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Fifteen years ago, A Day To Remember dropped What Separates Me From You — an album that had to follow the monster success of Homesick, and somehow managed to hold its own. Released on November 15, 2010, it marked a moment where ADTR refined their sound rather than reinventing it, tightening everything fans already loved about them into a cleaner, sharper package.

A Day To Remember – All I Want

From the opening punch of “Sticks & Bricks,” it was clear the band hadn’t lost their bite. The riffs were massive, the breakdowns were heavier than ever, and Jeremy McKinnon sounded like he had something to prove. But mixed in with all that fury were hooks that could fill arenas — “All I Want,” “It’s Complicated,” and “All Signs Point to Lauderdale” were pure singalong gold. You could thrash to it, cry to it, or shout every word with your mates in the car — sometimes all three in the same song.

A Day To Remember – All Signs Point to Lauderdale

While Homesick remains the fan-favourite, What Separates Me From You showed growth. It was tighter, more accessible, and proof that A Day To Remember could evolve without losing their edge. Some fans missed the raw chaos of earlier records, but most agreed — the band had found a balance between heavy and catchy that few others could pull off.

It also gave ADTR some of their biggest live moments. “All I Want” turned into an anthem of independence, the kind of song that makes everyone in the crowd feel seen. It captured everything the band stood for — self-belief, frustration, and freedom — in just under four minutes. Even now, it’s hard not to yell along when that chorus kicks in.

Album Artwork

Fifteen years later, What Separates Me From You isn’t the record that defined A Day To Remember’s career — but it’s the one that proved their staying power. It showed that the band could adapt, polish up their sound, and still sound completely like themselves. And that’s why it still holds up today — not because it was their biggest album, but because it was the one that proved they weren’t going anywhere.

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