

Trimble and Halliday met in school, and then hooked up with Baird through mutual friends. Hailing from Bangor and Donaghadee, Northern Ireland, Two Door Cinema Club features singer/guitarist/programmer Alex Trimble, guitarist/singer Sam Halliday, and bassist/singer Kevin Baird. They continued to evolve, landing in the Top 20 of the Billboard 200 with 2012's Beacon, and experimenting with Giorgio Moroder-esque disco and synth pop on 2016's Gameshow. Along the way, they earned favorable comparisons to Phoenix and the Postal Service. Mixing guitar-driven, post-punk hooks with dancey, electronic polish, Northern Ireland's Two Door Cinema Club first gained attention with 2010's Tourist History and singles like 'Something Good Can Work' and 'Undercover Martyn.' The album hit number one on the Irish independent albums chart, and landed on the BBC Sound of 2010 Poll. See All Artist PlaylistsSee All Singles & EPsSee All About Two Door Cinema Club

Check it out on Slacker Radio, on free internet stations like Glassnote Radio, Alternative Deep Dive, 30 Under 30 too. Listen to the biggest hits from Two Door Cinema Club, including Something Good Can Work, What You Know, I Can Talk, and more. Stream Tracks and Playlists from Two Door Cinema Club on your desktop or mobile device. Listen to Two Door Cinema Club SoundCloud is an audio platform that lets you listen to what you love and share the sounds you create.

From Serial Productions and The New York Times comes The Trojan Horse Affair: a mystery in eight parts.Get Apple Music on iOS, Android, Mac, and Windows Music Videos Together they team up to investigate: Who wrote the Trojan Horse letter? They quickly discover that it’s a question people in power do not want them asking. Because through all the official inquiries and heated speeches in Parliament, no one has ever bothered to answer a basic question: Who wrote the letter? And why? The night before Hamza is to start journalism school, he has a chance meeting in Birmingham with the reporter Brian Reed, the host of the hit podcast S-Town. To Hamza Syed, who is watching the scandal unfold in his city, the whole thing seemed … off. By the time it all dies down, the government has launched multiple investigations, beefed up the country’s counterterrorism policy, revamped schools and banned people from education for the rest of their lives. The story soon explodes in the news and kicks off a national panic. The plot has a code name: Operation Trojan Horse. A strange letter appears on a city councillor’s desk in Birmingham, England, laying out an elaborate plot by Islamic extremists to infiltrate the city’s schools.
