Blog

  • Canada’s Rock Trio DANKO JONES Announces Latin America Tour Dates For 2026

    Hard-hitting rock act Danko Jones are preparing to take their high-octane rock ‘n’ roll to venues across Latin America this May. This tour announcement follows the release of their critically-acclaimed, twelfth studio album Leo Rising. Canada’s Danko Jones will unleash their electrifying sound with setlists including songs from the new record. The band’s uplifting and energizing live shows are not to be missed.

    Danko Jones comments on the forthcoming tour: “Even when we were on tour in Latin America last year, I was already itching to come back. Now that it’s official and we are coming back my 2026 year has been made! We can’t wait to play for everyone in Latin America. Let’s rock together!!!”

    Latin America Tour Dates 2026:

    21 May – São Paulo, Brazil – Fabrique Club
    23 May – Buenos Aires, Argentina – Uniclub
    24 May – Santiago, Chile – Club Ambar
    27 May – Bogota, Colombia – Ace of spades club
    29 May – Mexico City, Mexico – Foro Bizarro

    Purchase tickets here.

    Produced to perfection by longtime collaborator Eric Ratz, the trio’s new studio offering Leo Rising is a masterclass in sweat-soaked, no-nonsense rock. Packed with razor-sharp riffs, thunderous rhythms, and infectious hooks, the album reaffirms that Danko Jones are keeping rock alive by doing it better than anyone else.

    John Calabrese laid down bass tracks from Finland, Rich Knox flew to Toronto to record drums, and Danko worked with producer Eric Ratz in the same city to capture vocals and guitars. Despite recording separately once again, the band’s chemistry is unmistakable. The result is pure Danko Jones: tight, loud, and built for the stage.

    On duty since 1996, these unstoppable road-hogs have devoted their lives to rousing the people with blistering, no-bullshit, all-action rock. They have rallied a global army of rock-hungry fans, and blown them away with a steady stream of explosive, anthem-packed albums and an absurd number of live shows. From early underground smashes like We Sweat Blood [2003] and Sleep Is The Enemy [2006], to the band’s recent, triumphant triumvirate of A Rock Supreme [2019], Power Trio [2021] and Electric Sounds [2023], Danko Jones have been a relentless force for rock ‘n’ roll good, both in the studio and on the road. And they have absolutely no intention of stopping.

    “You know what? I like the routine of recording, touring, writing, and repeat,” states singer and guitarist, Danko Jones himself. “I can do that till I’m dead! It may sound boring, but it’s so hard for a band to achieve. I don’t take this lightly. Also, it’s a page out of the Motörhead handbook so it works! Since Electric Sounds we’ve been touring and touring. We managed to play in Mexico and Greece for the first time, and we even played Prince Edward Island, a province in Canada we’d never been to before. Other than that, it’s been a life of gigs and writing more songs to play more gigs!”

    Proving that their time was well-spent, Danko, bassist John Calabrese and drummer Rich Knox have conjured yet another blazing banquet of nourishing rock goodness on their 12th studio record Leo Rising, that is out now here.

    The post Canada’s Rock Trio DANKO JONES Announces Latin America Tour Dates For 2026 appeared first on Sonic Perspectives.

  • Rock + Metal Bands That Still Saw Success With Their Third Singer

    These rock and metal bands still found at least moderate success with their third singer despite fans typically being skeptical. Continue reading…
  • 12 New Rock + Metal Tours Announced This Past Week

    We'e got the return of Dogstar to the concert stage and two special Marilyn Manson anniversary shows among this week's concert and tour announcements. Continue reading…
  • Exodus’ Gary Holt Is Ready For New Album + What’s Coming Next

    Gary Holt joins Loudwire Nights to help fans get ready for Exodus' new album, 'Goliath,' and says their next record is already nearly wrapped up. Continue reading…
  • In Ruins – We Are All to Perish Review

    I think most people who meet me, either online or in meatspace, would not imagine I enjoy a genre like funeral doom. Yet, it is one of my favorites. Acts like Eye of Solitude, Convocation, Slow, Un, and Ahab rank among my top choices for the space, and Romania’s In Ruins caught my ear by treading a similar path. A duo established in 2021, with mastermind Urmuz previously engaged with a spectrum of black metal, grindcore, and death/doom acts, In Ruins prepared a tight 42-minute opus as their opening salvo into fundoom territory. We Are All to Perish, but will we remember the journey that In Ruins led to that final destination?

    With some funeral doom records, you get catharsis in the form of a few well-placed outbursts of violence interspersed between large swaths of misery. This is the philosophy Eye of Solitude and Convocation often adopt. Other applications of the style prioritize moods and crushing sorrow delivered at a dirge, a uniformly funereal pace that hypnotizes as much as it depresses. Enter the eulogies of Slow and Un. In Ruins embraces the latter methodology, lumbering as a husk emptied of light and of will. It is a deeply affecting emotional foundation upon which to build, and In Ruins build upon it well. Riffs crush and linger, simple and thunderous, but here they are not the hero element. Melody and atmosphere take a higher rank, though they too dilute into a more simplified, pure state that maximizes potency while stripping away musical complexity. It is entrancing as only funeral doom records can be, and its smart writing boasts all of the natural components for a successful procession.

    A common element that distinguishes good and great funeral doom records from inferior specimens is a showstopper track. Slow famously invites comparison here with their incredible “Incendiare,” Eye of Solitude with “Act II: Where the Descent Began,” Convocation with “Atychiphobia,” Woebegone Obscured with “Drømmefald.” In Ruins achieves it with closer “Farewell,” and does so in the most deceptively simple way. By launching the track with excellent SWANA1-inspired melisma, and reinforcing those deep vocalizations later against mournful bells, In Ruins makes an indelible mark on my fundoom rotation. It’s slow and plodding through its first act, enacting yet another favorite motif: the two-chord riff (see Slow’s “Lueur” for a stellar example of this tactic). In its second, a weeping melody, isolated against droning choral synths and Frayle-esque backing siren song until the album’s dying rattle. It is breathtaking and morose in equal measure, but more than that, it inspires repeat spins for the express purpose of experiencing the excursion that led to this climax with greater anticipation and attention.

    This, in turn, invigorates and contextualizes the songwriting of the preceding three tracks. At first, they go through all the right motions of a proper funeral doom experience, but without a strong sense of memorability to leave a lasting impression. But after the first spin, I noticed the clarity of “I’m Tired of Living in My Land” offered by its candid, unpretentious lyrics. I understood the emptiness and the apathy that colors “I Do Not Regret and I Do Not Shed Tears” in a monochrome, dull gray. Compositional foreshadowing felt more meaningful when “We’ll Depart This World for Ever, Surely” sets me up for “Farewell” once more. In this way, In Ruins crafted a record that requires repeat spins to fully appreciate, forging a double edged sword. On one side, each of the first three songs on their own still lacks the same power of the closer despite gaining substance with time. On the other hand, treated as a single unit, We Are All to Perish is a wholly successful and worthy entry into the pantheon of funeral doom.

    As a competitor to the standout entities of the funeral field, In Ruins stake a viable claim with We Are All to Perish. To push further into that space and stand out, they’ll need to make each and every track—especially if there are as few as four, like so here—unforgettable in some meaningful way. “Farewell” is a great song, and features elements and ideas that, if capitalized on in future records, might guarantee In Ruins a wider audience and greater acclaim. Until then, rest easy knowing that while We Are All to Perish, we can at least enjoy the path that leads to the end.


    Rating: Good!
    DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
    Label: Meuse Music Records
    Websites: inruins13.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/InRuins.ro
    Releases Worldwide: March 13th, 2026

    The post In Ruins – We Are All to Perish Review appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.

  • Geoff Tate Shares First Taste of ‘Operation: Mindcrime III’

    The former Queensryche vocalist reveals what fans can expect from the upcoming concept LP. Continue reading…
  • DEICIDE Announce North American Tour Dates

    With Guests ROTTING CHRIST And IMMOLATION Death metal legends DEICIDE are set to bring their relentless, unapologetic brutality to venues and festival stages across North […]

    The post DEICIDE Announce North American Tour Dates appeared first on Metal-Rules.com.

  • Cold Steel Announce April U.S. Tour

    Back to dish out more discipline and punishment.

    The post Cold Steel Announce April U.S. Tour appeared first on Theprp.com.

  • SABATON release battle-ready new single and video ‘Yamato’

    IN PARTNERSHIP WITH WORLD OF WARSHIPS WATCH HERE || LISTEN HERE OUT NOW via BETTER NOISE MUSIC Making another major move and breaking down walls once again, the […]

    The post SABATON release battle-ready new single and video ‘Yamato’ appeared first on Metal-Rules.com.