The War on Drugs have never done that so well as they do with I Don’t Live Here Anymore, their fifth studio album and their most compulsive and bold set of songs to date. Show More Genres: Indie, Alternative Band Members: Adam G...
The War on Drugs have never done that so well as they do with I Don’t Live Here Anymore, their fifth studio album and their most compulsive and bold set of songs to date. Show More Genres: Alternative, Indie Band Members: Adam Granduciel, Robbie ...
The War On Drugs was founded by Granduciel and Kurt Vile in Philadelphia in 2005. Originally inspired by Bob Dylan and compared to Tom Petty and Bruce Springsteen, over the years the band has had a few members come and go, including Vile. At the time of release ofLost In the Dreamin...
For “Live Drugs Again,” the The War on Drugs' upcoming second live album out Sept. 13, frontman Adam Granduciel wanted to do justice to the ways in which the band has grown Adam Granduciel, leader of the band The War on Drugs, poses for a portrai...
I Don’t Live Here Anymore, the War on Drugs’ first album since 2017’s A Deeper Understanding, is led by the single “Living Proof,” which sees frontman Adam Granduciel experiment with restraint while still throwing in an electric guitar solo. The band plans to hit the road in 2022—...
1. The War on Drugs: “I Don’t Live Here Anymore” (Feat. Lucius)The War on Drugs are releasing a new album, I Don’t Live Here Anymore, on October 29 via Atlantic. On Wednesday they shared its second single, “I Don’t Live Here Anymore,” which features backing vo...
(2013), marking the longest gap between studio albums by the band. The album was produced by Rick Rubin and recorded at his Shangri-La studio in Malibu, California, with additional recording taking place at studios in Los Angeles County and Hawaii. The Strokes began performing songs from the...
The War on Drugs: “Thinking of a Place” In the War on Drugs’ music, you’re never quite sure where the road leads, but you have faith it’s safe to travel. Bandleader Adam Granduciel’s romantic, mysterious vision of America is at its most expansive on the 11-minute “Thinking ...
To celebrate Robert Smith’s 60th birthday, Nina Lindell explores The Cure’s albums and songs, along with their 40-year touring history. Clicking on the tour timeline reveals a tour map, where you can see every location they visited that year. Nina discovered that the band continues to ...
The War on Drugs Lost in the Dream Secretly Canadian 3 Lost in the Dreamrevolves around War on Drugs linchpin Adam Granduciel's personal struggles—with loneliness, depression, death. And the frontman’s weariness and dislocation is articulated not just through words but also the album’s overal...