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Foster the People began promoting new music following extensive touring in support of their second studio album, Supermodel (2014), in late 2016. During the recording sessions, Foster described waking up each day and witnessing tragedies, traumatic events and political scandals in the news; citing that the band sought to create an album of joy amidst the chaos of current events.
Foster the People is an American indie pop band formed in Los Angeles, California in 2009. Its members include founder and frontman Mark Foster and keyboardist Isom Innis. [1] [2] Foster founded the band in 2009 after spending several years in Los Angeles as a struggling musician and working as a commercial jingle writer.
Paradise State of Mind is the fourth studio album by American indie pop band Foster the People, released on August 16, 2024, by Atlantic Records, their first under the label. [2] It is the band's first studio album in seven years since the release of Sacred Hearts Club (2017), although they released an EP and a number of non-album singles ...
The "Pumped Up Kicks" rockers are slated to headline at the Brooklyn Paramount on Feb. 24.
It's been seven years since 2017’s album “Sacred Hearts Club" and Foster and his bandmates haven't lost a step, making thoughtful, first-rate pop for a jangled, insecure era with the 11-track ...
Mark Derek Foster (born February 29, 1984) is an American musician, singer, and songwriter, best known as the lead singer of the band Foster the People. [1] After struggling to create a successful band in his early twenties, Foster finally had his big break as the founder and frontman of Foster the People in 2009, which he formed alongside his two friends Mark Pontius and Cubbie Fink.
In the Darkest of Nights, Let the Birds Sing is the fourth extended play (EP) by American indie rock band Foster the People, and their first to consist entirely of non-album material. The band released it independently on December 11, 2020.
He has attributed his success to some of that early commercial work, telling Bloomberg in 2012, “Foster the People wouldn’t exist without Mophonics. Mophonics is kind of a creative home for me.”