Years of Their Debut With a Deluxe Vinyl Release and a North American and European Tour

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Twenty years on, Rodrigo y Gabriela’s self-titled debut still stands as one of the most striking acoustic guitar albums of its era. The GRAMMY Award-winning duo are marking the milestone with ‘Rodrigo y Gabriela + Re-Foc (20th Anniversary Edition)’, a limited edition 2xLP out now via ATO Records that pairs a new vinyl master of the original album with something fans have never had before.

‘Re-Foc’, the duo’s previously unreleased 2002 debut recording, appears on vinyl for the first time and makes its long-awaited digital debut simultaneously. It’s a genuine discovery, an early chapter that Rodrigo y Gabriela describe as essential to everything that followed.

“For most people, including ourselves, the Croc album is our debut album because it was the first one released worldwide,” they say, “but Re-Foc was a really important piece of the puzzle. Without Re-Foc, we wouldn’t have been able to write the songs on the Croc album.” That context makes the release genuinely significant.

The collection arrives in 2 vinyl editions. An exclusive limited run of 700 units pressed on gold emerald and gold black ice colored vinyl, and a retail version on jade and citrus-colored eco-wax vinyl. Both include a bonus poster.

Re-Foc standout “30 de Marzo” is available now alongside a live session performance video. It’s an immediate reminder of how fully formed this duo’s chemistry has always been.

The anniversary tour is already underway, with North American dates followed by European shows through late May. Several Irish dates are already sold out.

2026 Anniversary Tour Dates:

May 23 – Royal Festival Hall, London, United Kingdom

May 25 – The National Stadium, Dublin, Ireland

May 26 – Dolans Warehouse, Limerick, Ireland (Sold Out)

May 27 – Cyprus Avenue, Cork, Ireland (Sold Out)

BACK-ON Reclaim the Anime World They Helped Build With New EP ‘ANIMANIA’

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BACK-ON have been part of anime music’s global rise for over two decades. With ‘ANIMANIA’, the Japanese rap-rock duo aren’t revisiting that world as guests, they’re walking back in as architects. The 4-track cover EP is out now, and it’s a confident, energetic celebration of a musical identity they helped build.

The lead single “Guess Who Is Back” sets the tone immediately. Originally performed by J-pop superstar Kumi Koda for the anime Black Clover, the track was composed by BACK-ON themselves, with lyrics co-written alongside Koda. It’s racked up over 42 million Spotify streams since its original release, and BACK-ON’s reimagining brings it fully into their lane.

“Out of all the songs we’ve provided for other artists, this one really felt the most ‘us’,” says KENJI03. “When the idea for this EP came up, this was the first track we picked, no question.” TEEDA adds that the focus was on channeling BACK-ON’s signature style rather than leaning on shout vocals, letting the track breathe in a way that feels distinctly theirs.

The animated lyric video, produced by UK-based 12 Inch Media (known for work with Bring Me The Horizon, Ed Sheeran, and Oasis), matches the track’s intensity and anime spirit with real visual energy.

‘ANIMANIA’ also includes BACK-ON’s take on “PRIDE” from Mobile Suit Gundam SEED DESTINY, the One Piece theme “HANDS UP!” which BACK-ON originally wrote, and “GO!!!” by longtime peers FLOW, the track known worldwide as a defining opening theme for Naruto. The EP draws on songs connected to Fairy Tail, Mobile Suit Gundam, and Kamen Rider, franchises that have carried BACK-ON’s music to audiences across the globe.

The sold-out ANIMANIA live shows late last year proved the appetite is there. The EP delivers on every bit of that momentum.

Nashville Southern Rockers Parker Barrow Bring ‘Glass Eyes Cryin’ and a UK Tour This July

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Parker Barrow are heading back to the UK this July, and they’re arriving with new music in hand. The Nashville-based southern rockers have released ‘Glass Eyes Cryin’, the latest single from their ‘Hold The Mash’ EP, and it’s a strong indicator of where the band is headed.

The track is groove-driven and layered, built around Megan Kane’s powerful lead vocals and threaded with gospel textures that give it real emotional range. It’s a sass-filled response to emotional manipulation, delivered with the kind of slow-burning confidence that makes it hit harder than a straight-ahead rocker would.

“Glass Eyes Cryin’ was the first song we wrote and recorded for Hold The Mash,” says drummer Dylan Turner. “We felt it was the perfect song to kickstart a musical shift to what the band has become since our previous record.” That shift is audible, and it works.

Parker Barrow is husband-and-wife duo Megan Kane and Dylan Turner, expanded in 2023 with the full-time addition of guitarist and musical director Alex Bender. His inventive riffs and fiery playing anchor the band’s signature blend of rock, southern rock, blues, and soul. Their debut album ‘Jukebox Gypsies’ earned global praise, and the single “Back To Birmingham” crossed a million YouTube views.

The ‘Hold The Mash’ EP followed in 2025, with “Make It” landing on Planet Rock’s main playlist. A UK support run with The Damn Truth that same year expanded their fanbase further. The momentum heading into this summer’s UK dates is real.

Six shows across July, including a festival slot at Steelhouse, make this a proper run worth catching.

2026 UK Tour Dates:

July 17 – Treehouse, Frome, England

July 18 – John Peel Centre, Stowmarket, England

July 21 – Audio, Glasgow, Scotland

July 22 – Greystones, Sheffield, England

July 23 – Foxlowe Arts Centre, Leek, England

July 24 – Steelhouse Festival, Ebbw Vale, Wales

HOKKA Unite Finland’s Rock Royalty on ‘Via Miseria IV’ and the Emotional Gut-Check “Heart Said No”

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Three names from Finland’s rock legacy, one band. HOKKA brings together former Blind Channel frontman Joel Hokka, The Rasmus founding member and guitarist-songwriter Pauli Rantasalmi, and drummer Jimi Aslak, and their debut album ‘Via Miseria IV’ is out now via Nuclear Blast Records.

The album’s third single “Heart Said No” is the emotional centerpiece of the campaign so far. Built around a captivating piano melody, it’s a vulnerable, soaring anthem that showcases a side of HOKKA distinct from earlier singles “In The Darkness” and “Death By Cupid’s Arrow,” while staying fully within the band’s cinematic, high-intensity world.

Joel Hokka doesn’t hold back describing the track. “Big boys don’t cry, except when writing songs like this,” he says. “‘Heart Said No’ was the first song I ever wrote with tears in my eyes, and I wasn’t the only one in the band.” That kind of raw honesty is exactly what gives the song its weight.

‘Via Miseria IV’ explores struggle, resilience, and inner conflict across its full runtime, and the singles released so far confirm the album has both the sonic depth and thematic range to back that up. The cinematic video for “Heart Said No” matches the song’s emotional scale perfectly.

HOKKA also has a packed summer of Finnish festival dates ahead, plus an appearance at Rock The Lakes in Switzerland in August.

2026 Live Dates:

June 12-13 – Kesämössö, Lahti, Finland

June 27 – Tuska, Helsinki, Finland

July 3-5 – Ruisrock, Turku, Finland

July 4 – Tuhdimmat Tahdit, Tampere, Finland

July 17-19 – Ilosaarirock, Joensuu, Finland

July 23-25 – Kuopiorock, Kuopio, Finland

July 25 – QStock, Oulu, Finland

August 14-16 – Rock The Lakes, Cudrefin, Switzerland

Lost in Hollywood and Normandie’s Philip Strand Collide on the Gut-Punch Single “Love Is Dying”

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“Love Is Dying” doesn’t ease you in. Lost in Hollywood find the exact moment a relationship starts fracturing and plant a camera there, letting the whole uncomfortable scene play out in real time. Crushing metalcore energy meets haunting melodic pull, and the combination lands hard.

The feature from Philip Strand of Normandie is the track’s secret weapon. His voice adds a fragile, almost delicate contrast to the band’s relentless aggression, turning the song into a tense push-and-pull between vulnerability and rage. It’s heavy and melodic in equal measure, and it sticks.

The single arrives with serious context behind it. Recent releases “The Fire,” “Pretty Skin,” “Like A River” featuring Of Virtue, and “The Art Of Being Torn Out” featuring Half Me each demonstrated a different dimension of the band’s range, moving confidently between atmosphere, heaviness, and emotional depth. The momentum has been building track by track.

“Love Is Dying” threads all of that together. It’s the emotional center of a campaign that’s been steadily expanding Lost in Hollywood’s place in the modern metalcore landscape, and the album it leads into, out now, is their most focused and ambitious work yet.

The Veer Union’s ‘Reinvention’ Arrives With Nearly 300,000 Monthly Listeners and Zero Compromises

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‘Reinvention’ is out now, and The Veer Union have delivered the album their catalog has been pointing toward. Heavy, melodic, and emotionally charged, it’s the sound of a band fully locked into what they do best and executing at the highest level of their career. Listen here.

The album’s focus track “Feel Again” is the emotional backbone of the record. Built around soaring hooks and crushing guitars, it’s a song about breaking through numbness and finding that spark after being worn down. The chorus sticks immediately, and it earns every second of its runtime.

The road to ‘Reinvention’ was deliberate. Singles “My Empire,” “Sea Of Fear,” “Caught In The Crossfire,” “Sunk Your Teeth In,” and “Meet Your Maker” rolled out steadily, each one pulling more listeners into the fold while staying unmistakably true to the band’s identity. The campaign built real momentum, and the album delivers on all of it.

The numbers back it up. Nearly 300,000 unique monthly listeners on Spotify, a figure that reflects both a loyal core audience and a steady stream of new fans discovering the band across the global heavy music scene.

Kalsey Kulyk Marks ‘Outlaw Poetry’ Anniversary With Vinyl, a New Strip, and Summer Shows

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Kalsey Kulyk is marking two years of ‘Outlaw Poetry’ the right way. The limited edition vinyl and CD release of her 2024 album is out now via Universal Music Canada, and it arrives alongside a brand-new “Love Me Like An Outlaw (Stripped Version)” that gives her biggest single yet another moment to breathe. Listen here.

“Love Me Like An Outlaw” already has over 2 million Spotify streams, 200,000 YouTube views, and climbed to #18 on the Canadian country charts. V13 Media called it “an unequivocal testament to Kulyk’s brilliance.” The stripped version leans into the song’s emotional core with no distractions, and it delivers.

The Hudson Bay, Saskatchewan singer-songwriter has been building steadily and deliberately. Her 2019 self-titled debut reached #2 on the Canadian iTunes Country Chart and earned a CCMA Roots Album of the Year nomination. Her 2022 single “Big Deal” topped SiriusXM Country. The catalog keeps growing, and the fanbase keeps following.

Kulyk’s live schedule this summer is stacked. Headline shows land June 24 at The Drake in Toronto and June 25 at Rum Runners in London, Ontario. From there, the summer runs deep through festival season.

2026 Upcoming Live Dates:

June 24 – The Drake, Toronto, ON (Headline Show)

June 25 – Rum Runners, London, ON (Headline Show)

June 27 – Living Skies Music Festival, Centennial Park, Humboldt, SK

July 10 – Expo Lachute Fair, Lachute, QC

July 12 – Country Thunder, Craven, SK

August 16 – LASSO, Montreal, QC

August 28 – Boots and Hearts West, Fan Park @ Ice District, Edmonton, AB

What to Do Before You Go Into the Recording Studio

The recording studio is one of the most exciting places a musician can walk into. There is something genuinely thrilling about hearing your songs come to life in a professional space, with great gear, great ears, and the full focus of everyone in the room on your music. A little preparation beforehand means you get to spend more of that time in the joy of creating and less of it on logistics. Here is how to set yourself up for a session you will never forget.

Know your songs well. Not because the studio is unforgiving, but because confidence is the best creative fuel there is. When you know your material inside and out, you free yourself up to take chances, try new things, and say yes when your engineer suggests something unexpected. Record yourself at home and listen back with fresh ears. You might discover a little tweak that makes the whole song open up, and you get to bring that discovery with you into the room.

Get your gear ready a few days ahead of time so it is the last thing on your mind when you arrive. Fresh guitar strings, tuned drum heads, charged batteries, organized cables. Singers, treat your voice kindly the week before, sleep well, drink plenty of water, and let yourself arrive feeling strong. When your instrument is in great shape you play with greater ease and that ease shows up on the recording in the best possible way.

Connect with your engineer or producer before the session. Share some reference tracks, talk about the feeling you want the songs to have, ask what excites them about the project. A good engineer is a creative partner and the conversation you have before the session can spark ideas that end up being the best moments on the record. Come in with a vision and stay open to where the collaboration takes you. Some of the greatest recorded moments in history happened because someone in the room said let’s try something.

Take care of the simple practical things so your whole mind is free for the music. Eat a good meal, bring water, confirm your session time, know where you are going. Bring your charts or lyric sheets if you need them and have everything organized so you can dive right in. Walk through that door with a great attitude and an open heart because the studio rewards both. The musicians who have the most fun and make the best recordings are the ones who showed up ready to play, ready to listen, and ready to be surprised by what they create.

You Can Go There: 30 Songs That Name the Exact Spot

There’s something magic about a song that drops a real address. Not just “New York” or “London” — but this corner, that bridge, this restaurant on that block. Suddenly the music has a GPS coordinate and you’re halfway to booking a flight. Here are 30 songs that put a pin in the map.

“Ho Hey” — The Lumineers

Canal and Bowery in Manhattan is now a full-on pilgrimage site, complete with people holding up phones and crying. Wesley Schultz did not see that coming.

“53rd and 3rd” — The Ramones

A gritty corner in Midtown Manhattan gets the punk treatment. Dee Dee Ramone wrote it from experience and that’s all we’ll say about that.

“Electric Avenue” — Eddy Grant

A real street in Brixton, London, and the first market street in the area to be lit by electricity. The song sounds like a party but it’s actually about the 1981 Brixton riots. Layers.

“Take It Easy” — Eagles

Standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona. Jackson Browne wrote it, Glenn Frey finished it, and the town of Winslow built a statue for it. Not bad for a line about a flatbed Ford.

“Baker Street” — Gerry Rafferty

The saxophone riff alone could find its way home blindfolded. The real Baker Street in London inspired one of the most melancholy portraits of city loneliness ever recorded.

“Penny Lane” — The Beatles

A real street in Liverpool that John and Paul knew from childhood bus rides. The barbershop is still there. People still steal the street signs. Every single time.

“Strawberry Fields Forever” — The Beatles

Strawberry Field was a Salvation Army children’s home behind John Lennon’s aunt’s house in Liverpool. He turned a garden into a myth and never looked back.

“Free Fallin'” — Tom Petty

Ventura Boulevard, Mulholland Drive, the whole San Fernando Valley gets the Petty treatment. A geography lesson disguised as a breakup song.

“I’m Waiting for the Man” — The Velvet Underground

Lexington and 125th in Harlem. Lou Reed knew exactly where he was going and wrote down every step of the trip.

“Walking in Memphis” — Marc Cohn

Beale Street, the ghost of Elvis, a reverend at the W.C. Handy Club. Memphis doesn’t just show up in this song, it is the song.

“Bleecker Street” — Simon and Garfunkel

A foggy, philosophical walk down one of Greenwich Village’s most storied streets. Simon and Garfunkel were barely out of their teens when they wrote this and somehow it sounds ancient.

“The 59th Street Bridge Song” — Simon and Garfunkel

The bridge connecting Manhattan to Queens gets a sunny, unhurried tribute. Feelin’ groovy has never been so geographically specific.

“Kansas City” — Wilbert Harrison

12th Street and Vine. A specific corner, a specific woman, a bottle of Kansas City wine. The whole thing is a postcard that somehow became a rock and roll standard.

“Bobcaygeon” — The Tragically Hip

A small town in Ontario cottage country becomes the emotional centre of one of the greatest Canadian songs ever written. Gord Downie made everywhere feel important.

“Atlantic City” — Bruce Springsteen

The Boardwalk, the city, the myth of starting over with nothing. Springsteen turns a New Jersey gambling town into a place where dreams go to make one last bet.

“Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out” — Bruce Springsteen

A specific New York street corner becomes part of the origin story of the E Street Band. Bruce has never stopped making his neighbourhood the centre of the universe.

“Werewolves of London” — Warren Zevon

Lee Ho Fook’s Chinese restaurant and Trader Vic’s tiki bar, both real London landmarks, both now closed. Zevon immortalized them and they still couldn’t stay open.

“Ode to Billie Joe” — Bobbie Gentry

The Tallahatchee Bridge in Mississippi. One of the great unsolved mysteries in pop music history, and the bridge gets to keep the secret forever.

“Carmelita” — Warren Zevon

Alvarado Street in Los Angeles, by the Pioneer Chicken stand. Zevon had a gift for making the seediest corners of a city sound like literature.

“Chelsea Hotel” — Leonard Cohen

A specific address on West 23rd Street in Manhattan where Cohen had a famous encounter he later admitted he shouldn’t have talked about publicly. He talked about it anyway.

“Blue Jay Way” — The Beatles

A real street in the Hollywood Hills where George Harrison was waiting for friends lost in the fog. He sat down at a borrowed harmonium and wrote a song about being bored. It is not a boring song.

“Posse on Broadway” — Sir Mix-A-Lot

A cruise down Broadway in Seattle hitting every landmark from Dick’s Drive-In to Westlake. A love letter to a city written at 15 miles per hour.

“Grace Cathedral Hill” — The Decemberists

Nob Hill in San Francisco and Hyde Street Pier get the Colin Meloy treatment, which means they come out sounding like a 19th century novel. Somehow that works perfectly.

“Crossroads” — Robert Johnson

Widely believed to refer to the intersection of Highways 61 and 49 in Clarksdale, Mississippi. The legend of the deal with the devil only made the address more famous.

“City of New Orleans” — Steve Goodman

The actual City of New Orleans train, rolling through Kankakee, Illinois and on down to Memphis and beyond. Arlo Guthrie had the hit but Goodman wrote one of the great American road songs.

“Willin'” — Little Feat

Tucson to Tucumcari, Tehachapi to Tonapah. Lowell George turned a trucker’s route map into poetry and made the open road sound like the only place worth being.

“Route 66” — Bobby Troup

Kingman, Barstow, San Bernardino. The ultimate American road trip song, and every town it names felt chosen, not just listed.

“YYZ” — Rush

Named for the airport code of Toronto Pearson International, the song opens with the letters Y-Y-Z tapped out in Morse code. An instrumental tribute to coming home that hits harder than most songs with words.

“Ocean Avenue” — Yellowcard

A real street in Jacksonville, Florida where lead singer Ryan Key spent his teenage years. Violin-driven pop punk about a specific block of a specific city and somehow the whole world related to it.

“Pink Pony Club” — Chappell Roan

A real bar on Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood. Roan wrote about dreaming of performing there while working a day job, and now she sells out venues the Pink Pony Club could never hold.