The 2019 follow-up False Alarm-infused with Bowie-esque bombast and featuring collaborations with Zimbabwean Afro-fusion group Mokoomba and rapper Open Mike Eagle-further supports their mission to ensure that disco-punk remains fresh and always in fashion. After taking time to recharge, they came back as furious as ever, with Trimble flashing his falsetto all over the glammed-up, funk-powered, Bee Gees-inspired boogies of 2016’s Gameshow. But all that motion was taking its toll: “We as a band were beginning to crumble,” they admitted to Apple Music. Their 2010 debut album, Tourist History, bursts at the seams with pensive confessions disguised as infectious club anthems, including indie hit “What You Know” and the aforementioned “Something Good Can Work.” The trio then went into overdrive, bringing their tight, dynamic live shows across the world and quickly dropping sophomore album Beacon in 2012. Taking cues from indie-pop darlings like Phoenix and Foals, the band soon found their sweet spot, spiking playful melodies with punchy post-punk rhythms and sing-along choruses. Signing to French indie label Kitsune and all but ignored by the media, they build a DIY phenomenon by dint of relentless touring and a close connection to. In 2007, they rebranded as Two Door Cinema Club (a name inspired by the local Tudor Cinema) and decided to skip university to polish up their fidgety dance-punk demos. The trio had been honing that sound since they were teens, when singer/guitarist/programmer Alex Trimble, lead guitarist Sam Halliday, and bassist Kevin Baird formed the band Life Without Rory in Bangor, Northern Ireland. READ MORE: Two Door Cinema Club at Reading Festival 2021: heady anthems from indie survivors The track is the latest preview of the Northern Irish trio’s fifth studio album ‘Keep On Smiling’, which is due to arrive on September 2 (physical versions will come out on November 4). Walking on stage at a rammed Whelan’s in Dublin, their bassist and guitarist are the spitting image of Two Door Cinema Club’s Kevin. Two Door Cinema Club have shared a new single, ‘Lucky’ you can listen to it below. A double tricker Em Hidden way back when Am Em The. Well, I’ve been lucky Em I’m a lucky man Am Em But I never saw this part of the plan C. key Transpose 0 scroll Autoscroll 0 1 2 Search for: Verse 1 C. Since debuting with 2009’s joyous, jangly “Something Good Can Work,” Two Door Cinema Club have served as a high-energy antidote to, well, life with their bright electro-pop anthems. A s cover bands go, Tudor Cinema Club are pretty convincing. C x32010 Em 022000 Am x02210 F 133211 G 320003 Dm xx0231.