Facebook Slider
Marky Edison

Marky Edison

Finnish Rockers AncarA Release Garden Of Chains

Finnish Alternative hard rock band AncarA will release it’s fourth studio album Garden Of Chains via Concorde Music Company internationally on March 3rd 2017. On November 2015 AncarA played the highest (unofficially) ever played electrical rock show on Mount Everest at 4600 metres. A documentary film of that trip, Project Rockin High, was also recorded and has gathered lots of praises when shown at film festivals, movie theatres and on Finnish national television.

The music video to the track ‘Ending Mode’ was filmed at the Mount Everest session and it’s probably the highest ever filmed music video with the band members standing their legs on ground! AncarA will celebrate the release of the album with a release show at Rock Club Tavastia, Helsinki. 

With the earlier albums AncarA has reached on top 10 on official Finnish record sales charts and at number two on Finnish single charts. Garden Of Chains was recorded in Finland and at Hollywood, Los Angeles with producers Jimmy Westerlund and Erno Laitinen.

Sorority Noise are back with You're Not As ______ As You Think

Indie-punk band Sorority Noise’s latest album is arguably their best yet. There will be few albums with as strong an opener as ‘No Halo’ this year. The new album was produced by Mike Sapone (Brand New) and captures their significant live sound. Sorority Noise go to uncomfortable places, unafraid to let the darkness in, but they’re also not shy at kicking back until the sorrow subsides. They’re songs of confusion, anger, life, death, mental health and, most importantly, hope. They’re what it means to be human.

That vulnerability has been Sorority Noise’s hallmark since they formed in 2013, but it’s never been as precise as it is on You're Not As ______ As You Think, their third album, set for release March 17 via Triple Crown Records. Singer/guitarist Cameron Boucher, who prefers not to edit or overthink his lyrics, empties both his pen and soul on songs like ‘No Halo’, ‘Disappeared’ and ‘A Portrait Of’; tragically vulnerable vignettes that find him coming to terms with the death of close friends.

So what you’re getting is an unfiltered, inward look at the last year of the band’s life that’s filled with intimate, visceral details yet remains universally relatable. But even amidst weighty subject matter, Sorority Noise want to give you a sense of resilience: “No matter what I feel, it’s going to be OK,” Boucher says. “Things are going to be tough, but it’s going to be fine in the end – and you have to keep going because you just have to. This is how it’s going to be. You’ve just got to do it.” 

Subscribe to this RSS feed