Between Manchester United's victory over Everton at Goodison Park and the present day, a lot has changed.
22.03.2023 - 13:59 / officialcharts.com
With no intention of making you feel absolutely ancient, 2023 marks 20 years since the release of Fall Out Boy's debut LP Take This to Your Grave. Since then, the Illinois-formed rock group have secured four Top 10 albums and 11 Top 40 singles; from Sugar, We're Goin Down to Centuries.
This week, Patrick Stump, Pete Wentz, Andy Hurley and Joe Trohman release their eighth studio album So Much (for) Stardust. It's an album that sees them reconnect with producer Neal Avron, the man behind their 2008 record Folie à Deux, and release under their original label Fueled by Ramen.
Ahead of its release, we caught up with frontman Patrick to talk fist fights, fan reactions and coming somewhat full circle.
It’s funny, everybody keeps telling us ‘you’re back, you went away!’ Really, the whole world went away over the pandemic. But it allowed us breathing room to work on the record quietly. Usually you’re right in the middle of it; you come off a big tour and straight into the new record cycle. It was different being in a place where no one was asking when new music was coming.
Records take a lot less time to make now. You can make a record in a really short space of time if you want to. We’ve done that, and it’s been amazing and I’m proud of those records, but I’d started to miss the way we make records in the early 2000s because you had to make them that way.
This was a chance to use these muscles we hadn’t exercised in a long time. Things like the mic placement, dialling-in guitar tones for hours, those kinds of things. I was grateful to do that; it’s something I’ve always enjoyed. You could lock me in a studio forever.
Mania was a very high tech record, one which really utilised technology. This one’s much more about the live
Between Manchester United's victory over Everton at Goodison Park and the present day, a lot has changed.
Cat Deeley looked incredible during a recent beach trip with her son James, four.The 46 year old TV presenter showed off her stunning figure in a red bikini as she built sandcastles with her youngest son during a trip to the seaside. Cat still oozed glamour during the beach day as she wore a straw sun hat with her blonde hair tucked back in a bun.
Police have issued an appeal for help to find man who is wanted on recall to prison,
A group of mums managed to enjoy a 12-hour holiday in Ibiza after grabbing return flights for only £34.
Lana Del Rey is back, and she’s heading for her sixth Number 1 album in the UK.
Fall Out Boy have shared their views on the recent split of Panic! At The Disco.The band were speaking as part of a new interview with NME‘s In Conversation series on Saturday when they opened up about their relationship with the band, and explained how they “respect” the members’ decision to call it quits.When asked if it felt like the end of an era, bassist Pete Wentz stated, “I think so. Obviously, Panic! changed so much between members, sonically and what it was; they’ve felt like mini-chapters [that] have opened and closed.”Panic! – who formed in 2004 – announced that they would be disbanding in January, with singer Brendon Urie confirming that he wants to focus on his family.
Fall Out Boy have reflected upon their divisive 2018 album ‘MANIA’, saying that it represented an attempt to survive in a climate that they thought was becoming more hostile towards bands.Guitarist Joe Trohman previously said in his 2022 memoir None Of This Rocks that he wasn’t a huge fan of the album and subsequently didn’t really participate in its creation.When asked if this motivated the band’s return to their rock roots on new album ‘So Much For Stardust’ by Variety, bassist Pete Wentz said: “I feel like our thoughts on ‘MANIA’ were taken a little out of context. Two records before, we were making albums in a landscape that was not particularly friendly to bands, and so we were just trying to figure out how to survive.
William Earl Fall Out Boy is back with their first record in five years, and although the musical landscape has changed dramatically since the pandemic and the rise of TikTok, “So Much (for) Stardust” returns to the classic sound many fans grew up on. While recent records like 2015’s “American Beauty/American Psycho” and 2018’s “Mania” were successful, Fall Out Boy took on a pop sheen that was a far cry from their punky hits like “Dance, Dance” and “Thnks fr th Mmrs.” For “Stardust,” the band — singer and guitarist Patrick Stump, bassist Pete Wentz, guitarist Joe Trohman and drummer Andy Hurley — worked again with Neal Avron, who produced the band’s biggest rock records, 2005’s “From Under the Cork Tree,” 2007’s “Infinity on High” and 2008’s “Folie à Deux.” The result isn’t a nostalgia trip, but rather a return to the group’s core strengths, with big riffs, huge singalong choruses, and lyrics that are in-tune with the woes of modern life. The band is also headed on a world tour this year, playing for the first time without Trohman, who is taking a break from the band to focus on his mental health.
Pete Wentz and Patrick Stump of Fall Out Boy are speaking out.
Jewel is opening up about her mother, Lenedra Carroll, claiming she stole millions of dollars from her.
Jewel is sharing the big ways her parents did her wrong.
Pete Wentz is reflecting on a big time of change. In the latest edition of Nylon, the 43-year-old Fall Out Boy bassist looks back on his band taking a hiatus after “One Direction-level” of success, and his marriage to Ashlee Simpson ending, which happened at the same time.
Pete Wentz is reflecting on a big time of change. In the latest edition of, the 43-year-old Fall Out Boy bassist looks back on his band taking a hiatus after «One Direction-level» of success, and his marriage to Ashlee Simpson ending, which happened at the same time. «My life was just like… a bomb had gone off in it,» the «Dance, Dance» singer tells the magazine.
rule, which prohibits minors from receiving hormone therapies, puberty-blocking drugs, or gender confirmation surgery, was adopted on March 16, based on guidance from the Florida Department of Health.The Florida Board of Osteopathic Medicine is expected to adopt an identical rule later this month, and the state has already barred Medicaid from covering gender-affirming treatments for transgender adults wishing to transition.That guidance discourages transgender minors from transitioning — not only medically, but socially, warning medical practitioners that minors with gender dysphoria should not be allowed to present or dress in a manner that does not match their assigned sex at birth.But those restrictions are now leading some parents of transgender or nonbinary minors to consider fleeing Florida in order to ensure their children can present themselves as the gender with which they identify.One of those parents, Heather St. Amand, a Tampa Bay area resident whose lived in the state for nearly her entire life, says the state’s recent decisions targeting those who receive gender-affirming care is motivating her to leave the state, reports Tampa Bay area CBS affiliate WTSP.“For my daughter, if she hadn’t received gender-affirming care when she did, I don’t know that she would still be here,” St.
St. Patrick’s Day act might just be The Prodigals, a long-running Celtic punk band that will play four back-to-back gigs in Manhattan and Queens this Friday.One of those stops will be iconic Irish pub Paddy Reilly’s in Kips Bay, where the band have had a weekly residency for 26 years.It was right before St.
St Patrick's Day is a huge celebration in cities across the globe, and Manchester is no exception.
A trainee solicitor stole more than £100,000 to fund a gambling addiction, a court heard. Tauseef Sadeeq, 31, was working for Bolton-based Jacob Miller Solicitors when he began tricking insurance companies into paying money meant for clients into his own bank accounts.
Kyle Richards’ ongoing family feud with big sister Kathy Hilton has prevented her from meeting her great nephew.
Boy George 's mother, Dinah, has passed away at the age of 84. Confirming the news, the Culture Club singer's representatives said that he is "devastated" by the loss.They also confirmed that Dinah was surrounded by family, including George, when she passed, and ask for privacy at this time. Boy George's close friend DJ Fat Tony has since paid tribute to Dinah on Instagram, writing: "God bless you you amazing woman Dinah ....my heart goes out to @boygeorgeofficial and the entire O Dowd family what an incredible beautiful strong woman we will miss you x." In April 2020, Dinah was hospitalised for two days at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Schools across Greater Manchester will close today after heavy snowfall across the region.