Tag Archives: new wave

WATCH: Get ‘Lost Among the Avenues’ with The Mad Sugars

There’s nothing like falling in love underneath the bright city lights.

The Mad Sugars — who, you should know, just released their much-anticipated full-length album, Personal Space — give us that sweet feeling with the new music video for focus track, “Lost Among the Avenues.”

The video — shot by Nita Ann — takes us through popular Nashville haunts including Printers Alley and Sid Gold’s Request Room, as frontman Adam Lawrence sings about the adventure of embarking on a night on the town with a new flame.

Sonically, those who are familiar with The Mad Sugars will be happy with this one, as it’s another example of the band’s penchat for high-powered, highly danceable alt-rock. With that being said, there’s also a Killers-esque new wave sensibility that comes to the forefront, with radiant synths that shimmer like the city skyline on a clear summer night.

Get “lost” with this one below. It’s an experience you’ll never forget!

WATCH: Aaron Lee Tasjan Examines the ‘Horror Of It All’

Photo credit: Shervin Lainez

Aaron Lee Tasjan has made a career out of pushing the sonic envelope, but his forthcoming album, Stellar Evolution, promises to be his most innovative offering to date. The record — Tasjan’s fifth studio album — is said to “(connect) the far away universes of slacker indie, hyper pop, and new wave.”

And frankly, if the rest of the record is anything like lead single, “Horror Of It All,” sign us up for more!

The single is a glorious sonic melting pot; one whose new wave sensibilities feel nostalgic and futuristic, all at once. The tension of this glorious hybrid soundscape — which reaches a brilliant apex with an electrifying guitar solo shortly after the 2:20 mark — is representative of “the joy, confusions and humiliations of the queer adolescent experience.”

“When I think of what scares me the most about ‘being myself,’ is that I’ll get rejected for it. This song examines the concepts of both rejection and self-acceptance, through metaphors of childhood playground heartbreak and the dramatic nature of the teenage experience,” Tasjan noted. “The story is being told through the eyes of a young queer person. I wanted to use experiences from childhood in the song, because I feel like those heartaches are the ones that are truly everlasting. In life, we have to deal with and learn from the heartbreaks of our youth. Those lessons stay with us because the pain of the experience can be processed, but the memory of it happening always remains.”

“Horror Of It All” is accompanied by a stellar, Teen Wolf-inspired music video, lending a nod to Tasjan’s love of 80s cinema, as well as to the confusion of — and ultimately, triumph over — our formative teenage years. Watch it below!

UMC20: It’s a Wild One! (May 9, 2023)

This week’s UMC20 playlist will take you through some unexpected turns!

The genres are plentiful. You want hip hop and R&B? There’s a big block of it, right at the beginning. Want experimental electronica? We got you, fam. Want hard rock and metalcore? You’ll find it within these 20 tracks!

Oh, and because we missed last week — sorry, we were busy launching an agency — we included not one, but two episodes of The Quinn Spinn as bonus tracks at the end!

Listen to UMC20

UMC20: April Showers Us with New Jams (Apr. 4, 2023)

Hold it right there!

Did you know that you can support Underground Music Collective, any time of year? By making a tax-deductible donation to UMC via The Arts & Business Council of Greater Nashville, you ensure that we can keep sharing songs and stories from independent creatives everywhere, for years to come. Click here to get started!

Anyway, onto this week’s edition of UMC20

Listen to UMC20

UMC20: Experimental Vibes (Mar. 22, 2023)

Hold it right there!

Did you know that you can support Underground Music Collective, any time of year? By making a tax-deductible donation to UMC via The Arts & Business Council of Greater Nashville, you ensure that we can keep sharing songs and stories from independent creatives everywhere, for years to come. Click here to get started!

Anyway, onto this week’s edition of UMC20

Listen to UMC20

UMC20: Another Wednesday Edition (July 13, 2022)

When we get busy, we stay busy. When we get a little too busy, we need a little more time to properly listen to the 20 songs that will make up the week’s UMC20.

This is another edition that’s worth the wait. We’ve got some fresh, hot rock anthems; varying shades of Americana; all kinds of pop, soul, and R&B, and even a little bit of ambient electronica. This week’s playlist is a true variety pack!

Listen to UMC20

UMC20: New Faces Week (June 14, 2022)

OK, so there are some familiar faces on this week’s UMC20… but for the most part, we have artists making their debuts on our weekly playlist.

This one’s also a rock fan’s dream — we’ve got all kinds of rock and roll and Americana flavors on this week’s edition, before things take a poppier turn later in the playlist. And, as is always the case, there are 20 good reasons to dig in!

Oh, and we’ve included a couple tracks in honor of our friends at On the Guest List…, who just welcomed The Black Keys’ Patrick Carney onto their podcast. Check it out here!

Listen to UMC20

NEW SHOW ALERT: The Z-Man Experience, Borrowed Sparks, and Uplander at The Cobra on May 21

We’ve got photos coming from the most recent NashLive! show at The Cobra Nashville, featuring Pepperwood and Nicole Boggs & The Reel.

While you wait for those, we’re excited to tell you that we’ll be back there on Saturday, May 21 with The Z-Man Experience, Borrowed Sparks, and Uplander.

Learn more

UMC20: Catching Up! (Mar. 22, 2022)

Things got a little busy around these parts last week, which is why we weren’t quite able to get you a fresh, hot batch of fire back on the 15th.

With that said, we think what we have for you on this week’s all-new UMC20 is worth the wait! We start off by rocking your world, before things get a bit more tender in the middle. Then, we have some pop anthems on tap before things get suuuuper experimental toward the end.

Ready to dive in? Same here. Let’s go!

Listen to UMC20
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