USA Based Alt-Rocker
RICHIE CROSS
Has Released Single
‘When I Get Old’


discography:

EP

What if growing up is the biggest lie we’ve ever been told?
That’s the question Las Vegas-based alt-punk provocateur Richie Cross asks with his latest high-voltage reinterpretation of ‘When I Get Old‘.
Stripping away reflection for confrontation, Cross transforms the track into a razor-sharp alt-rock and punk anthem that refuses to sit quietly.
Gone is any gentle nostalgia;
in its place, punchy guitars and a restless, unapologetic vocal delivery push the tension between who we are and who society expects us to become.
Lines about resisting conformity, rejecting routine, and refusing to ‘fossilize‘ land harder than ever, giving the song an immediacy and raw honesty that resonates with anyone caught between independence and expectation.
Fans of Rise Against, Bring Me The Horizon, and A Day To Remember will find themselves drawn to its emotional punch and defiant energy, yet Cross carves out a sound entirely his own.
Cross’s journey as an artist is as purposeful as his music.
After stepping away from the industry, he returned with renewed focus, channeling years of reflection into songs that confront disconnection, control, and the struggle to remain human in an increasingly numbing world.
Between 2024 and 2026, a steady cycle of releases – including the breakout single ‘60 Miles An Hour‘ – earned him international attention from radio, playlists, and music media across the U.S., Europe, and Latin America.
Now signed to SODEH Records, he prepares to release his full-length album ‘Bridging The Gap‘ on August 7, 2026, promising heavier textures, deeper emotional range, and explorations of survival, surrender, and conscious choice.
Earlier this year, Cross delivered ‘Widespread Coma‘, a scathing wake-up call to a culture numbed by screens and headlines.
Built on driving riffs and pounding rhythms, the track rails against passive living, with the chorus’ chant-like urgency cementing his reputation as a modern punk firestarter.
Richie Cross doesn’t just make music – he demands attention, memory, and awareness.
In a city known for spectacle, he’s here for substance, and he isn’t laying down quietly.