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
Duster - Stratosphere | 90s Album Review
Samiam - You Are Freaking Me Out | 90s Album Review
Blur - Blur | 90s Album Review
Tracy Bonham - The Burdens of Being Upright | 90s Album Review
Flu Thirteen - In the Foul Key of V | 90s Album Review
Bad Religion - Stranger Than Fiction | 90s Album Review
Downset by Downset | 90s Album Review
Milk - Tantrum | 90s Album Review
Idaho - Three Sheets To The Wind | 90s Album Review
T-Ride - T-Ride | 90s Album Review
Pale Saints - Slow Buildings | 90s Album Review
Recoil - Unsound Methods | 90s Album Review
Chris Whitley - Din of Ecstasy | 90s Album Review
Spot - Spot | 90s Album Review
Glide - Open Up and Croon | 90s Album Review
Controversial Albums and Music of the 1990s | Roundtable
Holly McNarland - Stuff | 90s Album Review
Black Lab - Your Body Above Me | 90s Album Review
Catherine Wheel - Chrome | 90s Album Review
Dave Smalley of Down By Law, All, Don’t Sleep, and Dag Nasty | 90s Artist Interview
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