MOON WALKER HAS A LOT TO SAY 🌙

MOON WALKER HAS A LOT TO SAY 🌙

Harry Springer may compose, produce and perform all of Moon Walker's music in his bedroom, but the electrifying and uniquely eclectic sound undeniably feels more fitting for a stadium.

When Springer formed Moon Walker at the height of the Covid-19 Pandemic, he was merely looking for a way to pass time and make some extra money selling songs to music libraries. “I sold some, and it was going fine, but then I wrote some songs, and I was like, ‘I really don’t want to give these ones away." Those songs that Springer just couldn't part with ended up becoming his critically acclaimed debut record "Truth to Power". Thanks to sudden viral success on Tik Tok and praise from the likes of The Darkness's Justin Hawkins, the 7-track album quickly established Moon Walker as one of rock's most promising acts. Less than a year later, Springer is back with his sophomore effort "The Attack of Mirrors".

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Apocalypticism Press

  • Apocalypticism, the piercing third album out now by Moon Walker, is arguably band leader Harry Springer's most conceptual and most personal album yet. Over eight eclectic tracks, Moon Walker imagines an apocalypse and confronts society's troubling inclination towards a hive mind. Much like his earlier work, Moon Walker is unafraid to confront harsh truths and pull back the curtain on the deeply flawed layers of American society.

  • Apocalypticism is the new LP, a brilliant rock record that packs a lyrical punch at the powers-that-be in a world that should be better than it is.

  • The pandemic project turned prolific fuzzy rocker Moon Walker is back with his third album in three years, and it’s his best yet. Apocalypticism is here to soundtrack your concerns as the artist pens skeptical poetry and sets it to beautiful chaos. “Them” is the most potent of the bunch, acrobatic vocals drive the tone of the track as the chugging arrangement is allowed to shapeshift with a stellar bridge.

The Attack of Mirrors Press

  • In the one year since his debut album, Harry Springer – the visionary behind Moon Walker – has continued to push his own envelope, expanding the possibilities of what modern rock can be and how it can sound, all while retaining its rebellious spirit. His raucous sophomore album, The Attack of Mirrors, finds him kicking down the barriers of the genre and turning his guitar-based sound up to eleven.

  • Trust me when I tell you that Moon Walker might just be the most important alternative rock band making music today... From a sonic standpoint, if you took the better parts of ’70’s classic rock and fused it with ’90’s alt-rock, threw in a few synthesizers, and gave it the epic rock swagger of The White Stripes, you’ve got Moon Walker. It’s well-crafted pop rock with an edge and a bite. The heart and conscience of Moon Walker’s music on Attack Of Mirrors deep dives into the ever crumbling world around us without fear of reprisal for calling out the global ills that keep us sick.

  • At the visual level, Moon Walker is the second coming of Marc Bolan. On the sonic standard, he is Slade sashaying around Saturn holding hands with Sweet... Never has guitar music needed a nice Jewish boy with a bit of awake-dreaming in his angle so badly—that beautiful breed that has always been the great nemesis to the nullification of sense—to re-meadow the sea in the witless wasteland of what Scottish penman Craig McLean once incisively called “the new pop normal.”

Truth to Power Press

  • As soon as you think you have a handle on Moon Walker’s identity, they switch it up. For most bands, this would spell failure. For Moon Walker, they’d fail if they weren’t doing this. The song “The TV Made Me Do It” is the better part of ’70s classic rock and funk mixed with modern-day alternative rock. Envision a beautiful marriage between The White Stripes, The Talking Heads, even Wild Cherry. Why is this song not burning up rock radio right now?

  • LA-based artist duo Moon Walker is without a doubt the most underrated band of 2021, an incredible indie rock powerhouse the likes of which I’ve never heard. They tear down the walls between genres, crafting psychedelic riffs with robust basslines, the ska-punk freneticism and inspired political themes in a tightly crafted indie-alternative soundscape that is both contemporarily influenced as well as embracing the raw vivacity of vintage rock spirit.

  • The band seems to base their visual textures with 70’s attire, twisted with a modern approach. Taking inspiration from bands like Pink Floyd and Talking Heads, it is no wonder that the band oozes out vintage rock and roll spirit, all with their own ferocious yet enlightening approach to social commentary.