Barriers to Right

  Forest Live 2025

  The Commoners Live

  Montreux British Dedication

  Joanna Shaw Taylor UK Tour

  Within Temptation Ukraine Film

  Gaza - Too Little, Too Late

  Robert Jon & The Wreck Live

  Mike Peters Remembered

  Elliot Minor Live Manchester

  The Swell Season LP & Tour

  Robert Jon & The Wreck ‘24 Tour

  EARTH DAY 2025

  Montreux Lineup 2025

  The Omen (Has Arrived)

  Divine Comedy Back in ‘25!

  DOWNLOAD 2025

  The Damn Truth UK Tour

  David Gray’s New LP & Tour

  On Freelance Photography

  Trump’s Winning Ways…?

  Martha Wainwright’s Debut LP

  Roger Waters on Amused To Death

  Trump, Drunk On Power

  Apartheid and Beyond…

  David Ford Live in ‘25

  My Favourite Records

  In Dreams…

  Coheed & Cambria New LP & Tour

  Young Knives New LP & UK Tour

  Elliot Minor Back In 2025

  Emily Barker LP & 2025 UK Tour

  Political Inhumanity

  Record Reviews

  Ani DiFranco 2025 Tour

  “Let Right Be Done”

  Farah Nabulsi Filmmaker

  G3 Reunion Live LP in ‘25

  IS THIS IT?

  Larkin Poe Live in ‘25 + New LP

  Laura Marling New Record Out Now

  Rise Against 2025 Tour

  Rag ‘N’ Bone Man New LP & Tour

  The Middle East Crisis

  Ezra Collective New LP & Tour

  Leif Vollebekk New, Great LP

  Stick In The Wheel Returns

  SO, WHAT’S CHANGED?

  “They’re American Planes…”

  Olive Tree By Olive Tree…

  Ani Di Franco In Conversation

  Gemma Hayes Returns

  Remembering Thomas Hoepker

  Joe Bonamassa Live in 25

  On Misinformation

  Joan As Police Woman LP

  Politics - Who To Trust?

  The 76 Year Catastrophe

  Black Country Communion Back!

  Within Temptation Live Recordings

  Beth Gibbons New Solo LP

  Politics Is Failing

  Ani DiFranco New LP

  Pink Floyd’s Animals Remix

  SHIT FLOATS

  Seasick Steve Alive & Kickin’

  “My country, right or wrong…”

  Heart Announce Live Tours

  Anais Mitchell HADESTOWN Returns

  The Photographer’s Selection

  Gaza Nightmare Continues

  Princess Goes COME OF AGE

  Philip ‘Seth’ Campbell Live

  This Troubled World

  Dark Side Of The Moon 50th

  The More I Hear The Less I Know

  Great Albums: Fresh New Life

  Hozier’s New Album

  Nicole Atkins Jim Sclavunos Live

  SBT (Sarabeth Tucek) Live

  I’m As Angry As Hell!

  Magnum - A Year in Ukraine

  Alessandra Sanguinetti Interview

  The Damn Truth Live

  Newton Faulkner Live

  The Handsome Family Live

  The State We’re In Pt II

  Eric Gales Live

  The Cavalry Never Arrived

  Chvrches Live

  Andrés Peña Flamenco Star Live

  Paul Draper Live

  A Fly-Free Zone

  Liverpool Jazz Festival

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  Politics is Failing

  Lucy Kruger TRANSIT TAPES

  Joe Bonamassa Live!

  Rodrigo Y Gabriela Interview

  Music & Brexit

  Happy New Year?

  On Barbra Streisand

  The State We’re In…

  Welcome Back! But To What?

  What Have We Done?

  A RISK TOO FAR

  Photojournalism Hero

  Samantha Fish Live

  Gill Landry Live in Chester

  Noah Gundersen Live

  David Gilmour’s Interview

  Snow Patrol Live in Manchester

  New Model Army Live

  Shakespears Sister Live

  Lamb Live in Manchester

  The Struts Live

  Sting & Shaggy Live

  David Gray Live in Liverpool

  John Lennon Interview


The All-American Rejects Live in Manchester ‘09

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The All-American Rejects

“You can sit beside me when the world comes down/If it doesn’t matter than just turn around/You be the queen and I’ll be your clown/You can sit beside me when the world comes down.” The All-American Rejects front man, Tyson Ritter, sings the verse to ‘Mona Lisa’ for the 29th time. “All right, nice pass,” comments the voice behind the glass. “Some good stuff in there.” Producer Eric Valentine sits behind the console in his Barefoot Studios control room and imparts his bohemian brilliance. On the soundstage beyond the wall, the band o’ Oklahoma brothers track live their third cd. Welcome to the womb of creation where minds meld, riffs congeal, voices carry, lives alter, skin sheds and a modern rock multi-platinum success story swing, swing for the fences. But for The All-American Rejects, the road to When the World Comes Down, their third long form musical offering, has been anything but a straight line.

“This record hasn’t been smooth sailing,” confesses Nick, sporting a wry grin across his boyish face. “After the success of MOVE ALONG, we felt an innate need to challenge ourselves to grow. And to challenge our fans to grow with us. On the last record, all the songs were there before we even entered the studio. We were completely rehearsed. We just had to show up, play the parts, producer Howard Benson pushed the buttons and in six weeks, we were done. This LP is where we’re at as people, not just artists, here and now. That’s why we took the bus trips and locked ourselves away in remote cabins to recreate this sense of torture like we had in the past, before we sold any records.”

Bus trips? Cabins? Torture? How divinely placed are the potholes on the creative road less travelled? “When we first started working on “Real World,” a pretty aggressive rock song for us, we all got in a room, jammed it, and it sucked!” recalls Mike. “So me and Chris went to Florida to Nick and Ty’s place on the gulf coast and hung out for about a month. Ty has this electric drum kit, tiny ass little practice amp. We put the drums through the amp and the song came together really cool. You’ll have to ask Ty and Nick about the cabin and cross country bus trip.”

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“‘Breakin” came out of the bus ride,” says Ty. “I wrote the chorus at Eric’s studio but after several weeks of basic tracking, I had a meltdown and became totally claustrophobic; lost my touch. I was going soft on everything, like falling into this vortex, grabbing things on my way down. I was depressed and worse, afraid to just let go; certain doom to an artist. So Nick and me got in a bus and just headed east on Interstate 10 to wherever we felt like cruising. And ‘Breakin” came together along the way, just me and Nick in the back of the bus, figuring shit out, chords, verses. The song is so different for us. It’s different and weird.”

“Ty and I know each other so well that two weeks in the back of a bus, personal shit doesn’t come out,” says Nick. “We’re in this together. I’ve known him since I was 14. We discussed insecurities but accepted the process. We knew we were growing. The cabin trip up in Rabun County, Georgia, where they filmed Deliverance, we’d done like four songs, two of which are on the record, ‘Damn Girl,’ and ‘Falling Apart.’ It was like the 12th day in close quarters and we’re cracking and Ty says, ‘give it one more day, one more day’ and he sat down at his keyboard with his headphones on and I was diddling some guitar part from another song and he says, ‘Okay, I’ve got it!’ and he plays me the chorus from ‘Mona Lisa,’ and I’m like yeah, but we get back to the rest of the guys and jam it and there’s something not quite right. It sounded like alt country southern rock but the chord changes were too quick. Then, completely frustrated, we played it for Eric and he says, ‘what’s wrong with the demo? Just play it like that.’ And it worked and we decided to track it live and now we love it. A common theme throughout the process of making this record has been ‘what was the initial inspiration or thought for the song? Less is more has won out time and again.”

Beyond a band, AAR is four friends who discovered one other and scored the American dream. Tyson and Nick founded the group and released the EP, SAME GIRL, New Songs in the summer of 2001. Mike and Chris joined in 2002 and the new quartet hit stores with their self-titled long play debut, THE ALL-AMERICAN REJECTS, on October 15th, scoring commercial success with the single, ‘Swing Swing.’ They toured tirelessly and in July 2005, presented their fans with MOVE ALONG, a breakout effort featuring three smash hits, ‘Dirty Little Secret,’ ‘It Ends Tonight,’ and the LP’s inspiring anthemic title track. From down home southern boys to multi-platinum stars, AAR broke through the pabulum of mainstream pop with a cache of great songs and an authentic connection to their adoring audience.

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While success can often damage the psyche, it just brought the Rejects closer together. It has something to do with personality and good breeding. “I was enrolled at the University of Central Oklahoma, was gonna be a physical therapist,” muses Chris. “‘Til I got this call from Ty. Immediately deep sixed school and joined the band. I love playing drums and wish I could do this all the time. More I get to play, happier I am, less apt to get in trouble. I felt like I hit the lottery when I was making 50 bucks a show and not having to work for a living. Success is relative. When we got our first gold record, I started thinking ‘yeah, I guess this could pan out for awhile.’ The recording process of WHEN THE WORLD COMES DOWN has united us in a deeper way. Tyson has really matured in the past year. We all have.”

Songs like ‘Believe,’ an homage to a fallen friend that examines why we’re here and where we might go once we cross over, the ambitious ‘Another Heart Calls,’ AAR’s first duet with the hypnotic vocals of a pair of Alabama sisters called, The Pierces, the soaring, roaring, antagonizing, ‘Hope It Gives You Hell,’ (written on a road trip to Vancouver), the bouncy, effervescent ‘Falling Apart,’ and the infectious, monster hooked, ‘Damn Girl,’ illustrate seasoned composition, vintage production and a fierce spirit that contemporary fans beyond the Rejects’ passionate base will wholeheartedly and enthusiastically embrace.

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“I want this record to be more than just good for us, I want it to be good for them, our fans,” insists Ty. “In the end, we’re just a band, close friends, who care deeply about what we do. When the bullshit eventually dies, love survives. I’m no rock star or hometown hero. I’m just a nobody. And like the song says, you’re nobody ’til somebody loves you.”

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