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UNDER THE INFLUENCE now streaming on #applemusic. Produced by sonic sorcerer Don Douglass, the all-covers EP features my take on tracks by @brucespringsteen.net, @paulsimonnon.bsky.social, Lou Reed, and more. #indiemusic #IndependentArtist #NewRelease #Rock #Folk music.apple.com/us/album/und...
USA's EverFelt and 'Epic One,' a fusion of 70s horror psych and doom; groove driven with plenty of energy and nifty guitar work, drums adding to the expressive soundscape, and it building into an hypnotically intense cinematic sound! @SODEHRecords www.youtube.com/watch?v=DmLs...
‘Weird Al’ Yankovic is Screening His Cult-Classic Film ‘UHF’ (w/ Orchestra) at The Greek in LA for its 37th Anniversary Oct. 31
Good afternoon. New punk rock song "Blacked Out". It's a protest song about the current affairs of the job market, late stage capitalism, and other grievances. #musicsky m.youtube.com/watch?v=ZA67...
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Huge thanks to @moonbuilding.bsky.social for the kind words about my new Floormat Doormat album, Stop Thinking You Got This. In the round up's round up. moonbuilding.substack.com/p/issue-112-...
On the Graves -- thewholekameese.com/2026/06/11/t...
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UK's Nina Antonia & The Lunar Moths release DROPPING LIKE BUTTERFLIES on vinyl on 18 June. This is 'Shellshocked and Shoeless,' disillusioned spoken word contrasting with the simple and light punk rock grooves providing the soundtrack. Chris Hewlett PR www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEcq...
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Yer Metal is Olde: Warning – Watching from a Distance: It’s not that often that I’ll have difficulty talking about an album that’s hitting its 20 year anniversary soon. In the case of Watching from a Distance, the second (and… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
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When I was young and first started playing the saxophone I wanted to be a session musician and see my name in the credits for an album. Today I received a CD of a special project I worked on that has fulfilled that dream. Everyone needs to check this out 22 June. Thanks @hartshornmusic.bsky.social
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Loud Enough Magazine
Jacob Tell
Loud Enough Magazine
ROCK CELLAR MAGAZINE
Zelena Hull
Watch: Music video "One Last Time" by Glasgow Kiss [Hard Rock] via Metal Rock Punk News 💥 from the full-length album 'Down In Flames' out now metal-rock-punk-news.blogspot.com/2026/04/glas...
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The essential DIY electronic music lowdown: Track Of The Week: Flying On The Ground + Album Of The Week: 'The Silent Harvest Vol 1' + The Empress + Audio Obscura + Age Of Chance + more...
moonbuilding.substack.com
We have come to the conclusion that pretty much anything that Connecticut indie art–rock legends in the making , The Pretty Graves, put out on to the great canvas known as the universe, pretty much…
thewholekameese.com
Issue 112 / 12 June 2026
The Mystique Of The Pretty Graves Grows With New Visualizer For ‘Walkin’’
Album · 2026 · 6 Songs
music.apple.com
Under The Influence - EP by Jacob Tell on Apple Music
YouTube video by SODEH Records – Alternative, Rock, Grunge & Metal
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🔥You've Been Afraid of the Dark Inside You EverFelt Just Made a Song About Going There Anyway🔥
Shellshocked and Shoeless
'UHF,' "Weird Al" Yankovic's zany 1989 comedy, will be screened live with an orchestra on Oct. 31 at the Greek Theatre in LA for its 37th anniversary.
rockcellarmagazine.com
"Weird Al" Yankovic Hosting 'UHF' 37th Anniversary Screening Oct. 31 in LA
YouTube video by Zelena Hull
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Blacked Out | Punk Rock criticizing the current state of affairs | SOTW #196
metal rock punk news - as últimas notícias do mundo do heavy metal, rock and roll e punk rock. Videoclipes, próximos lançamentos, top 10.
metal-rock-punk-news.blogspot.com
GLASGOW KISS - One Last Time [Alternative Metal Ballad Music Video] (OFFICIAL) - Eclipse Records and Glasgow Kiss Official
It’s not that often that I’ll have difficulty talking about an album that’s hitting its 20 year anniversary soon. In the case of Watching from a Distance, the second (and at the time, final) album from UK doom metal (then-) trio Warning, giving words to the atmosphere, the weight, and the aching hurt emanating from these five songs proved to be more than daunting. It’s not that often that you come across an album that feels like a sonic gutpunch that just doesn’t stop punching you into emotional submission, and guitarist/vocalist/mainman Patrick Walker did so effortlessly. It’s hard to not feel something while listening to the album, then or now. It’s this encapsulation of utter sadness and yearning that would influence many since, and what better time than now to induct Watching from a Distance into the Halls of the Olde? Warning didn’t come from the more Gothic sounds of their contemporaries (and fellow YMIO inductees) Anathema, My Dying Bride, or Paradise Lost. Lyrically, they also couldn’t be more different. Whereas not many people could sing about fighting the gods like Darren White did, nor can we all take Aaron Stainthorpe’s hand or do we all have the ability to opaque the dissident establishment that we all suffer like Nick Holmes,1 we’ve all encountered the aftermath of a break-up or losing a loved one. If you haven’t, rest assured it’s coming, and no one can articulate the sheer crushing feeling that comes with that like Walker does here, and it’s especially not at the level of maturity he exhibited. No fingers pointed, no blame assigned, no good/bad person(s) to smear… just the aftermath, the pain that comes with it, and the knowledge (or lack thereof) of what to do next to move on. Watching from a Distance by Warning Take the devastatingly heartbreaking “Bridges,” in which there’s very little variation between riffs and percussive patterns, and that’s on purpose: the rhythm section of bassist Marcus Hatfield and drummer Stuart Springthorpe knew to keep things plodding and controlled by design, further accentuating the repetitive riffs and lyrics of Walker’s. Speaking of, each verse ends with Walker achingly bellowing “I wish you were here with me tonight,” with each passing verse more dire and heartwrenching than the last, with the final pass preceded by “Can someone feel too much?” Tear-inducing on its own, but when it’s immediately followed by Walker harmoniously bellowing towards the end, those who are unprepared2 will be reduced to a quivering pile of sobs. Emotionally decimating. The other four songs also float by with the grace and delicacy of a cinder block thrown right at your heart and emotions. The closing combo of “Faces” and “Echoes” do a fine job of further bringing the sorrow and pain, with the former lamenting a sense of normalcy amongst the crumble of a failed relationship, while the latter recalls pleasant memories of what was, but will never be again. However, it’s the opening one-two suckerpunch of the title track and “Footsteps” that everyone remembers, and with good reason. The title track feels like a moment in time where Walker sees the wreckage of a the relationship and sees what he remembers are the good qualities, but it’s far too late to turn back the clock and repair the damage. And “Footsteps”… man, fuck “Footsteps” so much. At first a bit more upbeat than “Watching from a Distance,” all seemingly feels almost uplifting when suddenly Walker bares all in the song’s final few minutes, complete with a desperate delivery, complete with an emotionally charged voice that cracks and warbles in a broken manner that I made the mistake of listening to it the first time on my way home from work, and I had to pull over to partake in the ugliest of purging crying sessions. It’s ultra-rare that doom metal can make me feel that way, and Walker and company succeeded in accomplishing this in spades. It was a sad time when Walker disbanded Warning in 2009, due to the simplest of reasons: artistic integrity and keeping his vision intact, forming the formidable 40 Watt Sun, an acoustic continuation of what Warning achieved. However, with their influence driving the likes of Pallbearer and Khemmis (among others), it was only a matter of time before Warning would return with Hatfield in tow, and now with their long-awaited third album, Rituals of Shame, on the horizon, it’s only fitting to induct Watching from a Distance in the Halls of the Olde. Give this a listen, but bring tissues. The post Yer Metal is Olde: Warning – Watching from a Distance appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
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Yer Metal is Olde: Warning – Watching from a Distance