Sunny Day Real Estate
Album reviews
The Rising Tide
Time Bomb/Arista (2000)
Indeed, every day really is another scene for this group, which has put itself through more drama in seven years than most major rock acts of an earlier era.
Live
Sub Pop (1999)
Live is no-frills, fist-clenched rock that will be essential to diehards but of minimal interest to newcomers.
How It Feels To Be Something On
Sub Pop (1998)
One of 1998's most impressive releases and arguably the most satisfying comeback of any band in the '90s, Something demonstrates many times over the innovation at which Sunny Day Real Estate had previously only intimated.
LP2
Sub Pop (1995)
Although its influence would only truly be felt after the fact, Sunny Day Real Estate's second album was at the forefront of the so-called "emo-core" explosion during the second half of the decade.
Diary
Sub Pop (1994)
Although the band would become increasingly more serious and cryptic afterward, Sunny Day Real Estate inadvertantly signaled "go" for the emo-core frenzy with Diary. What happened next now fills clubs across the land and raises the clenched fist of many a listener
Interviews
Another Sunny Day
December 2, 2000
In a rare interview, Jeremy Enigk talks with NATN Associate Editor Jonathan Cohen about the new album and SDRE’s continuing career evolution.