The Shopping Mall of Rockers The mall was dying. Not dramatically. There were no closing-down sales, no angry landlords, no wrecking balls waiting outside. It was dying the slow way old shopping malls die. One empty storefront at a time. One flickering light. One forgotten corner. One fewer customer every week. The Amplifier Centre had once been the pride of the city. Families spent entire Saturdays there. Teenagers gathered around the arcade. Friends met at the food court. Music drifted from every shop. Now the fountain in the centre court hadn't worked in years. Half the neon signs buzzed weakly. The pigeons seemed to outnumber the shoppers. Yet somehow, the place refused to disappear. Perhaps that was because a few stubborn souls still believed in it. Among them was Seymour Jones. Seymour owned Vinyl & Vibes, the last independent record store in the entire mall. While everyone else had embraced streaming playlists and algorithms, Seymour remained devoted to physical music....
The Bands You're Not Supposed To Like Let's be honest. Every rock fan has at least one. A band they'll happily mock at a BBQ, roll their eyes at in a Social media comment section, or pretend not to own when discussing their record collection with friends. Then they get home. The door closes. The headphones go on. And somehow that "embarrassing" band's greatest hits album ends up playing from start to finish. Rock music has always had its unwritten rules. You're supposed to like certain bands. You're supposed to respect certain albums. You're supposed to have strong opinions about authenticity, credibility, and artistic integrity. Yet the funny thing about music is that it couldn't care less about the rules. A great song is still a great song, whether it comes from a critically adored underground act or a band that became the punchline of a thousand internet jokes. That's what got me thinking about Nickelback . No band has become a bigger ...