High-energy pop punk with sibling harmonies and a gritty garage edge. Raw, melodic anthems for basement shows and desert road trips.
The Eyeliners deliver a punchy, unpretentious brand of punk that sits perfectly between the sugary hooks of pop-punk and the raw, jagged edges of garage rock. Their sound is defined by the chemistry of three sisters, resulting in vocal harmonies that feel intuitive and locked-in, even when the guitars are distorted and the drums are crashing. It is music that feels lived-in, capturing the spirit of the late-90s DIY scene without the over-polished sheen of later commercial radio punk.
What truly sets them apart is the 'singing drummer' dynamic, which gives the rhythm section a unique melodic urgency. The guitar work favors thick downstrokes and classic three-chord structures, but there is a subtle power-pop sensibility in the songwriting that makes every chorus feel like a hard-won anthem. It is the sound of a band that grew up playing together in a garage in Albuquerque, honing a style that is as much about sisterhood as it is about distortion.
Start with 'Here Comes Trouble' for the definitive Eyeliners experience. It captures the band at their peak of melodic aggression, featuring tracks that balance heartbreak with a defiant, high-speed energy. If you prefer a rawer, more archival feel, 'The First Four Years' provides a fascinating look at their evolution from Psychodrama into the tight-knit punk unit they became.
The Eyeliners are an all-woman American pop punk band from Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States.
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