Please go to your post editor > Post Settings > Post Formats tab below your editor to enter video URL. Interviews STARE RIVAL SONS’ Robin Everhart interviewed by Cleartone Strings, October 2012 October 20, 2012 1 min read Cleartone Strings recently conducted an interview with RIVAL SONS bassist Cleartone Strings. Share this Facebook Messenger Twitter Whatsapp Reddit Email Tags: blues rockhard rockrival sons 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 MORBID ANGEL’s David Vincent interviewed by Full Metal Jackie, October 2012 Next Story GRAVE’s Ola Lindgren interviewed by CobraMetal.net, October 2012 Latest END OF THE LINE on summer 1991, Ebullition, and reunion shows with Downcast: an interview with Matt Anderson and Cory Linstrum Washington’s emo act EVERETT TEA discuss “long-tailed cat” ahead of LP “smoke signals” smallways. snap into “WHAT I’M DOIN'”, their heaviest track and a Dirk Kruithof cover that maps the whole pyramid Gol Olímpico share “respirar en cuadro,” a shoegaze panic-attack song built around box breathing and the songwriter who first showed them emo in Spanish Tæl drops fifteen filthy tracks of bass-and-drums powerviolence from Oslo
END OF THE LINE on summer 1991, Ebullition, and reunion shows with Downcast: an interview with Matt Anderson and Cory Linstrum
smallways. snap into “WHAT I’M DOIN'”, their heaviest track and a Dirk Kruithof cover that maps the whole pyramid
Gol Olímpico share “respirar en cuadro,” a shoegaze panic-attack song built around box breathing and the songwriter who first showed them emo in Spanish