We knew ’90s-rockers Toadies would be putting on their DIa De Los Toadies festival in Texas again this year, and now the band has announced a US tour to go down after that. The tour is in support of ...
In addition to the big stories we covered today, Wire-to-Wire provides you with some of the other key rock and metal news items from Jan. 2, 2018: - Toadies received a nice nod of recognition over the ...
When Rubberneck turned 25 in 2019, the Toadies were touring around the silver anniversary of their debut album before canceling the remainder of the tour when COVID hit. Rescheduling dates for 2021, ...
The Toadies are celebrating 4/20 with the release of a new edible in collaboration with Texas High Country. The band’s I Come From The Watermelon—a play on their 1994 Rubberneck track, “I Come From ...
For over two decades, Toadies have been one of the most consistently solid rock acts, churning out underrated gems. As they prepare for the release of their seventh studio album, The Lower Side of ...
Toadies are one of those bands that even if you don’t know them, you still know the music. Since the release of the group’s brilliant 1994 album, Rubberneck, Toadies have been on the rock ‘n’ roll ...
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Credit: Bill Tompkins There’s a reason the Toadies’ 1994 alt-rock hit Possum Kingdom remains a ...
Remember The Toadies, the grunge flavored 1990s rockers that asked you “do you wanna die?” in their oddly titled ’90s hit “Possum Kingdom”? Well, they’re back, but not in a way you might expect. The ...
In the summer of 1996, you couldn’t turn on the radio without hearing the Toadies’ song “Possum Kingdom.” If you watched MTV’s ode to slacker degeneracy, Beavis & Butt-Head, you know how the two ...
Yesterday, an announcement was made that The Toadies’ major label debut, Rubberneck, will be reissued in April on Kirtland Records. Remastered for CD and vinyl with five unreleased bonus tracks, this ...
Nina Diaz kicks off the Spanish-language reimagining of Elvis Costello’s This Year’s Model with her version of “No Action.” Credit: Courtesy Photo / Nina Diaz The days around Christmas aren’t exactly ...
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