Our latest requested review requires us to ask a question - when is it showing your influences, and when is it ripping them off entirely? On their one and only release, the 1998 self-titled album by The Din Pedals walk the precarious line between the two, thanks to lead singer James Grundler's Thom York-like tenor, and a band that easily recreates the dramatic bombast and minor chord melancholy of Radiohead, U2 and Our Lady Peace.
Songs in this Episode
#383: From The Choirgirl Hotel by Tori Amos
#382: U2 In The 90s Roundtable
#381: The Proximity Effect by Nada Surf
#380: Shōso Strip by Ringo Sheena
#379: Sophomore Slump Revisited - The Chinese Album by Spacehog
#378: Laid by James
#377: Darkest Days by Stabbing Westward
#376: The Process by Skinny Puppy
#375: Digging Your Scene visits New York City
#374: 12 Bar Blues by Scott Weiland
#373: Shapeshifter by Marcy Playground
#372: Desert Rock Discussion with Director Jason Georgiades
#371: Interview with Craig Wedren of Shudder To Think
#370: Little Plastic Castle by Ani DiFranco
#369: Wonderful Life by The Tories
#368: This Is My Truth Tell Me Yours by Manic Street Preachers
#367: Apocalypse Dudes by Turbonegro
#366: Albums of 1998 Roundtable
#365: How to Measure a Planet? by The Gathering
#364: Ill At Ease by The Mark Of Cain
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