Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Everything Everything are an English art rock band from Manchester that formed in late 2007. Noted for their eclectic sound and complex, avant-garde-inspired lyrics, the band has released seven albums to date — Man Alive (2010), Arc (2013), Get to Heaven (2015), A Fever Dream (2017), Re-Animator (2020), Raw Data Feel (2022) and Mountainhead (2024) — and has been widely critically acclaimed.
Arc is the second studio album by British indie pop band Everything Everything. It was released in the United Kingdom on 14 January 2013, [ 2 ] having been preceded by the singles " Cough Cough " and " Kemosabe ".
It should only contain pages that are Everything Everything albums or lists of Everything Everything albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Everything Everything albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Their third release in the span of two years, following Raw Data Feel in 2022 and a reissue of their debut album Man Alive in 2023, Everything Everything announced Mountainhead on 26 October 2023. [9] The band wrote, recorded and produced the project in Stockport with the help of guitarist Alex Robertshaw.
THE COUNTDOWN: Bidding farewell to 2024, The Independent’s music critics Mark Beaumont and Helen Brown count down the best albums of the year
The 25 most overrated albums ranked, from Nirvana’s In Utero to The Beatles’ Sgt Pepper Mark Beaumont,Roisin O'Connor,Louis Chilton,Adam White and Annabel Nugent October 28, 2024 at 4:47 AM
Raw Data Feel is the sixth studio album by British band Everything Everything, released on 20 May 2022 through Infinity Industries, the band's own imprint. [10] The album was produced by the band's guitarist Alex Robertshaw and Tom A.D. Fuller, [10] and its release was preceded by the singles "Bad Friday" (7 February), [11] "Teletype" (9 March), [12] "I Want a Love Like This" (28 March) [13 ...
Coldplay’s 10th album, the full title of which is Music of the Spheres Vol. II: Moon Music, is a little sleepier and less adventurous than its 2021 predecessor.It’s full of utopian good vibes ...