Artist's albums
GODDAMNITALL
2023 · single
Mortal Kombat 2
2023 · single
Summer Clothes (Extended Cut)
2023 · single
The Hum Goes on Forever
2022 · album
Low Tide
2022 · single
Threadbare
2021 · single
Out On My Feet / Brakeless
2020 · single
Burst & Decay (Volume II)
2020 · album
Losing My Religion
2019 · single
Sister Cities
2018 · album
Burst & Decay (An Acoustic EP)
2017 · EP
No Closer To Heaven
2015 · album
I Don't Like Who I Was Then
2015 · single
Cardinals
2015 · single
Cigarettes & Saints
2015 · single
The Greatest Generation
2013 · album
Dismantling Summer
2013 · single
Passing Through A Screen Door
2013 · single
Local Man Ruins Everything (Nervous Energies)
2013 · single
Don't Let Me Cave In
2011 · single
Suburbia I've Given You All and Now I'm Nothing
2011 · album
Local Man Ruins Everything
2011 · single
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Biography
For years, this would have been an almost-blank page. Back in the mid-2010s, a few years after The Wonder Years had first formed in Lansdale, PA, the band would be asked to provide a bio for events they were playing. All Dan Campbell would write was ‘The Wonder Years is a band’. That was it. They’d then receive the programs for whatever event it was for and laugh. A lot of time has passed since then, a lot has changed, although also not that much, at the same time. If The Wonder Years – completed by guitarists Matt Brasch and Casey Cavaliere, drummer Michael Kennedy, bassist Josh Martin and keyboardist/multi-instrumentalist Nick Steinborn – could get away with a six-word bio, they probably would. There’s a lot of thinking on the bands latest record, The Hum Goes On Forever. But the main one is that very first line of the first song: I don’t want to die. It’s something he repeats on final track “You’re The Reason I Don’t Want The World To End”, which addresses the change in Campbell’s purpose since becoming a dad. That’s obvious enough from the title alone, but the final line – inspired by gardening with his son during the pandemic – the message becomes truly clear: ‘Put the work in, plant a garden, try to stay afloat.’ It’s a reminder to himself, but it’s also for anyone who listens, anyone who needs it, everyone who’s grown up with the band and has sought refuge in their songs. Because, yes, The Wonder Years is a band. But it’s also much, much more than that.