Albums by The Neighbourhood
ALBUMChip Chrome & The Mono-Tones (Deluxe)The Neighbourhood
ALBUMHard To Imagine The Neighbourhood Ever ChangingThe Neighbourhood
ALBUMWiped Out!The Neighbourhood
ALBUM#000000 & #FFFFFF (No DJ Version)The Neighbourhood
ALBUMI Love You. (Chopped Not Slopped)The Neighbourhood & OG Ron C
ALBUMI Love You.The Neighbourhood
ALBUMI Love You. (Slowed Down)The Neighbourhood
ALBUMI Love You. (Sped Up)The Neighbourhood
The Neighbourhood's Popular Music Videos
Sweater Weather
The Neighbourhood
Stargazing
The Neighbourhood
Afraid
The Neighbourhood
Daddy Issues
The Neighbourhood
Scary Love
The Neighbourhood
Devil's Advocate
The Neighbourhood
Cherry Flavoured
The Neighbourhood
R.I.P. 2 My Youth
The Neighbourhood
Pretty Boy
The Neighbourhood
Lost in Translation
The Neighbourhood
Artist Playlists
The Neighbourhood Essentials
The only indie rock band that goths and hip-hop heads agree on.
The Neighbourhood: Influences
Majestic and brooding, their sound feeds on outsized beats and downcast guitars.
Artist Biography
“I hate the beach, but I stand in California with my toes in the sand.” When The Neighbourhood’s Jesse Rutherford sang that line on his band’s 2013 alt-pop earworm, “Sweater Weather,” he was doing more than just hinting at his preference for long-sleeved tops—he was positioning his group as the go-to soundtrack to your endless summer bummer. Released two years after The Neighbourhood formed in the L.A. suburb of Newbury Park, “Sweater Weather” was perfectly acclimated to a moment when songs like Gotye’s “Somebody That I Used to Know” and Foster the People’s “Pumped Up Kicks” were blurring the lines between moody alternative rock and ebullient Top 40 pop. While The Neighbourhood may have initially looked the part of the tattooed, leather-clad, five-piece hipster rock band, they became evermore fluent in the language of modern R&B and rap: They followed their platinum-selling debut, I Love You., with the trap-inspired mixtape #000000 & #FFFFFF, featuring cameos from YG and French Montana, while the dramatic 2015 anthem “R.I.P. to My Youth” sees Rutherford channeling the self-flagellating antihero confessionals of The Weeknd. Their 2020 release, however, heralded not just a radical change in sound but in persona: Taking a page from the Sgt. Pepper/Ziggy Stardust playbook, Chip Chrome & The Mono-Tones outfits The Neighbourhood with a silver-painted alien alter ego in service of a bold, MGMT-esque fusion of glam, electro, and psychedelia.
Hometown
Newbury Park, CA, United States
Genre
Alternative