AltWeeklies Wire

Floetry May Be Over, But the Floacist Goes Onnew

Sometimes you just have to face the music. You have to bite down and come to terms with the truth, no matter how painful or unbelievable it may be. Most recently I had to finally accept what I’ve been denying for a while now: Floetry has, indeed, broken up.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  01-26-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Q-Tip Beats 'Democracy' to the Punch with 'The Renaissance'new

All this talk of Chinese Democracy finally seeing the light of day has overshadowed another album many of us -- at least those in the hip-hop community -- thought would never come to be: Q-Tip's second album, The Renaissance.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  12-08-2008  |  Reviews

Nikka Costa Label-Jumps from Virgin to Staxnew

"I just really wanted to get away from Virgin," she says. "I didn't think they were a healthy company, and I had four presidents while I was there."
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  10-20-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Raphael Saadiq Brings It Back to the Past With His Current Releasenew

Saadiq worked on The Way I See It for two years while creating singles for other performers. Like most of his music, it contains a sound reminiscent and respectful of the music he grew up listening to on the streets of Oakland.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  09-29-2008  |  Reviews

Can This Auto-Tune Trend Just Stop Already?new

Ah, Auto-Tune -- the newest tool for artists to enhance their vocals. Due to this item, quite a few rappers have recently decided they can sing all of the sudden.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  09-22-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

A Slew of Fall Soul Releases are Worth Getting Excited Aboutnew

Hell must have frozen over if Maxwell is heading out on tour. But fall has more scheduled including Raphael Saadiq, Robin Thicke, Nikki Costa, more.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  09-08-2008  |  Music

Eric Roberson on the State of Black Musicnew

Does he have any suggestions on how to make black music less, um, pitiful?
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  07-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Al Green's New Album Will Make You Wish You Were a Better Mannew

If there's one male vocalist who can make the most secure of men feel inadequate about the way he's been living his life, it's Rev. Al. Even after all these years Green still performs with all the authority of a man who has lived, who has accomplishments he's proud of and mistakes he's tried to rectify.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  06-03-2008  |  Reviews

Jean Grae Says Peace Outnew

One of hip-hop's brightest MCs calls it quits. She says she means it.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  05-19-2008  |  Music

The New Roots Album has Some Feeling Nostalgicnew

I didn't get hardcore Rootsy until '99 when they dropped their commercial breakthrough Things Fall Apart, which people were touting as the last great hip-hop album of the 20th century. (Looking back, it kinda was.)
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Mala Rodriguez Gets Wickednew

Spain's sexy female MC rounds out a night of Latino hip-hop.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  03-17-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Van Hunt: Still Trying for 'Popular'new

Van Hunt's third album was supposed to be out by now. Titled Popular, it was the Dayton, Ohio, native's latest attempt to hook audiences with his cocoa-covered funk and soul.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  02-25-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Not So Pleasurable 'Pleasure for Sale'new

Take HBO's softcore Cathouse, suck out all the fun and frivolity, throw in a bunch of traumatic sexual baggage and you have Pleasure for Sale, the six-part documentary series on the Sundance Channel.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  02-11-2008  |  TV

Power of Soulnew

Marvin Gaye's Here, My Dear -- the biggest fuck-you album ever -- gets reworked.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  02-11-2008  |  Reviews

Fred is Deadnew

It's officially a new year, and it's usually at this time that I comb through the tribute and farewell sections of magazines' year-end issues to see which greats left us and exclaim, "Oh shit, he’s dead!"
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  01-14-2008  |  Music

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