Even voorstellen - Band of Horses Announce ‘Everything All The Time (20thAnniversary Edition)’
Out March 20 via Sub Pop
Previously Unreleased Track “(Biding Time Is a) Boat to Row” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=py9LQTYAvyQ
Expanded edition of the band’s breakthrough, era-defining debut album features previously unreleased tracks and rarities
January 12th, 2026, Seattle, WA – Band of Horses announce they will celebrate the 20th birthday of their Gold-certified 2006 debut album Everything All The Time with a newly expanded 20th Anniversary Edition, out on March 20, 2026 via Sub Pop. The expanded 19-track edition is accompanied by an additional LP of bonus tracks, including the 2005 tour EP, a trove of previously unreleased studio and live tracks, and rarities like “The End’s Not Near” (as featured on The O.C.) and a demo version of the double Platinum single “The Funeral.”
The album has been fully remastered for the anniversary edition, with the artwork refreshed and expanded into a gatefold jacket, including new liner notes by the album’s producer, Phil Ek (Fleet Foxes, Built To Spill, Modest Mouse, Father John Misty).
In his liner notes, Ek shares:
“I’ve always believed that albums need to feel special and should transcend the recording process. I want records that I produce to feel like you can walk into them, to have a three-dimensional depth. The music should stay as fresh and exciting as the first time you heard it. Achieving this requires a lot of time, trust, and effort in the studio, but it pays off in the end. Twenty years on, I still think Everything All The Time exemplifies this fully.”
Reflecting on the anniversary, Band of Horses’ Ben Bridwell adds:
“This album made all of my dreams come true. Forever grateful for the desperation that fueled its inspiration.”
About Everything All The Time:
Achieving musical transcendence is a tricky feat. If it happens - a big if - it does so naturally, and perhaps nobody knows that better than Band of Horses, whose landmark debut Everything All The Time still, after twenty years, feels as vital and, dare we say, transcendent as when it came out in 2006.
Guitarist/vocalist Ben Bridwell formed Band of Horses in Seattle in 2004, after the end of his nearly ten-year run in northwest melancholic darlings Carissa’s Wierd. Carissa’s Wierd trafficked in beautiful orchestral pop, whose songs told unflinching stories of heartbreak and loss, leavened with defeatist humor. Band of Horses rose from the ashes of that well-loved band, buoyed by Bridwell’s warm, reverb-heavy vocals, and woodsy, dreamy songs oozing with tension, longing, and hope. Armed with a fresh Sub Pop deal and a smashing batch of songs, the band recorded their debut full-length, Everything All The Time, with producer Phil Ek at Seattle’s Avast Studios.
At times raggedly epic (“The Great Salt Lake”) and delicately pensive (“St. Augustine,” “Monsters”), Everything All The Time is an album painted gorgeously in fragile highs and lows. That’s part of the genius in Band of Horses: they craft intelligent, classic movements within their songs, perfectly balancing desperation and hope, calmness and mania, love and fear. And of course there’s the massive single, “The Funeral,” which became a defining song of the era, and continues to inspire new generations of fans and artists alike. The song has appeared extensively in film and TV placements, was sampled by Kid Cudi, and was recently reimagined in a 2025 dance edit by acclaimed producer/multi-instrumentalist Gryffin. The enduring Everything All The Time would go on to be certified Gold, and “The Funeral” was recently certified double Platinum by the RIAA.
About Band of Horses:
There might be no other band that was able to channel the generational anxiety in those early millennial years and turn it into such powerful and inclusive art quite like Band of Horses. Band of Horses fashioned gorgeously ragged epics, Ben Bridwell’s high-flying vocals and eccentric enunciation floating like a specter that felt like a prelude to a dream. Full of profundity, truth, and sometimes just homespun advice on how to live, Band of Horses songs have become anthems and touchstones for fans — meditations on change, longing, and what a person will do to make things right. And what you do when you can’t.
The band’s debut Everything All the Time (2006) introduced their sweeping, emotionally resonant sound, embodied by the double Platinum anthem “The Funeral,” now regarded as one of the most enduring songs of the modern indie rock era. The albums that followed, including 2007’s Cease To Begin, cemented their place in the indie rock canon. They've released six studio albums, including Infinite Arms (2010), which earned a Grammy nomination. Most recently, the critically acclaimed Things Are Great (2022) finds the band recapturing the raw emotion and unpolished punk-rock spirit of its earlier days.
Tracklisting:
- The First Song
- Wicked Gil
- Our Swords
- The Funeral
- Part One
- The Great Salt Lake
- Weed Party
- I Go to the Barn Because I Like The
- Monsters
- St. Augustine
- (Biding Time Is A) Boat to Row
- Part Two
- Coal Mine
- Worry Song
- The End's Not Near
- The Funeral (Demo Version)
- Wicked Gil (Demo Version)
- Our Swords (Demo Version)
- I Go to the Barn Because I Like The / Monsters (Live at The Crocodile)