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Score 24: Listen to the bands playing the 2017 Rock And Roll Rumble

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Studio 52 is a community artist space located in the heart of Allston, and is proud to support the Boston music scene and local artist community.


The "World Series of Boston Rock" is upon us.

The 2017 Rock And Roll Rumble kicks off four weeks from tonight at ONCE Ballroom in Somerville, and it will feature 24 bands from New England vying for a crown currently held by '16 champs Worshipper. This evening (Sunday, March 5), longtime organizer Anngelle Wood is announcing the 24 participating bands, one by one, live on 100.7 WZLX's Boston Emissions.

"It feels so good to be able to get this off my chest," says Wood at the start of her show. "It's gonna be a very very good time."

Preview all the bands, as they are announced, below. We'll update this post throughout the Boston Emissions broadcast.

In the meantime, here’s some pertinent info to get everyone in the mood: The Rumble preliminary week runs Sunday, April 2 to Saturday, April 8, the semi-finals are April 14 and 15, and the grand finale goes down on Friday, April 21. Individual nightly lineups and groupings will be unveiled next weekend. Rumble "Full Boat" passes, good for all nine nights, are priced at $75 and on sale now, and the Rumble "Six Pack," which gets you into all preliminary nights, goes on sale tomorrow morning. Other Rumble info can be found at the Rumble's new homepage via ONCE.

All bios below pulled from the Rumble page at WZLX.com. Featured photo of Weakened Friends taken by Lauren Piandes for Vanyaland during last year's Rock And Roll Rumble final at ONCE Ballroom.

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no hope/no harm

Location: Boston, MA

Bio: no hope/no harm is a Boston four piece lead by Aaron Perrino of The Sheila Divine and Dear Leader, and longtime Boston journalist Luke O’Neil, formerly of the band The Good North. “I suppose it sort of sounds like the Sheila Divine meets the Good North, surprisingly!” O’Neil explained in an interview with Vanyaland. “At least on our first song ‘This Living Wage’, for sure — that same sort of melancholy grandeur.” The project began out of the duo’s shared love of emo — James F. Forbes, and Adam Hand, of The Field Effect, were brought on board after a singalong at O’Neil’s Emo Night Boston. Traces of all permutations of that broad genre — from twinkling, prettier sad songs, to screaming post-hardcore, and tightly-wound pop-punk show up throughout their material, at turns literary-minded or arch and self-referential, but always meant to break your heart.

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