Performance

Monthly Listeners

Current

Followers

Current

Streams

Current

Tracks

Current

Popularity

Current

Top Releases

View All

Appeal To Reason

1.3B streams

1,284,863,050

The Sufferer & The Witness

841.5M streams

841,512,776

Endgame

516M streams

515,981,434

The Black Market (Expanded Edition)

240.1M streams

240,072,095

Wolves

192.3M streams

192,310,244

Long Forgotten Songs: B-Sides & Covers...

122.8M streams

122,781,372

The Ghost Note Symphonies, Vol.1

96.4M streams

96,420,487

Nowhere Generation

93.9M streams

93,888,757

Talking To Ourselves

66.1M streams

66,121,525

The Numbers

56.1M streams

56,069,715

Biography

If ever there was a perfect time for a new album from the outspoken, socially-conscious, multi-Gold and Platinum punk rock band Rise Against, it’s right now. Nowhere Generation, due out June 4 on Loma Vista Recordings, is blazing and aggressive, fusing old-school punk attitude with post-hardcore fury. Lyrically, the eleven songs were influenced by input from the band’s vocalist/lyricist Tim McIlrath’s two young daughters, and the band’s community of fans, and point an enormous spotlight at the social and economic deck that has been stacked against younger generation’s pursuit of The American Dream. Today, there is the promise of The American Dream, and then there is the reality of The American Dream. America’s “historical norm” that “the next generation will be better off than the one that came before” has been diminished by an era of mass social, economic, and political instability, and a sell-out of the Middle Class. The brass ring that was promised by hard work and dedication no longer exists for everyone, and as was the case with the counterculture of the 1960s, disruption becomes the only answer for the Nowhere Generation. Nowhere Generation was recorded at The Blasting Room in Fort Collins, CO under the tutelage of Jason Livermore, Andrew Berlin, Chris Beeble and long-time producer/engineer Bill Stevenson who has worked with the band on nearly all of their acclaimed releases since their sophomore effort, 2003’s Revolutions Per Minute.