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By mixing several genres of rock together, it became hard to label Garbage’s sound into any one specific subcategory of rock. Interest for the band spread until they embarked on their first tour in ...
For Garbage, it was a short drive from their hometown of Madison, Wisconsin. Manson’s favorite memory was pre-Garbage, when the others asked her to join the band.
The terrifically fun band Garbage made a ton of dough from their huge hit songs in the 1990s. Then they did something totally crazy with that money: They saved it.
Garbage returns with “Let All That We Imagine Be the Light,” an album blending fierce rock and vulnerable lyrics as Shirley Manson confronts pain, ageism, and hope through the band’s ...
Two years ago high school students Jack Berry and Ollie Gray had the idea to make instruments for a band with various pieces of garbage and recycled materials. Berry and Gray then recruited three ...
With severed ties from a major label, a self-imposed hiatus and a catalog whose best-known hits are pushing 15 years in age, it might be fair to assume that Garbage has lost its edge. Rubbish.
There are two things you should never do. Don’t call San Francisco “Frisco,” and don’t call Garbage “grunge.” The former will irritate San Franciscans, while the latter will annoy the alternative rock ...
Fourteen years ago producer Butch Vig, also the drummer for Garbage, produced for a relatively unknown band, fusing the punk rock do-it-yourself philosophy with a big, polished stadium rock sound.
The album is Garbage’s eighth and the first since 2021’s “No Gods No Masters.” The genesis came last August, when Manson aggravated an old hip injury, abruptly ending the band’s world tour.
The American rock band Garbage’s new album is titled “Let All That We Imagine Be the Light.” It’s the sound of frontwoman Shirley Manson pushed to the brink by health issues and the fury of ...