Roads, Bridges, and Ruins
| A Mistake | |
| If You Say So | |
| Another Day | |
| Not Looking Down | |
| Stop Screaming | |
| The Ocean | |
| This Conversation Ends | |
| Meant To Lose | |
| Best For Me | |
| Sleep Tight |
| Absolute Punk review! |
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"It seems that the last few years have seen a plethora of "punk" documentaries. From American Hardcore (based on the book of the same name) to a semester of the genre packed into Punk: Attitude, we're certainly getting a visual of the 80's and 90's punk platform of yesterday. BYO Record's 25th anniversary documentary is not one to be shelved at all. Not only is there a visual, there's an audio accompaniment that is equally as nostalgic for some." Read the whole thing here: absolutepunk. ... More |
| Verbicide Review |
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Another great review from our friends at Verbicide! "I’m going to say this right off the bat: if you’re not considering buying this box set, there’s going to be an emptiness in your music collection, thus making the rest of your collection worthless without it. I was so excited to get my hands on this that I had to tell somebody. So I called my friend Alvin, who I assumed knew a lot about California punk rock. But when he told me that he never heard of Youth Brigade or BYO Records, ... More |
| Cool Review of Boxed Set! |
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We've run into a lot of people on the road, and this dude was awesome! We got to talk to him and his dad (two generations of punks!). Anyhow, we wanted to share with you his review! ... More |
Nothington
Imagine a group of young musicians finding success, travelling internationally on high profile tours, gracing covers of magazines, endorsing products and having all the marks of what a “successful” band has in its routine. For Gabe Lindmen and Jay Northington, who had spent the better part of the early 2000’s in the wildly successful pop punk outfit, Tsunami Bomb, it was just the kind of success story that seemed too good to be true at such a young age. And just as things seemed like they couldn’t possibly get any better, the spring of 2006 saw Tsunami Bomb brought to an abrupt end with the group disbanded and tied up in litigation. Enter Nothington, in the fall of 2006. Jay and Gabe began practicing and writing songs in an old woodshop in Petaluma. It quickly became evident that the project would be a labor of love between the two bandmates and what emerged was the idea for both to get back to their punk rock roots. It was during endless hours on tour buses, planes and ...more



















