© 2011 Tonight, the City Skyline.  Produced by Tonight, the City Skyline & Jchristopherhughes at Posthistoric.  Mastered by Justin Perkins at Mystery Room Mastering.
PRESS

"The sound is beautiful; the lyrics however, are stupendous, mostly being about the ups and downs with human relationships, which I personally connected to at this time in my life. Tonight, The City Skyline does a phenomenal job bottling all these messages in song with their latest project, "Nothing Will Be The Same." I highly recommend it to anyone."
- Mitchel DeSantis, Hot Lunch Collective

"I'm honored to review this group which came to my attention through direct submission by Martin. The 7 song indie pop rock album moves between softer piano trimmed love songs and pounding guitar riffed anthems of desperation and longing. The group's lyrics though simple and honest are able to pack a passionate punch and hit hard forme in this song Mantra For A Dark Lit December."
- Owen Carver, Song Of The Day

"It's a seven-track EP the blends a lot of drums and piano to create a great sound without being perceived as trying too hard. For a two-man band they bring a full, compact sound that will leave you stuffed come closing time. My favorite track on the record is "This is The End (For You)." The pounding drums with the on-point vocals convey an emotion that these guys are for real."
- Aldo Singer, Independent Media Magazine

"Although this Wisconsin group is a 2-piece band, their recordings sound full with multiple layers of instruments and vocals. Their debut album, "Nothing Will Be The Same" is full of alt rock/pop that is sometimes ambient, sometimes moody, and sometimes quite energetic."
- IMR, The Indie Music Review

"This the four-song debut EP from Tonight, The City Skyline sobs from the get-go, like if Jimmy Eat World decided to quit a Zoloft prescription and watched that commercial with the abused cats and dogs on continuous repeat - the one with the Natalie Merchant song in it. But hey, everyone goes through sad-sack phases, and this record might help get your cry on. The band is at its best when it shifts from sad to frustrated on "It's Almost Over," a double-time ballad that drives n' pounds despite its end-of-relationship lyrical musings. A dedicated ear can hear some Sunny Day Real Estate with enough concentration. The rest of the album is a down-tempo, piney meditation that has a tough time crawling out from under the covers, from the sad piano waltz of the title track, to the slow-moving, quiet-loud closer "Pent Up, Held Down.""
- lillitot, Redundancy! Redundancy!

"What I enjoy the most about this album is that each song has a personality of its own. It's clear that the specific instrumentation was picked carefully. Different keyboard and percussion sounds show up in each song. The acoustic guitar and piano build off of each other in Nothing Will Be the Same, and vocal lines lend themselves to that indie soundtrack sort of feel."
- Maria von Amp, Now Add The 7th