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Baltimore's All Time Low marry effusive emo and punk riffs with an ever deepening maturity and sense of pop songcraft. An enduring presence in the late-2000s scene, they were a Warped Tour mainstay from their breakthrough sophomore set, So Wrong, It's Right (2007), to their chart-peaking sixth LP Future Hearts (2015). While they have continued to evolve, embracing a sonically-broadminded pop style, as on 2017's Last Young Renegade, driving pop-punk remains the core of their sound, as on 2020's Wake Up, Sunshine, 2023's Tell Me I'm Alive, and 2025's passionate Everyone's Talking!
Formed in 2003 in the suburbs of Baltimore, Maryland, All Time Low originally featured singer/guitarist Alex Gaskarth and guitarist Jack Barakat with bassist Zack Merrick and drummer Rian Dawson. All still in high school when they started, they quickly garnered a reputation for their energetic pop-punk sound and rowdy live shows, which often included silly string and beach balls; even touring across the East Coast and the South during school breaks. They issued a four-song EP, 2004's The Three Words to Remember in Dealing with the End, with help from local label Emerald Moon, and followed its release with a full-length album, The Party Scene, one year later.
Touring across the country that summer, the band found themselves on bills with similar acts like Motion City Soundtrack, the Early November, and Plain White T's. Along the way, they also bumped into fellow pop-punkers Amber Pacific, who brought the young band to the attention of their label, Hopeless Records. The label was immediately impressed, and All Time Low had officially become part of the Hopeless family by March 2006, just a few months shy of the members' high school graduation. Finally done with schoolwork and able to concentrate full-time on music, the group issued Put Up or Shut Up -- a seven-song EP that mostly featured new recordings of older material -- that July.
All Time Low supported the EP's release with a handful of Warped Tour dates before hitting the road again with Amber Pacific. So Wrong, It's Right appeared in 2007, marking the band's first full-length release for Hopeless. After being named 2008's Band of the Year by Alternative Press, All Time Low returned with their second album, Nothing Personal, in July 2009. Debuting at number four on the Billboard charts, Nothing Personal helped make All Time Low one of the top emo-pop acts in the business. Two CD/DVD packages, MTV Unplugged and Straight to DVD, were released the following year, tiding fans over while the band returned to the studio to begin work on their major-label debut for Interscope Records.
Dirty Work, featuring the single "I Feel Like Dancin'," was released in 2011. The album reached number six on the Billboard charts the week it was released, and the band hit the road. In 2012, All Time Low announced they had parted ways with Interscope and released a new song, "The Reckless and the Brave," on their website in June. Soon after, they re-signed with Hopeless and began work on a new album. Don't Panic was released in November 2012, then reissued almost a year later with four newly recorded songs and four acoustic versions under the name Don't Panic: It's Longer Now!
In 2015, All Time Low returned with their sixth record, Future Hearts, which found them reuniting with their Dirty Work producer, John Feldmann. In 2016, they released Straight to DVD 2: Past, Present & Future, a sequel to the 2010 live album. In February 2017, All Time Low issued the single "Dirty Laundry" in anticipation of their seventh studio long-player, Last Young Renegade, that arrived in June of that year. Renegade was their first effort issued on Fueled by Ramen and featured the singles "Nice2KnoU" and the pop-focused "Life of the Party." Their fifth consecutive Top Ten record, the set's unabashed pop polish proved divisive and, after the era came to a close, the band got to work on a course-correcting follow-up.
In 2018, the summery and anthemic one-off single "Everything Is Fine" offered a taste of things to come with album number eight, which landed in early 2020. Wake Up, Sunshine saw All Time Low returning to their pop-punk roots after a brief pop foray on 2017's Renegade. Featuring appearances by blackbear and the Band Camino, the upbeat LP reached number on Billboard's Top Rock Albums chart, buoyed by singles like "Some Kind of Disaster" and "Monster," the latter of which was re-released in December 2020 with guest vocals from Demi Lovato.
The following year saw the band team up with English indie rockers Pale Waves for the single "PMA" before returning with 2022's "Sleepwalking." That pop-leaning track appeared on their ninth album, 2023's Tell Me I'm Alive. Later that year, the band teamed up with Avril Lavigne on the fiery standalone single "Fake as Hell," which served as a prelude to 2024, when the band joined Lavigne on her Greatest Hits tour. That November, the band released The Forever Sessions, Vol. 1, which celebrated their 20th anniversary by re-recording some of their biggest hits, including "Dear Maria, Count Me In." It was also around this time that they resolved a legal matter regarding an anonymous 2021 accusation of misconduct against guitarist Barakat. The dispute behind them, All Time Low returned with their tenth album, 2025's Everyone's Talking! Produced with longtime collaborator Dan Swank, it found them striking a smart balance between the driving emo-punk of their early work and the hooky pop they embraced in the 2010s; a mature and affecting energy emblemized by singles "Suckerpunch" and "The Weather." ~ Matt Collar & Corey Apar
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