Please go to your post editor > Post Settings > Post Formats tab below your editor to enter video URL. Latest FOR TODAY studio diary [UDPATE] February 23, 2012 1 min read FOR TODAY have posted the first studio webisode for their new album entitled “Immortal”, to be released on May 22nd through Razor & Tie Records. PUBLISHED on February 16, 2012. UPDATED on February 23, 2012 – second part added. Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: for todaymetalcore 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 December 18, 2024 Grindcore dads JÄRNBÖRD brings havoc to a bookstore in new video “Vi ska ätas, vi ska dömas” December 17, 2024 Keep Planting Flowers: STICK TO YOUR GUNS map out a way forward December 20, 2024 Finnskramz – Finnish Screamo Special – 16-way interview & new compilation premiere! December 17, 2024 SUBURBAN EYES (members of Mineral, Christie Front Drive) premiere new video for “4AM” Previous Story NAPALM DEATH – “Utilitarian” track-by-track [UPDATE] Next Story THE DILLINGER ESCAPE PLAN to reissue their self-titled EP on vinyl Latest DEFTONES and their consequences upon society “Garden Snakes’: Steven Shoelace shares a lo-fi exploration of heartbreak and displacement on new album Hearty punk rockers HELL & BACK leave a world in flames with great new single “Space Jam” From GEL to SHELLAC: end of the year picks by St. Louis hardcore band WORN DOWN San Francisco’s thrashcore unit V.V.M. shares Bay Area’s best kept secrets
December 18, 2024 Grindcore dads JÄRNBÖRD brings havoc to a bookstore in new video “Vi ska ätas, vi ska dömas”
December 20, 2024 Finnskramz – Finnish Screamo Special – 16-way interview & new compilation premiere!
December 17, 2024 SUBURBAN EYES (members of Mineral, Christie Front Drive) premiere new video for “4AM”
“Garden Snakes’: Steven Shoelace shares a lo-fi exploration of heartbreak and displacement on new album