Skip to content
  • home
  • videos
  • sounds
  • local
  • wamu.org

Bandwidth

Heard on WAMU

  • Capital Soundtrack

Tag: Spoonboy

The Max Levine Ensemble's new album, Backlash, Baby, comes out Nov. 20.

Review: The Max Levine Ensemble, ‘Backlash, Baby’

Eight years after the D.C. trio’s last record, Backlash, Baby is a desperate, full-tilt pop-punk record that’s just trying to make sense of a backwards world.

Read More →

A still from The Max Levine Ensemble's "My Valerian."

Songs We Love: The Max Levine Ensemble, ‘My Valerian’

Eight years between albums, the D.C. pop-punks return with a chunky rock anthem about chasing bliss. In the video, a doomsday device is implanted in singer David Combs’ brain.

Read More →

All that merch won't sell itself: Could labor be the most overlooked expense in DIY music scenes?

The Cost Of Independence: Economics And Labor In DIY Music

The final installment in a series by punk musician David Combs, formerly Spoonboy, about issues facing DIY musicians. Read Part…

Read More →

spoonboy

Video Premiere: Spoonboy, ‘Free Yer Mind, Square’

David Combs, D.C.’s longest-serving pop-punk bandleader, found the idea for one of his new songs in Redwood National Park. It…

Read More →

Page 1 of 1
Grid List

Local

Cellist Wytold teaches music workshops for soldiers at Walter Reed military hospital in D.C. He says the experience has changed his approach to music.
December 16, 2016

Working With Soldiers At Walter Reed, Cellist Finds A New Creative Path

Oddisee's new album, The Iceberg, comes out Feb. 24.
December 15, 2016

Songs We Love: Oddisee, ‘Things’

Maryland hip-hop artists Brain Rapp, Nature Boi and Ezko make up the collective Dope Music Village.
December 13, 2016

To These Maryland Rappers, ‘DMV’ Stands For ‘Dope Music Village’

D.C. label Verses Records says its newest release, a compilation called "Code Red," will benefit the American Civil Liberties Union.
December 7, 2016

In Wake Of Trump Election, Verses Records Rallies 40 Bands To Benefit ACLU

The latest tune from D.C. indie-rock band Brushes is "about the tension we feel between Venus and Mars within ourselves," says leader Nick Anway (left).
November 28, 2016

Premiere: On ‘Mars And Me,’ D.C.’s Brushes Come From Mars And Venus

Supported By

About Bandwidth

A digital project by WAMU 88.5, D.C.’s leading public radio station for NPR news and information, Bandwidth covered the varied landscape of the region’s music scene. Read More →

Newsletter

Stay in the loop.

Social

Follow Us on FacebookFollow Us on Google+Follow Us on TwitterFollow Us on YouTube

Copyright ©
WAMU 88.5 American University Radio