Os dejamos parte el artículo:
''"I think it’s definitely gone away. I think the main thing people thought was that we wouldn’t be around for a long time. We are as popular now as we’ve ever been. As for being accepted, I guess we really worried about it when we were younger, but it doesn’t bother us now. As long as we are still selling out our shows, and kids are still coming, we don’t really mind.”
Short Stack’s vocalist and songwriter Shaun Diviney is talking about the early barrage of hatred the band received. They were easy enough targets: the unashamed sugar-rush of their sound, their adoption of emo aesthetics, the hordes of visible, audible teenage fans – but this attitude obscured the fact Short Stack put the hard yards in, from riding trains for years to spending every waking hour building a large following via social media. Their second album This Is Bat Countrysilenced most critics who assumed they would be a flash in the pan, while the indie elite found different targets for their vitriol. “It sold more copies than the first album by like, second week,” explains Diviney. “It’s almost double Platinum and the other one only went Gold. We consider it a massive success.”''
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