LA Based Alternative Punk Rock Band PUSHING VERONICA has released the official music video for their single, “Dead Girl,” from their upcoming...
[embedplusvideo height=”253″ width=”450″ editlink=”http://bit.ly/2Le67wJ” standard=”http://www.youtube.com/v/qE45Mq9zinM?fs=1″ vars=”ytid=qE45Mq9zinM&width=450&height=253&start=&stop=&rs=w&hd=0&autoplay=0&react=1&chapters=¬es=” id=”ep7838″ /] Alternative Rock Band THE COLOUR YOU has released the official music video for their...
For the first time since 2001, the Vans Warped Tour returned to New Orleans, Louisiana for a hot, yet memorable...
Pearl Jam returned to New Orleans to headline Saturday afternoon at the annual Jazz & Heritage Festival. Almost 100,000 people...
The Shelters play a heady and potent mix of alternative rock tinged with the dark tones of old time blues....
In the mid 2000s, Go Betty Go seemed to be on everyone’s radar. The all female pop/punk LA based band...
In a sea of music where so many bands seem to sound alike and lack that creative gene to make...
Check out the RockRevolt video report featuring interviews with everyone at this amazing concert event to premier "Battlefield Of The Mind" by director Fran Strine.
The definition for the word “puzzle,” when used as a noun, is a game to exercise the brain by fitting...
Jason Newsted filled some incredibly big shoes back in 1986 after the death of Metallica bassist Cliff Burton. During his...
Promising to be raw, emotional and interactive, Justin Furstenfeld, vocalist/songwriter/guitarist for the Platinum-selling rock band Blue October, will kick off a 24-date solo/acoustic tour "An Open Book: An Evening With Justin Furstenfeld of Blue October" on April 4 at Hotel Cafe in Los Angeles, CA. The shows, all presented in intimate settings, will consist of spoken word, a Q&A session, and an acoustic set of songs never before heard, as well as stripped down and softer versions of Blue October fan-favorites.
Most people like to rant about politics and everything in between whilst making an unnecessary fuss about it – ranging from the radical (yet awesome) Rage Against The Machine to the average whining 16 year olds who think they know everything. Take all of that out of the equation and you end up with the LA based rapper Hyro Da Hero’s album Birth School Work Death. He churns up politically charged tunes while fusing hip-hop and rock influences in an attempt “To bring real music back”.