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Parkway Drive Concert Tickets

Parkway Drive is an Australian metalcore band. The band formed in the summer of 2003, their name coming from the street they used to practice on in their home town of Byron Bay, Australia. Not long after they had formed, they released a split EP with Adelaide band I Killed The Prom Queen. Check our available Parkway Drive concert ticket inventory and get your tickets here at ConcertBank now. Sign up for an email alert to be notified the moment we have tickets!


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Parkway Drive Reviews

Avg. Customer Rating:
5.0 (based on 9 reviews)

Release Date: October 30th, 2012 Metalcore is a genre that I haven't listened to a lot of in the last couple of years. It's not that I've grown tired of it, it's just I've expanded my horizons a bit. Regardless, Australian metalcore band Parkway Drive is a band I've always kept my eye on. I picked up a copy of 2007's Horizons about three years ago, and that was my first introduction to the band. I was quite new to them, but for some reason, the album didn't stick with me...
- absolutepunk.net
Sound: Parkway Drive, simply amazing! A band that has emerged as the biggest metalcore band in Australia in a very short amount of time. With the release of their debut EP "Don't Close Your Eyes" in 2004, the band came out pumping with the 2005 release "Killing With A Smile" full of massive metal riffs and breakdowns. The LP features 11 huge tracks including the hit "Smoke 'Em If Ya Got 'Em" which was also on their 2004 EP...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Sound: Personally, I'm not a fan of the sound this CD. The guitars don't sound very heavy, and the vocals seem too loud at times. Also, on my speaker system, the bass drum seems to drown everything else. As for the actual music, in my opinion, it isn't as good as their previous albums. At some points, it gets quite boring. The CD is quite a different style compared to 'Horizons' and 'Killing With A Smile'. As ever, breakdowns are featured regularly throughout the album, all to varying effect...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
Sound: If you get bored with the same old format in your rock songs, Parkway Drive's latest release Horizons could be considered a feast for the ears. The band doesn't hesitate to go in several very different musical sections within the course of one song, which can be a good and bad thing. Apparently the Australian quintet wanted to step up everything -- from the heaviness to the speed on the album, and they haven't disappointed in those areas...
- www.ultimate-guitar.com
"refreshing in a market saturated with mediocrity." Mixing characteristics of both metalcore and hardcore, Parkway Drive sound uncannily like something you've heard before and yet simultaneously unlike most bands of either genre. Brutal and catchy, you almost feel as though you already know the songs despite having never heard the band before...
- www.metalunderground.com
Over the past decade or so, Australia has really grown into itself as a metal heavy country. Whether it be the numerous bands who inhabit the underground (Woods of Desolation, Portal, etc...) or the more mainstreamed oriented acts, the land down under has definitely been busy, especially when it comes to metalcore...
- www.reviewrinserepeat.com
When Deep Blue's ominous opener (Samsara) gives way to Unrest's frenetic pounding, you're hopeful. Sleepwalker continues the pace, but its intense start degenerates into cliché. The rest of this album's near 44-minute runtime provides conflicting evidence. On the one hand, you hear songs (Alone, Pressures) that are signs Australia's reigning kings of metalcore are on to something. On the other, you hear bits of 2007 Parkway Drive release Horizons...
- www.hour.ca
In music, sometimes two wrongs can actually make a right, and there's perhaps no better example of this than Parkway Drive. The Australian quintet has taken the two most hated metal subgenres of this decade, metalcore and deathcore, and blended the two together, creating an entirely new and somehow unique engine of pure destruction. 2006's Killing With a Smile showed lots of promise, but it was 2007's Horizons that really cemented Parkway Drive as a worldwide force of devastation...
- www.popmatters.com
Parkway Drive are probably (if not) the heaviest band on Epitaph and this fact is backed up on the band's third album, 'Deep Blie'. After the slow burning intro of 'Samsara', 'Unrest' explodes with the bands usual pounding, aggressive style, one that the band honed so well. Soon enough 'Sleepwalker', 'Wreckage' and 'Deadweight' set the tone and momentum, as Winston McCall growls and screams his way through and backed up by mighty guitar riffs from Luke Kilpatrick and Jeff Ling...
- www.alterthepress.com
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