plus UK dates THIS WEEK
THE ‘LAST CHOICE’ EP plus UK shows THIS WEEK
“Love Is All write amazing pop songs, ones that that don't sound like anybody else's pop songs” Drowned in Sound
“Love Is All can still thrill” NME
Love is All celebrates the release of their brand new album, A Hundred Things Keep Me Up At Night (What’s Your Rupture?) with UK shows in May. In addition What’s Your Rupture? is proud to issue the ‘Last Choice’ EP featuring the track, "Last Choice" from "A Hundred Things Keep Me Up At Night" as well as five new tunes from Gothenburg, Sweden's finest.- which will be available at all shows and in stores from June 22nd.
Full tracklisting for ‘Last Choice’ EP is as follows:
1. Last Choice
2. Early Warnings
3. Jessica
4. Jealousy
5. Loud Ass Pounding Heart
6. Killing In Aarau
UK DATES:
09-May London Proud Galleries
10-May London The Lexington
From out of nowhere, Love is All arrived in 2005. Their debut album Nine Times That Same Song pushed its members – vocalist Josephine Olausson, guitarist Nicholaus Sparding, bassist Johan Lindwall, drummer Marcus Gorsch, and saxophonist Ake Stromer – into the spotlight as actively touring musicians, covering the globe with energetic live shows full of raging, dancing crowds and good vibes throughout. These shows recalled not just the overjoyed indie pop the band have been known for, but also the immediacy of second wave ska (Madness, Bad Manners) as it dovetailed into punk and new wave, the shocking pageantry of Bow Wow Wow, and an anthemic sincerity in songs that “Make Out Fall Out Make Up” that no other groups have been able to replicate. And then … nothing.
The band have spent their time away refining their frolicking approach to indie-pop with a tougher, leaner bent than before. The hooks are still there, some with a new, chilling sheen to them, making a sound suited for big rooms and mass celebrations. Others smash right through. What was once a bedroom pop odyssey gone wild has become a party that’s spilling out of the room, chaotic and delirious, with a free and inclusive spirit running up against Sta-Prest ideals and a lack of compromise consistent with the group’s spastic mode of laissez-faire.
They just want to be happy, you see.
“Love Is All write amazing pop songs, ones that that don't sound like anybody else's pop songs” Drowned in Sound
“Love Is All can still thrill” NME
Love is All celebrates the release of their brand new album, A Hundred Things Keep Me Up At Night (What’s Your Rupture?) with UK shows in May. In addition What’s Your Rupture? is proud to issue the ‘Last Choice’ EP featuring the track, "Last Choice" from "A Hundred Things Keep Me Up At Night" as well as five new tunes from Gothenburg, Sweden's finest.- which will be available at all shows and in stores from June 22nd.
Full tracklisting for ‘Last Choice’ EP is as follows:
1. Last Choice
2. Early Warnings
3. Jessica
4. Jealousy
5. Loud Ass Pounding Heart
6. Killing In Aarau
UK DATES:
09-May London Proud Galleries
10-May London The Lexington
From out of nowhere, Love is All arrived in 2005. Their debut album Nine Times That Same Song pushed its members – vocalist Josephine Olausson, guitarist Nicholaus Sparding, bassist Johan Lindwall, drummer Marcus Gorsch, and saxophonist Ake Stromer – into the spotlight as actively touring musicians, covering the globe with energetic live shows full of raging, dancing crowds and good vibes throughout. These shows recalled not just the overjoyed indie pop the band have been known for, but also the immediacy of second wave ska (Madness, Bad Manners) as it dovetailed into punk and new wave, the shocking pageantry of Bow Wow Wow, and an anthemic sincerity in songs that “Make Out Fall Out Make Up” that no other groups have been able to replicate. And then … nothing.
The band have spent their time away refining their frolicking approach to indie-pop with a tougher, leaner bent than before. The hooks are still there, some with a new, chilling sheen to them, making a sound suited for big rooms and mass celebrations. Others smash right through. What was once a bedroom pop odyssey gone wild has become a party that’s spilling out of the room, chaotic and delirious, with a free and inclusive spirit running up against Sta-Prest ideals and a lack of compromise consistent with the group’s spastic mode of laissez-faire.
They just want to be happy, you see.

