punk goes classic rock full album download Punk goes classic rock full album download. PUNK GOES ACOUSTIC VOL. 3 | OUT NOW. More Punk Goes. Join the Fearless Family SUBSCRIBE. Punk Goes Acoustic, Vol. 3. Punk Goes Pop Vol. 7. Punk Goes Christmas: Deluxe Edition. November 27, 2015. Punk Goes Pop Vol. 6. Punk Goes 90s Vol. 2. Punk Goes 90’s Vol. 2 Vinyl. Punk Goes Christmas (Red/Green Vinyl) December 2, 2013. Punk Goes Christmas. November 5, 2013. Punk Goes Pop Vol. 5. November 6, 2012. Punk Goes Pop Vol. 4. November 21, 2011. January 25, 2011. Punk Goes Pop 3. November 2, 2010. Punk Goes Classic Rock. Punk Goes Pop 2. Punk Goes Crunk. Punk Goes Acoustic 2. Punk Goes Acoustic. October 21, 2003. Punk Goes Metal. An album addresses the age in which it came to life and often foreshadows the future. Launched in 200 0 , the Punk Goes… series embodies each ebb and flow of popular culture for nearly twenty years —with a twist . As such, the Fearless Records staple holds the distinction of being “the top-selling compilation in the alternative genre , ” tallying cumulative album sales in excess of 2.5 million and nearly a-quarter-of -a-billion streams to date. Its eighteen volumes encompass Punk Goes Pop, Vol. 1-6, Punk Goes Classic Rock , Punk Goes 80s , Punk Goes 90s, Vol. 1-2 , Punk Goes X , Punk Goes Crunk , Punk Goes Acoustic Vol, 1-2 , and Punk Goes Christmas . The catalog boasts exclusive contributions by multiplatinum award-winning talent — ranging from A Day To Remember, All-American Rejects, and Rise Again s t to Rise Pierce the Veil, All Time Low, Sleeping with Sirens, and Asking Alexandria. Not to mention, the legacy includes multiple Top 20 debuts on the Billboard Top 200 as well as Top 5 entries on the Top Independent Albums Chart, Top Modern Rock/Alternative Albums Chart, and Top Rock Albums Chart. It served as a game-changer for many acts including Tonight Alive, A Skylit Drive , and Juliet Simms housing their “most-streamed” songs. Now of legal voting age, Punk Goes… reintroduces itself in 2019 by way of Punk Goes Acoustic, Vol. 3 . The nineteenth installment welcomes acoustic contributions from the likes of Mayday Parade, Taking Back Sunday, Underoath, Set It Off, Grayscale, Circa Survive, and more. This time around, an A-list roster delivers stripped-down interpretations of fan favorites as well as a few surprises. As the latest volume showcases another side of heavy music, alternative, and punk royalty, it also boldly extends the legacy of Punk Goes… Follow a selected journey of the collection thus far below : Punk Goes Metal ( 2000 ) This one started it all! Punk powerhouses tried their hand at metal favorites. Among many highlights, AFI got down and dirty on “My Michelle” by Guns N’ Roses, and New Found Glory reached for Sunset Strip immortality on Warrant’s “Heaven.” Notably, it set a precedent for originals as well with The Aquabats! getting heavy on “Why Rock?” Punk Goes Pop ( 2002 ) Punk and metal might not be the strangest bedfellows, but punk and pop on the other hand… The Starting Line took on “I’m Real” by Jennifer Lopez and a pre- Fyre Festival Ja Rule. Stretch Armstrong tackled P!nk’s “Get This Party Started.” Meanwhile, Yellowcard’s rendition of Michelle Branch’s “Everywhere” racked up 3.8 million Spotify streams. Punk Goes Acoustic ( 200 3) Punk Goes Acoustic would be the first Punk Goes… album to entirely forego cover s. For the first time, it exclusively featured originals broken down to the bare essentials on acoustic. Finch’s “Letters To You” surpasses 1 million-plus Spotify streams. Punk Goes Pop, Volume 03 . ( 2010 ) Who would’ve imagined Miss May I adding metal to the JAY-Z, Kanye West, and Rihanna smash “Run This Town?” Well, they did on this one and cracked 3.8 million Spotify streams. Woe, Is Me turned up the heat on Katy Perry’s “Hot N Cold” and put down 4.3 million Spotify streams. Punk Goes X (2011) For Punk Goes X , Fearless Records united with ESPN’s X Games for a high-profile partnership. It touts a bevy of bangers played during the 2011 Winter X Games courtesy of Breathe Carolina, The Word Alive, Miss May I, and more. Punk Goes Pop, Volume 4 (2011) Punk Goes Pop, Volume 4 can be cited as the “most-streamed compilation in the series . ” The total number of Spotify streams eclipses a staggering 81 million. Tonight Alive’s “Little Lion Man” holds the distinction of “most-streamed song in the series” with a whopping 22.8 million Spotify streams. It also became the band’s “ number one most-streamed song . ” This would be followed by Pierce The Veil’s “Just the Way You Are” (14.5 million Spotify streams – and the band’s tenth most-streamed song), A Skylit Drive’s “Love the Way You Lie” (13.5 million Spotify streams – and the band’s number one most-streamed song), Woe, Is Me’s “Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)” (8.5 million Spotify streams), Silverstein’s “Runaway” (7.7 million Spotify streams), Chunk! No, Captain Chunk!’s “We R Who We R” (6.8 million Spotify streams), and The Downtown Fiction’s “Superbass” (5.6 million Spotify streams – and the band’s second most-streamed song). Punk Goes Pop, Volume 5 (2012) The release stands out as the second in the series to crash the Billboard Top 200, landing at #16 and selling 21,000 copies. It also made waves at #4 on the Top Independent Albums Chart, #2 on the Top Modern Rock/Alternative Albums Chart, and #5 on the Top Rock Albums Chart. Mayday Parade’s “Somebody That I Used To Know” [feat. Vic Fuentes] sold 15,000 copies first-week and soared to the Top 20 of the Billboard Rock Songs and Heatseakers Charts. Continuing the streaming success, Memphis May Fire’s “Grenade” clocked 11 million Spotify streams and became their second most-streamed song, and Issues’ “Boyfriend” mustered up 10.1 million Spotify streams as their third most- streamed song. Punk Goes Pop, Volume 6 (2014) On this standout, GRAMMY ® Award nominees August Burns Red made Miley Cyrus’s “Wrecking Ball” live up to its title and ratcheted up 8.6 million Spotify streams—their third highest tally. Punk Goes Christmas: Deluxe Edition (2015) It houses both covers and originals, making it a unicorn in the pack. August Burns Red recorded the “Home Alone Theme , ” ya filthy animals! Punk Goes Pop, Vol. 7 (2017) The most recent installment made waves throughout the rock world. The streaming success continued, spanning Andy Black’s “When We Were Young” [feat. Juliet Simms] (6.4 million Spotify streams – and Simms’ number one most-streamed song and Black’s fourth most-streamed song), Grayscale’s “Love Yourself” (3.2 million Spotify streams – and the band’s third most-streamed song), New Years Day’s “Gangsta” (2.8 million Spotify streams – and the band’s third most-streamed song), and more. In addition to features by Rock Sound and Kerrang! , Substream awarded it 4.5-out-of-5 stars in a glowing review. The Frontrow Report summed it up best as “one of my go to albums of the summer . ” Punk Goes Classic Rock. If you're a band covering a song, the goal should be to pay homage to the original while simultaneously making the song your own. Like a chef tinkering with a recipe, the idea is to make something familiar, but to freshen it up with new ingredients, new flavors that complement the dish while reinventing it. As with any genre, punk has quite a history with covers. Some are iconic, like Sid Vicious singing “My Way,” and some have been the focus behind entire bands, like the fun-times punk supergroup Me First and the Gimme Gimmes. Unfortunately, Fearless Records’ Punk Goes Classic Rock compilation is a whole other story. Most of the songs here are pretty faithful to the originals, but add extraneous, post-hardcore flourishes that just feel tacked on. Hit the Lights' cover of the Boston anthem “More Than a Feeling” clips along as a slightly faster than normal rendition until adding bass bombs to the iconic chorus, turning what would have been a fairly ho-hum cover into a tired, screamo cliché. All of the bombast of Queen’s “We Are the Champions” is sucked out of Mayday Parade’s version, replaced by a sparkling over-production and Auto- Tuned vocals. The one standout track on the album comes by way of blessthefall’s rendition of Aerosmith’s “Dream On.” While it starts out by the book, it slowly expands in a more ambient direction, giving the song an electronic twist that takes it in darker directions while still being faithful to the original. With how uninspired a lot of the covers found here are, it’s difficult to know what purpose an album like Punk Goes Classic Rock serves. Perhaps it’s just a matter of the songs tackled here being a little too iconic in the classic rock canon, or maybe the bands covering the songs didn’t take enough risks. Either way, it’s an uninspired journey through some classic jams that will probably only appeal to hardcore collectors. Various Artists (Punk) Punk Goes Classic Rock. Punk Goes. put out a compilation that was put forth to companies worldwide and was released to the world entitled 'Punk Goes Classic Rock'. Now, this isn't the first time that this has happened, this is something that you see compilations and cover albums done by solo bands as well as compilations of artists all the time.
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