Contemporary punk band Samuel S.C. delivers its second single of 2026, the J. Robbins-produced “Push The Needle.”
“I did actually spend years wishing we had done it the more standard way, but we didn’t and I have now made my peace with it; there is nothing wrong with these records and, yes, they do have a certain quality and charm for having been done in this quite fractured way with all the different production approaches.” – Emma Anderson
“I did actually spend years wishing we had done it the more standard way, but we didn’t and I have now made my peace with it; there is nothing wrong with these records and, yes, they do have a certain quality and charm for having been done in this quite fractured way with all the different production approaches.” – Emma Anderson
Over their eighteen years as a band, Jim Putnam’s Los Angeles based collective Radar Brothers proved to be a model of consistency and melancholic, sun-baked comfort. Defying conventional, perpetual myths that artists must consciously reinvent themselves, a deep dive retrospective at the band’s working class trajectory reveals a singular path on the perennial edge of a larger, opportunistic breakthrough.
Over their eighteen years as a band, Jim Putnam’s Los Angeles based collective Radar Brothers proved to be a model of consistency and melancholic, sun-baked comfort. Defying conventional, perpetual myths that artists must consciously reinvent themselves, a deep dive retrospective at the band’s working class trajectory reveals a singular path on the perennial edge of a larger, opportunistic breakthrough.