A tiny, unassuming Blogspot blog — something like "UnreleasedRockRarity.blogspot.com" — posted a single MP3 file. The title: "Foo Fighters – Million Dollar Demo (Unreleased 2004)." No track name. No artwork. Just a raw, lo-fi recording of a song no one had ever heard. It wasn't a scrapped One by One track; it sounded newer, rawer, almost punk.
These bloggers were not journalists; they were archivists. They were the ones who kept the lights on during the three-year gaps between albums. foo fighters blogspot
Before social media platforms like Instagram or X (formerly Twitter) became the default for artist updates, fan-curated blogs served as the definitive news sources for the Foo Fighters community. A tiny, unassuming Blogspot blog — something like
: Bloggers have documented every change, from the addition of Chris Shiflett in 1999 to more recent discussions about the band's future following the loss of Taylor Hawkins . Just a raw, lo-fi recording of a song no one had ever heard
A tiny, unassuming Blogspot blog — something like "UnreleasedRockRarity.blogspot.com" — posted a single MP3 file. The title: "Foo Fighters – Million Dollar Demo (Unreleased 2004)." No track name. No artwork. Just a raw, lo-fi recording of a song no one had ever heard. It wasn't a scrapped One by One track; it sounded newer, rawer, almost punk.
These bloggers were not journalists; they were archivists. They were the ones who kept the lights on during the three-year gaps between albums.
Before social media platforms like Instagram or X (formerly Twitter) became the default for artist updates, fan-curated blogs served as the definitive news sources for the Foo Fighters community.
: Bloggers have documented every change, from the addition of Chris Shiflett in 1999 to more recent discussions about the band's future following the loss of Taylor Hawkins .