Soda Blonde Explained
Soda Blonde are an Irish alt-pop band from Dublin, formed in 2019 by former members of Little Green Cars.[1]
Career
Soda Blonde was founded in 2019 by former members of Little Green Cars.[2] They released two EPs and in 2021 their debut album Small Talk, which was nominated for the Choice Music Prize.[3] [4]
Their second album Dream Big was released in September 2023[5] to critical acclaim,[6] [7] [8] later ranked by the Irish Independent as Number 1 on their list of "Best Irish Albums of 2023".[9]
Personnel
- Faye O'Rourke (vocals)
- Adam O'Regan (guitar)
- Donagh Seaver-O'Leary (bass)
- Dylan Lynch (drums)[10]
Discography
- EPs
- Terrible Hands (2019)[11]
- Isolation Content (2020)[3]
- Albums
- Small Talk (2021)[12]
- Dream Big (2023)[13]
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Soda Blonde. Bandsintown.
- Web site: Goodbye Little Green Cars, hello Soda Blonde. The Irish Times.
- Web site: Dream Big, by Soda Blonde. Soda Blonde.
- Web site: Soda Blonde | Galway International Arts Festival. www.giaf.ie.
- Web site: Dream Big, by Soda Blonde . 2023-12-19 . Soda Blonde . en.
- Web site: Soda Blonde: Dream Big - Dubliners return with a bolder, more forthright, more experimental affair . 2023-12-19 . The Irish Times . en.
- Web site: Carty . Pat . Album Review: Soda Blonde - Dream Big . 2023-12-19 . Hotpress.
- Web site: On Dream Big, Soda Blonde Set A New Standard For Themselves . Headstuff.
- Web site: 2023-12-01 . The best Irish albums of 2023 — ranked . 2023-12-19 . Independent.ie . en.
- Web site: Soda Blonde Soda Blonde emerged from the ashes of internationally acclaimed band Little Green Cars; whose debut album saw them skyrocket to number one in the Irish album charts. | Other Voices Artists. www.othervoices.ie.
- Web site: EP Review | Soda Blonde Hit Reset With Terrible Hands - HeadStuff.
- Web site: Soda Blonde: "I feel very androgynous as a group, and I like that.". Tanis. Smither. Hotpress.
- Web site: Soda Blonde: Dream Big - Dubliners return with a bolder, more forthright, more experimental affair. Irish Times.