AltWeeklies Wire

Grammy Gripesnew

Today's Grammys are stale, uneventful, and hopelessly out of touch with the very world they're supposed to represent. Just how much do they suck? Let us count the ways.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  12-28-2005  |  Music

Broken Bonenew

As a member of Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, Bizzy Bone sold 15 million albums and won a Grammy, but his next goal is proving he's not crazy.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  11-23-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Rockin' the Boatzznew

Boatzz's urbane art-pop has alternately been described as "trippy elevator music," "the Zombies meet Blur," and "Joe Jackson rolling in an Escalade listening to Supergrass and doing some serious party favors."
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  11-09-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Sin Citynew

Avenged Sevenfold helps punks and metalheads unite over groupies and drugs.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  11-02-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

A Lesson in Violencenew

Obituary has humanized death metal, eschewing satanic posturing for a much less dogmatic take on a genre that is often hated by parents.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  09-13-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Making Tracksnew

Interfuse's full-length debut makes art rock menacing again.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  08-09-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

More Swing Than Swaggernew

Another promising rock troupe rises from the ashes of the Signoffs.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  07-12-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Upward Momentumnew

With its ear-bleeding guitars, Roue delivers a great nervous breakdown.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  06-08-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Masters of Horrornew

The duo Midnight Syndicate creates the creepy orchestral music that haunted houses swear by.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  06-02-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Idiot Savantsnew

It's easy to gripe about Green Day's politics being reductionist. At least the band provides an entry into some semblance of social awareness for teens and 'tweens.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  05-11-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Potential FCC Fines Shock Shock Jocksnew

The Broadcast Decency Enforcement Act is back, and it's chilling. Not only would the bill ramp up fines from $32,500 to $500,000 per incident; it also allows the FCC to fine individual DJs and artists. All without any warning.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  04-26-2005  |  Media

Facing the Musicnew

After seven years of touring the world as indie-rock royalty in Guided by Voices, virtuoso guitarist and songwriter Doug Gillard is back on his own.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  04-11-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Surviving the Gamenew

Thirty years in, the rock 'n' roll institution is still louder and drunker than everybody else.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  03-23-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Eccentric Funk Troupe Parties with Politicsnew

Flo scats, raps and sings about everything from blow jobs to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict while sporting angel wings, a fuzzy Kangol visor and white spandex pants coupled with a large, intimidating black codpiece.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  01-26-2005  |  Profiles & Interviews

Punch Drunksnew

The flipside to the underground rock band's creativity is that the musicians got into a brawl once over whether they had just played well or sucked.
Cleveland Scene  |  Jason Bracelin  |  12-13-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

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