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Yahoo
05-08-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
The Perpetual Pop-Punk Love Affair: Why Both Genres Keep Coming Back for More
When 5 Seconds of Summer were invited to join the nostalgia-heavy When We Were Young Festival in 2023, their immediate response was an eager yes. They likely would have ended up on the Las Vegas Festival Grounds even if they weren't performing. The bill was an exhaustive list of nearly every band they loved and learned from while growing up in Sydney, Australia. 5SOS would be taking the stage after Yellowcard and preceding sets from Sum 41, Good Charlotte, and headliners Green Day. It was a no-brainer. But once their initial enthusiasm dissipated, they were slightly perplexed by the offer. More from Rolling Stone Olivia Rodrigo Brings Out Weezer, Korn Return After 28 Years at Lollapalooza 2025 Hayley Williams Is Fiercely Independent, and Four Other Takeaways from Her 17 Singles Lollapalooza 2025 Livestream: Watch Olivia Rodrigo's Headlining Set Online 'The question comes up of, like, 'Do we fit?'' guitarist Michael Clifford tells Rolling Stone. 'And, I mean, the answer was still no.' Glancing at the barricade, he could tell who was clearly there for the more veteran acts performing later that night, who first discovered 5SOS during the three years they spent touring with One Direction, and who came across 'She Looks So Perfect' during one of its recurrent viral surges on TikTok. They couldn't quite nail down their own classification: 'Are we an alternative band? Are we pop stars? Are we rock musicians? Are we a boy band? Are we nostalgic?' Everyone there might answer those questions differently, depending on their own entry point into the intersection between pop and punk. The two genres perpetually orbit each other. Every few years, punk goes pop (or vice versa), by way of an unexpected crossover hit or comeback. Veteran acts shift their sound and break into a new era, or a younger generation will capitalize on the hunger for nostalgia. The waves rarely last longer than a few months in the mainstream, but the surge always returns. Territorial fans who didn't want commercial pop audiences infiltrating their scene in the first place are never too thrilled about new listeners or the pop-leaning pivots from their rock gods. But others who may have once found the genre unfamiliar are introduced to the thrill of hearing a killer pop chorus filtered through riotous guitars and punk percussion. Clifford's earliest pop-punk memories include playing Guitar Hero and watching Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker cover 'Crank That (Soulja Boy)' on YouTube in 2007. That same year, Paramore released the disruptive LP Riot!, Fall Out Boy teamed up with Jay-Z and Babyface on Infinity of High, Avril Lavigne became The Best Damn Thing to hit pop in a while, and Boys Like Girls were making 'The Great Escape.' Over the years, the route pop-punk could take to the mainstream was similarly altered by crossover hits from Machine Gun Kelly, Lil Peep, Halsey, Willow, and more. Each new surge showed straight-laced pop fans that there was always more happening on the outskirts of their favorite genre. 'With songwriting, it's interesting because the pop punk and emo genres [have] simple chord progressions, not a lot of parts, very clear concept, good emotional lyrics, really catchy melodies, are highly energetic — that's essentially pop music,' says producer and songwriter Andrew Goldstein, whose collaborators have spanned from Blink-182 and Bring Me the Horizon to Addison Rae and Britney Spears. 'Most pop music is three to four chords, a really catchy melody, and a concept that almost anyone can understand. That's what really connects with people. Those similarities are what really allows for these artists to become a lot bigger.' Pop-punk first sunk its teeth into Goldstein at the turn of the millennium. He came across New Found Glory and Sum 41, as well as emo leaders Taking Back Sunday and Thursday, but it was Blink-182 that rewired him musically. Finding them right on the cusp of Enema of the State made him want to pick up a guitar and connect with an audience the way that his new favorite band did with him. 'I remember my friend's older brother was like, 'Oh, they sold out,'' he says. 'If somebody becomes popular, it's easy to say that they're selling out because there's different steps you have to take to accommodate the fan base.' Playing bigger venues, mass ordering merchandise, recording in high-tech studios — all of that could be considered selling out. For pop fans, it's unfathomable that anyone would want anything else. That was the case with 5SOS. 'We always said from the beginning, we want to be as big as fucking possible,' Clifford says. Coming from Australia, they had to make their shot count. Before they'd released any music of their own, 5SOS shared A Day to Remember and Go Radio covers alongside renditions of One Direction and Justin Bieber tracks on YouTube. Green Day and Blink-182's influence was impossible to ignore across their self-titled debut album, released in 2014, and the lasting impression of acts like Mayday Parade and All Time Low appeared clearly on its follow-up, Sounds Good Feels Good. But their sticky melodies and hooks always wore the touch of pop, too. 'That style of music had taken such a downturn, and nobody was into it,' Clifford says of the pop-punk scene at the time. 'We were like, 'Well, hold on, we have a good idea where we can bring that back into the mainstream.' And, yes, there are going to have to be some changes when you evolve to bring that style of music somewhere else.' 5SOS leaned into 'the traits people were liking about boy band culture' since it was 'all anyone would fucking talk about,' anyway; but they were still 'longing for acceptance from a community that we were so passionately representing.' It came at a cost. 'We were just shunned by the community instantly,' Clifford says. 'They sort of just looked at how we looked and wrote it off.' If the genre wanted to thrive and survive, it couldn't keep treating pop success like a death sentence. 'Sometimes people are ahead of the curve, and it takes time for them to realize the brilliance of a record when it comes out,' says producer-songwriter John Feldmann, whose sprawling credits include Panic! at the Disco's Vices & Virtues. Change can be hard — and there was no tougher time for OG pop-punk fans than 2013. They were already reeling from My Chemical Romance breaking up and feeling disconnected from Panic! at the Disco's directional shift on Too Weird to Live, Too Rare to Die. They were also being reintroduced to Fall Out Boy following an extended hiatus while Paramore marked the beginning of a creative transformation with an explosive crossover hit. Feldmann saw Paramore lay the foundation for that moment years prior, when he first heard 'That's What You Get,' a blazing rock track from Riot! with an undeniable hook. He remembers Fueled by Ramen founder John Janick telling him, 'We can't put this out. It's too early for this band. They can't be that popular quite yet.' They'd already broken through with 'Misery Business,' but this could have gotten them stuck on the other side. 'With pop, it's harder to create a legacy because it takes a lot of time,' says Goldstein. 'It takes a lot of fans.' Fans in the pop-punk scene fostered a different sense of loyalty than pop did, and they expected it to be reciprocated. Paramore's progression to that point needed to be natural in order for it to work. 'You can really see the writing on the wall with that song,' Feldmann says. 'You know how 'Still Into You' became one of their biggest songs? That was already set up with 'That's What You Get.'' By 2013, Paramore were on their fourth album and umpteenth lineup change. They'd get nothing but false security out of moving backwards and rehashing the music they already made while clearly yearning to evolve. It's understandable why listeners would crave the kind of music they discovered during their formative years. 'Those are the records that shape your whole existence,' Feldmann adds, but notes that 'every artist should be able to experiment and not be harassed for expanding their sonic horizon.' It's the same crossroad Fall Out Boy faced when they recorded their fifth album, Save Rock & Roll. 'I wasn't interested in making a pop punk record with anybody. I was kind of burned out on that, just like I think most people were,' producer Butch Walker tells Rolling Stone. 'They didn't care about that. They were like, 'No, we're gonna lose a lot of fans, but we need to make new fans. We need to appeal to a whole new generation of people. Or why are we doing this? We're not growing as a band.'' When they re-entered the pop arena at the time, it was dominated by artists like Rihanna, One Direction, and Macklemore. Their lane was wide open. For an entire wave of pop fans, the band helped translate pop-punk into a format they could easily access. When Fall Out Boy released 'My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark,' Taylor Swift told her 25 million Twitter followers that she'd listened to it 43 times in one day. 'I love Fall Out Boy so much,' Swift told Rolling Stone in 2019. 'Their songwriting really influenced me, lyrically, maybe more than anyone else. They take a phrase and they twist it.' The two acts shared a collaborator in Walker, who can recall the first time he heard Green Day's Dookie in a Nebraska parking lot as clearly as he can remember Swift showing him 'Everything Has Changed' the morning she wrote it. As producer, he had 'no notes.' The Red single arrived in near-perfect shape, even with the bathroom tiles reverberating through the voice note. Walker ranks Swift as 'one of the best songwriters in pop music ever,' and expresses the same enthusiasm when praising Pete Wentz. 'She made the right call by being influenced by that, because I think that is the DNA in her music,' he says. When Walker first encountered Fall Out Boy, they were unsigned, 'a fucking trainwreck on stage,' and already writing ingenious lyrics. 'How are they thinking this big and how are they thinking this poetically?' he remembers wondering. 'Pete has just got a way with words like no one else.' 'My Songs Know What You Did in the Dark' ended up being Fall Out Boy's biggest hit since 'Thnks Fr Th Mmrs.' For Walker, it represents 'a classic example of a band taking the guard rails off, taking the boundaries off, pushing the walls down.' The song started with John Hill during pitch sessions for another artist's album, but collected dust for a year before Walker played the rough demo for the band. They lunged for it. 'The guys were like, 'That's our sound. That's our new record. Urgent, powerful, hooky, dirty, loud, aggressive — but poppy.' During our call, Walker digs up that original voice note and hits play. It confirms that the melody of the chorus has always been that irresistible. 'Do you want to hear the punch line?' he asks. 'That was actually written for Rihanna.' It's intriguing to imagine what the pop star could have done with it. The closest we've gotten to Rock Rihanna is Rated R's 'Rockstar 101' with Slash and 'Disturbia' — not the original Good Girl Gone Bad single, but the cover The Cab recorded for Punk Goes Pop in 2009. 'Punk Goes Pop was such a tremendous thing,' Goldstein says of the Fearless Records compilation series in which pop songs get rock makeovers. 'It showed the strength of good songs. It was a big gateway into pop music for people to be like, 'Wow, I like the song, it's just maybe I don't like the presentation of it.'' Mayday Parade and Pierce the Veil reimagined Gotye's 'Somebody That I Used to Know,' and years later State Champs revamped Shawn Mendes' 'Stitches.' Punk Goes Pop offered the best of both worlds. 'There was something about these pop songs that I already knew all the lyrics to because they were constantly on the radio suddenly having screams and heavy guitars and drums,' says Ada Juarez, drummer in the pop-punk band Meet Me @ the Altar. During their live shows, they often cover Kelly Clarkson's 'Since U Been Gone' and Jonas Brothers' 'Burnin' Up' with an intense rock edge. 5SOS, who they joined on the road in 2023, did the same with Katy Perry's 'Teenage Dream' early in their career. 'Everyone who would come see us was like, 'Dude, if you guys could write a song like 'Teenage Dream,' you'd be the biggest band in the world,' Clifford recalls. 'And I was like, 'Well, that is the hardest fucking thing to do.'' And while it's essential for a song to be great, the performance has to be convincing, too. 'If you go to completely what your fans want, you could please them very well, but it might not connect,' says Goldstein. 'But if you go too far into, 'Man, I'm going to make something mainstream' or 'What do people want? What's relevant right now?' — that's when you can get in trouble. It doesn't sound real anymore. I can tell what you were referencing and it's that song that was out six months ago. By the time the record comes out, whatever sound you were going for is done.' When pop-punk surged back into the mainstream in 2020, fueled by lockdown angst and Machine Gun Kelly, corners of the industry rushed to capitalize on it. 'You guys have to jump back on and do what you did in the beginning,'' Clifford recalls being told. 5SOS are more pop than punk these days, though the guitarist's recently-released debut solo album Sidequest does revive those influences. 'We were all very clearly like, no,' he says. 'It wasn't our place.' Other artists figured it was worth a shot. For years, Demi Lovato's OG fans yearned for her return to rock. Her Disney-era records were influential in showing a young audience that they could be rockstars, too. But when she finally gave in with Holy Fvck in 2022, it failed to crossover despite her pop capital and emo kid roots. 'It definitely felt just like a cash grab, in a way,' Meet Me @ the Altar's Edith Victoria says. 'Had she done that years prior, I think we all would have loved it.' The prior year, breakout star Olivia Rodrigo drew comparisons to Hayley Williams, Avril Lavigne, and Alanis Morissette when her pop-punk singles 'Good 4 U' and 'Brutal' crashed onto the Hot 100, establishing her as a genre-transcending force. 'Olivia Rodrigo pushed that genre further than anybody else in as long as I can remember,' Clifford says. 'She took the DNA and the foundation of what made pop-punk and gave it this fresh new life.' When she leaned into the sound even more on Guts, it never felt contrived. Feldmann praises 'All-American Bitch,' drawing parallels to the alternative edge of Sonic Youth and Green Day. To his credit, Machine Gun Kelly also 'opened the doors for a lot of people to be influenced by him, to make whatever pop-punk music will turn into in the future,' Juarez says, just like Paramore and Pierce the Veil did for them. 'It's just evolving forever.' At this point in 2025, nothing on the Hot 100 sounds even slightly reminiscent of pop-punk. The familiar is prevailing. But another surge could be right around the corner. The hardcore punk band Turnstile could open the gateway with their new genre-blurring album Never Enough, or Pierce the Veil could ride the unexpected viral fervor swelling on TikTok around their deep cut 'So Far So Fake' straight through pop's barricade. If the next installation in Beyoncé's genre-shifting album trilogy really is rock, that could be another prominent entry point for the bands who can't wait to sell out. They don't have to fit into the pop landscape immediately. They just have to go for it. It's that passion that keeps pop-punk's perpetual love affair alive. Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked Solve the daily Crossword

Courier-Mail
13-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Courier-Mail
Calum Hood is fourth 5SOS member to go solo
Don't miss out on the headlines from Music. Followed categories will be added to My News. Calum Hood has 'emphatically' reassured fans of global chart-toppers 5 Seconds of Summer the band is not splitting up. The bassist is the fourth member of the Aussie stream kings to unveil a solo project with his debut album CHAOS order CHAOS released this week. Back home in Sydney for the big reveal, Hood said he understood fans and music industry commentators assumed the raft of solo releases from himself, Luke Hemmings, Ashton Irwin and Michael Clifford signalled the end of the pop rockers after 15 years. It is incredibly rare for several members of any act to pursue solo careers while their band was still active with The Beatles, Rolling Stones, KISS and Fleetwood Mac among those who flexed their solo muscles as the group continued. Calum Hood was the final member of the group to announce a solo album. Picture: Thomas Lisson 'Emphatically, 5SOS is not over and actually, quite thriving,' Hood said. 'This might be a bit weird to people but we revel in doing things people think we shouldn't do.' Hood said the solo efforts of his bandmates had given him a 'good blueprint for how to do it'. Clifford released his debut solo single Cool in April ahead of the release of his album Sidequest next month while both Hemmings and Irwin have dropped two records each since 2020. It took Hood more than two years to craft the atmospheric, synth-heavy sound for the songs for CHAOS order CHAOS as he battled the inherent anxiety artists suffer when they start a new project. 'You know me, I'm an anxious boy anyway, but I never had that with the band; I was never anxious about releasing 5SOS songs,' he said. Ashton Irwin, Luke Hemmings, Michael Clifford and Calum Hood have big plans for the next 5SOS album. Picture: Justin Lloyd His solo songs are mostly of the sad boy variety, dealing heartbreak and the tyranny of distance playing havoc on relationships with family and friends when you are always on the road. One track Dark Circles explores the 'fantasy' of what life would be like if 5SOS didn't exist. 'Obviously it's a question that's coming up a lot with all these solo things happening. Is the band OK?' Hood said. 'The answer is the band is great, but (for that song) it was on my mind that if shit hit the fan, it would be devastating for me. I've spent half my life in the band, it has shaped who I am.' The band's bassist said fans have been shocked by one particular aspect of his solo project as he has travelled the world recently to promote the record. 'There's a big joke amongst the fans that 'Oh, he's actually talking,' which is really funny,' Hood said. 'In the band, I guess I'm the more reserved one but I actually have a f … ing lot to say!' While he has played some acoustic gigs to launch the project, Hood has no plans to go on a world tour, hinting that he is required to get back to his full-time gig with 5SOS. 'It was such a big deal for me just to release this music. When there is another record, if there's space and the time allows and it feels good, then we will see what happens about touring.' Originally published as Calum Hood assures fans 5SOS is 'thriving' as he releases solo record


Daily Mail
13-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Aussie rocker breaks silence over band break-up rumours: 'This question is coming up a lot'
After weeks of whispers and mounting panic, Calum Hood has finally broken his silence— emphatically denying that pop-rock sensation 5 Seconds of Summer is on the brink of collapse. The usually reserved bassist, 28, who will drop his first solo album this week, jetted back to Sydney for the big reveal. Calum, who toured the globe with 5SOS for 14 years, performed an intimate debut set at Pleasure Club in Newtown on Thursday for Nova's Red Room. He is the fourth and final member of the Aussie boy band to unveil a solo project, and said he understood the raft of solo releases had set alarm bells ringing for fans. It is practically unheard of for so many members of a chart-topping band to pursue solo careers while the group is still together. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. But Calum insists the Aussie hitmakers are not only sticking together, they're 'quite thriving.' 'Emphatically, 5SOS is not over and actually, quite thriving,' he said. 'This might be a bit weird to people but we revel in doing things people think we shouldn't do.' He admitted that bandmates Luke Hemmings, Ashton Irwin, and Michael Clifford — who have all released solo material since 2020 — had provided a 'good blueprint' for his own foray into the solo spotlight. Clifford released his debut solo single in April ahead of the release of his album Sidequest next month, while both Hemmings and Irwin have dropped two records each since 2020. Calum's solo effort, a synth-heavy, atmospheric collection of tracks, took over two years to create as he grappled with the all-too-common artist anxiety. 'You know me, I'm an anxious boy anyway, but I never had that with the band; I was never anxious about releasing 5SOS songs,' he confessed. His new tunes are pure 'sad boy' vibes, exploring heartbreak and the brutal reality of distance on relationships when you're constantly touring. Calum Hood has played several solo gigs to promote his solo album release but said that his full-time gig with 5SOS is calling him back One track, Dark Circles, even delves into the 'fantasy' of a world without 5SOS. 'Obviously it's a question that's coming up a lot with all these solo things happening. Is the band OK?' Calum pondered, before quickly reassuring fans: 'The answer is the band is great, but (for that song) it was on my mind that if sh*t hit the fan, it would be devastating for me. I've spent half my life in the band, it has shaped who I am.' 'There's a big joke amongst the fans that "Oh, he's actually talking", which is really funny.' 'In the band, I guess I'm the more reserved one but I actually have a f***ing lot to say!' While Calum has played several solo gigs to promote his album release, he warned fans not to expect a solo world tour anytime soon. He hinted that his full-time gig with 5SOS is calling him back. 'It was such a big deal for me just to release this music,' Calum said. 'When there is another record, if there's space and the time allows and it feels good, then we will see what happens about touring.'
Yahoo
10-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
5 Seconds of Summer's Calum Hood Gives in to Heartbreak on Solo Debut ‘Don't Forget You Love Me'
5 Seconds of Summer bassist Calum Hood steps into the spotlight alone on his solo debut 'Don't Forget You Love Me,' an enthralling introduction that finds him walking a tightrope between self-reflective (and at times self-destructive) despair and relieving reconciliation. The record will appear on his debut album Order Chaos Order, out June 13, which emerged from a kindred dichotomy. 'This album was made in a tumble dryer of knowing and not knowing. I started out with a vision — order — but quickly became overwhelmed by the process — chaos. Eventually, I learned to embrace both,and that balance became the heart of the record,' Hood shared in a statement. More from Rolling Stone 5 Seconds of Summer's Michael Clifford Blasts to the Past With Solo Debut 'Cool' Luke Hemmings Gets Lost in Translation in Cinematic 'Shakes' Video Luke Hemmings Is a Fountain of Existentialism on His New Single - And He Doesn't Want to Turn It Off Embracing hard truths doesn't come as easily for Hood on 'Don't Forget You Love Me,' but the effort he puts into doing so is evident in the grit of his emotional pleas across the single. 'And I know that it's hard to see/Every version of me/But it's not the same as everything you ever thought/I ever could/But never would be,' he sings. 'But I've tried enough to call you/and I'm scared that you'll pick up/cause I know that I don't want you to/cause baby I would have to own up/To everything oh everything I've done to you/and all I did to us.' Hood has served as a primary songwriter in 5SOS since their earliest records, the Unplugged and Somewhere New EPs released in 2012. But until now, he hasn't sought to break away from the band. The closest he came to a solo release was the one-off demo 'Bad Dreams' that he posted and swiftly deleted on X (then Twitter) in the dead of the night back in 2013, presumed to be a scrapped 5SOS album cut. Hood's collaborators on the 10-track album include Day Wave's Jackson Phillips, David Burris, and TMS (Lewis Capaldi, Niall Horan). Jack LaFrantz, who was a primary songwriter on Benson Boone's Fireworks & Rollerblades, is a co-writer on 'Don't Forget You Love Me.' Order Chaos Order, will check the final box on 5SOS solo projects. Earlier this month, guitarist Michael Clifford launched his debut solo album Sidequest with the pop punk-influenced single 'Cool.' Drummer Ashton Irwin was the first to go solo in 2020 with Superbloom, which he followed up with Blood on the Drums in 2024. Frontman Luke Hemmings followed in 2021 with When Facing the Things We Turn Away From and in 2024 with Boy. Hemmings — who has previously expressed that Hood was the first person in his personal life to inspire him as a songwriter — told Rolling Stone last year that each member being allowed to explore musical journeys on their own is key to keeping 5SOS alive. 'I know solo projects can be scary for fans of bands, but for me it's the way that the band can live on forever,' he said. 'In my eyes, that's the way I see it.' It's a type of catharsis. In a statement, Hood shared: 'There are things I've never been able to sing about in the band — my upbringing, my family, the places life has taken me. This album is about laying those things to rest and allowing listeners to connect in their own way.' Track List'Don't Forget You Love Me''Call Me When You Know Better''Sweetdreams''I Wanted To Stay''Sunsetter''All My Affection''Endless Ways''Streetwise''Dark Circles''Three Of Swords' Best of Rolling Stone The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time