Please go to your post editor > Post Settings > Post Formats tab below your editor to enter video URL. Interviews STARE CODE ORANGE KIDS interviewed by Exclaim! Aggressive Tendencies, January 2013 January 10, 2013 1 min read Exclaim! Aggressive Tendencies recently conducted an interview with CODE ORANGE KIDS guitarist/vocalist Reba Meyers. Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: code orange kidshardcorehardcore punk Karol Kamiński DIY rock music enthusiast and web-zine publisher from Warsaw, Poland. Supporting DIY ethics, local artists and promoting hardcore punk, rock, post rock and alternative music of all kinds via IDIOTEQ online channels. Contact via [email protected] You might be interested in February 10, 2013 BAD RELIGION bassist interviewed by AMP Magazine, February 2013 February 10, 2013 STCIK TO YOUR GUNS interviewed by I Want My C TV February 9, 2013 PARKWAY DRIVE interviewed by PitCam February 9, 2013 The Self-Titled Magazine talks to HOT WATER MUSIC Previous Story DROWNING IN PRECONCEPTION: Wetzlar Hardcore represent! Next Story GOVERNMENT ISSUE guitarist interviewed by AMP Magazine, January 2013 Latest Sicily’s MOTHER GIRAFFE map late-capitalist anxiety and turn repetition into pressure on “Food Is a Necessity” Baltimore’s emo alt rockers STILL BONES turn frustration into motion on collaborative EP “Start/Stop” KNUMEARS turn “Directions” into a map of change, family, and SoCal screamo THE SADDEST LANDSCAPE confront time, loss, and unfinished thoughts on “Alone With Heaven” – an interview Emo math rockers PASTEL stretch a decade of doubt into “A Lovers Manifesto,” a record shaped by instability and stubborn continuity
Sicily’s MOTHER GIRAFFE map late-capitalist anxiety and turn repetition into pressure on “Food Is a Necessity”
Baltimore’s emo alt rockers STILL BONES turn frustration into motion on collaborative EP “Start/Stop”
THE SADDEST LANDSCAPE confront time, loss, and unfinished thoughts on “Alone With Heaven” – an interview
Emo math rockers PASTEL stretch a decade of doubt into “A Lovers Manifesto,” a record shaped by instability and stubborn continuity