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
Le Tigre - Le Tigre | Album Review
Salmonblaster - Salmonblaster | Album Review
Garage Rock Revival | Roundtable
Adorable - Against Perfection | Album Review
Menthol - Menthol | Album Review
The Sharp - This Is The Sharp | Album Review
Antenna - Hideout | Album Review
Into Another - Ignaurus | Album Review
VAST - Visual Audio Sensory Theater | Album Review
Ben Harper & The Innocent Criminals - Burn To Shine | Album Review
Fu Manchu - King of the Road | Album Review
Doughboys - Crush | Album Review
Union by Union | Album Review
G. Love | Interview
Dinosaur Jr. in the 80s | Roundtable
Skeleton Key - Fantastic Spikes Through Balloon | Album Review
Dishwalla - And You Think You Know What Life’s About | Album Review
Little John - Derailer | Album Review
Art Alexakis of Everclear | Interview
Face To Face - Ignorance Is Bliss | Album Review
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