Latest Release
- APR 19, 2024
- 1 Song
- Paramore · 2013
- Riot! · 2007
- Paramore · 2013
- Brand New Eyes (Deluxe Version) · 2009
- Brand New Eyes · 2009
- Twilight (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) · 2008
- Riot! · 2007
- After Laughter · 2017
- Riot! · 2007
- Brand New Eyes (Deluxe Version) · 2009
Essential Albums
- Paramore's first album since 2009’s Brand New Eyes is also the first without original members Josh and Zac Farro. In 2011, fans were treated to a new Paramore song, “Monster”, which appeared on the Transformers soundtrack and featured the new stripped-down line-up. “Now” is an urgent, pop-friendly rocker with punk edges, reminiscent of vintage No Doubt.
- Coupled with post adolescent hormonally-driven drama, the overwhelming (i.e. platinum) success of 2007’s Riot! almost broke up Paramore as the young men in the band found themselves overshadowed by frontwoman Hayley Williams. But the recording process was therapeutic as passive/aggression turned into finger pointing lyrics that forced the band to confront one another with productive communication. The result is an incredible third studio album wrought with tension, catharsis, and of course totally awesome songs. Brand New Eyes is an apt moniker in that each member sees each other differently now. “Careful” kicks it off with winding guitars and skyward rocketing melodies bursting from lyrics about the dangers of bottling up one’s feelings and opinions. “Ignorance” is the money track. It grapples the ear with honed hooks and lyrics that throw punches at the frustration of someone who stubbornly refuses to confront change. Another standout is “Brick By Boring Brick,” a tune that (finally) rails against the calculated aloofness of the hipster generation.
- Thank goodness for Paramore: With their second album, they continue to combine the giddy thrash of Fall Out Boy with the sophisticated emo of their label, Fueled by Ramen, sparked by the firecracker presence of frontwoman Hayley Williams. Until Paramore appeared, emo had been almost entirely dominated by male perspectives. Here, Williams brings a much-needed female outlook to the genre—and some serious nerve, in the case of boyfriend-stealing anthem “Misery Business”—along with the ability to sing like a demon (“Miracle”) and an angel (ballad “When It Rains”).
Albums
- 2023
Artist Playlists
- These clever chart-toppers are led by emo-pop's first heroine.
- Paramore sits down with Zane to talk through their highly anticipated album This Is Why.
- The pop-punk idols are touring their fiery sixth album. Get the set list here.
Live Albums
Compilations
More To Hear
- Conversation with the band on their album 'This Is Why.'
- Mainstream Success and Legacy
- The band dissects their Apple Music Essentials playlist.
- Elton plays Moss Kena, Paramore, New Order, and PBR Streetgang.
More To See
About Paramore
“Every time we do a record, I get so married to who we are in that moment that I’m scared for us to go be something else,” Paramore frontwoman Hayley Williams admitted to Apple Music in 2017. “Because what if we’re not as good at that?” Decades into the band’s career, her fear is unfounded. After forming in the Nashville suburbs in 2004, Paramore pushed pop-punk out of the mosh pit and into stadiums precisely because the group was so successful at reinvention. Early albums like 2007’s Riot! embraced hard alt-rock sounds, pairing pop-punk-driven angst with the urgent, emo-schooled dynamics of Jimmy Eat World, most successfully on the pogoing “That’s What You Get” and the band’s first Top 40 hit, the 2007 love-triangle rager “Misery Business.” Williams herself became the Warped Tour generation’s foremost feminist voice, unafraid to call out injustices, inequality, and sexism; in fact, she even later publicly spoke out against “Misery Business” lyrics that painted the song’s other woman in a nasty light. In subsequent years, Paramore crossed over via acoustic ballads (the 2010 hit “The Only Exception”), breezy, gospel-infused funk (the Grammy-winning 2013 single “Ain’t It Fun”), and upbeat pop (2013’s “Still Into You”). Along the way, recurring personnel changes would reshape the band’s sound and chemistry, but Paramore persevered, dabbling in tropical disco (2017’s “Hard Times”), stirring post-punk (2023’s “This Is Why”), and ’80s rock via a jubilant 2024 cover of Talking Heads’ “Burning Down the House.”
- ORIGIN
- Franklin, TN, United States
- FORMED
- 2004
- GENRE
- Alternative