5 Incredible Pop-Rock Albums That You Shouldn’t Have Missed In The 2010s

By Matthew Murray /

3. Patrick Stump €“ Soul Punk

I could write pages and pages on this one. If you don€™t know who Patrick Stump is, he€™s the lead singer of pop-punk band Fall Out Boy. Have you heard of Soul Punk? I€™d be surprised.

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Mr Stump is a highly passionate musician and it shines through on this dance effort. The sound is massively different to Fall Out Boy and is almost straight pop music (if not for a few nice 80s pop-rock references). This is an album that takes a lot of influence from Michael Jackson and other 80s stars. Yet it utilises some incredible modern techniques used in dance tracks. The 80s pop-rock influences are evident on songs such as Allie (a fun little tale about a girl Stump wished had €œtaught him naughty things€).

What makes this album easily the most heart-breaking of the list though, is that it was made with blood, sweat, tears and all of Stump€™s energy€and it didn€™t even make enough money to be considered an average seller. It was a commercial flop, despite critical acclaim. Stump played every single instrument, wrote every single lyric€he even produced the album. And it got very little airplay. I could cry.

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I ranked Soul Punk as my second best album of 2011, beaten only by the top entry on this list (which I consider to be the greatest album I€™ve ever heard). With a lead single as pretty and catchy as This City, it should have been an instant hit. I mean, it€™s the lead singer of Fall Out Boy making damn good dance music€on the single release of This City we even got some sick rapping from Lupe Fiasco as well. How this failed is a true mystery.

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