To celebrate the 20th anniversary of their commercial breakthrough Good News for People Who Love Bad News, Modest Mouse are prepping a special reissue featuring several previously unreleased ...
Modest Mouse are wrapping up their tour celebrating the 20th anniversary of Good News For People Who Love Bad News; they hit Brooklyn Steel on Thursday night (11/21) for the first of three shows at ...
The post Modest Mouse Planning Tour Celebrating Good News for People Who Love Bad News appeared first on Consequence. This year marks the 20th anniversary of Modest Mouse’s indie rock classic, Good ...
Modest Mouse recently announced a tour to celebrate the 20th anniversary of their breakthrough album Good News for People Who Love Bad News. The expanded edition of the album arrived on April 5 ...
In celebration of Modest Mouse’s 20th Anniversary of the release of their groundbreaking 2004 album, Good News For People Who Love Bad News, the band has announced ‘Good News For People Who Love Bad ...
Modest Mouse‘s mainstream breakthrough Good News for People Who Love Bad News (the one with “Float On”) turns 20 on April 6, and the band will be celebrating with an expanded 20th anniversary edition ...
Earlier this year, Modest Mouse dropped Good News For People Who Love Bad News: 20th Anniversary Expanded Edition. The 2004 album remains the band’s most iconic release, and now they’re preparing to ...
This year, Modest Mouse will reach its milestone 20th anniversary after releasing its fourth studio album, Good News for People Who Love Bad News. To mark the occasion, the band has announced its ...
When a band owns a catalog as deep and wide as Modest Mouse — seven full-length albums dating back 27 years, almost all of which contain around an hour's worth of music — fans are bound to hold their ...
Two of indie rock’s biggest bands, The Flaming Lips and Modest Mouse, will be joining forces for a co-headlining tour this summer, dubbed “The Good Times Are Killing Me” tour. The tour will act as a ...
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Seattle had a problem. Many of its music stars had died. Record executives had mined the region of all its musical acts and there was veritable carnage left behind ...