Our latest requested review requires us to ask a question - when is it showing your influences, and when is it ripping them off entirely? On their one and only release, the 1998 self-titled album by The Din Pedals walk the precarious line between the two, thanks to lead singer James Grundler's Thom York-like tenor, and a band that easily recreates the dramatic bombast and minor chord melancholy of Radiohead, U2 and Our Lady Peace.
Songs in this Episode
#514: Boggy Depot by Jerry Cantrell
#513: Cattlemen Don't by Triplefastaction
#512: Favorite Record Labels of the 90s
#511: Dirt Track Date by Southern Culture on the Skids
Dig Me Out '80s revisits Fair Warning by Van Halen
#510: Whiskey For The Holy Ghost by Mark Lanegan
#509: Perfect From Now On by Built To Spill
#508: All The Pain Money Can Buy by Fastball
#507: Regret Is An Inevitable Consequence of Life by Ricaine
#506: The Ponzi Scheme by Firewater
#505: In A Perfect World by Season To 'Risk
#504: Dummy by Portishead
#503: Athens, Georgia in the 1980s and 90s
#502: In The Aeroplane Over The Sea by Neutral Milk Hotel
#501: Cure For Pain by Morphine
#500: Nevermind by Nirvana
#499: In Thrall by Murray Attaway
#498: B-Sides Of The 90s
#497: Mack Avenue Skullgame by Big Chief
#496: To Bring You My Love by PJ Harvey
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