Download Taking Back Sunday Tell All Your Friends Demo Zip
Filmed at the Chicago and Los Angeles stops on the TAYF10 Anniversary tour, this film is a rare, intimate acoustic performance of Tell All Your Friends complete with a bonus track and guest performance by Michelle DaRosa. Also includes exclusive behind the scenes interviews of the band reflecting on the past 10 years. The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus's profile including the latest music, albums, songs, music videos and more updates.
A collection of all the Taking Back Sunday that I've managed to get ahold of thus far. Unfortunately, I've never been able to get my hands on the Louder Now: parttwo videos, but the audio is still an excellent live album. Content: Taking Back Sunday Demo (from 2001, features Antonio Longo as lead and Jesse Lacy as back vocals for most of the EP) Tell All Your Friends Demo Tell All Your Friends LP Where You Want to Be Louder Now Louder Now: parttwo New Again Live from Orensanz And 'Best Places to be a Mom' from their upcoming album. ~Enjoy~ And if you know where to find LN:2 videos, let me know. I'll dl them and add them.
Reuniting the lineup from their debut album, 2002’s Tell All Your Friends, Taking Back Sunday seek to recapture the fire of that early lineup on their eponymous fifth album. Nearly a decade later, we find the post-hardcore outfit a little older and a little wiser, but sounding no worse for the wear, with John Nolan and Shaun Cooper sliding back into the lineup as if they had never left. The pair’s seamless return works in the band’s favor, reinvigorating their sound with the chemistry that brought them to the national stage without being a tired retread of things they’ve already done. In a lot of ways, Taking Back Sunday is the sophomore album the band never had.
Songs like “El Paso” and “You Got Me” find the band both refining and expanding their sound, offering up tighter songs without sacrificing intensity in the process. The big surprises on the album come by way of the highly danceable “Money (Let It Go),” where deep fuzz bass and stomping drums blast their way through a garage-influenced dancefloor scorcher, and “This Is All Now,” which drifts back and forth between a verse anchored by an angular, Dismemberment Plan-style beat and a classic, singalong-style chorus. Normally, you’d expect a band to gain new members in order to inject this kind of life into their sound, and with three albums and seven years passing between Nolan and Cooper’s exodus and return, it’d be an easy point to argue that they almost are new members.
What their return does bring, though, is that unquantifiable “getting the band back together” feeling and all of the excitement that comes with old friends getting back together to do what they do best. ~ Gregory Heaney.