AltWeeklies Wire

Old-Growth Roots Give Red Cedar Inspirationnew

Born from the ashes of the psychedelic-tinged project Sister Ray, Red Cedar boasts some of Vancouver's most dedicated musicians. While the group's name is not yet a mainstay on the tattered show posters plastered around town, the quintet has been working at a feverish pace since forming last March.
The Georgia Straight  |  Jenny Charlesworth  |  03-23-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Approaching 90, T-Model Ford Keeps the Blues Goingnew

Blues guitarist T-Model Ford has incredible energy and vitality for a man of any generation.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  03-19-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Israel's Monotonix Is Setting America on Fire -- Literallynew

"You hit my girlfriend in the head with a trash can, and as much as I love her, you were still the best fucking band I've seen in ages," one fan wrote on Monotonix's MySpace page. This says a lot about the rock 'n' roll of Monotonix.
Tucson Weekly  |  Annie Holub  |  03-19-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Deaf Guitarist Does Not Go Gentlynew

Since the age of 10, Steve DiCesare has slowly been losing his hearing. It is now almost completely gone, but the band plays on.
Boulder Weekly  |  Dylan Otto Krider  |  03-19-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Will Oldham Doesn't Just Cross Borders, He Transcends Themnew

Will Oldham, a.k.a. Bonnie "Prince" Billy, is the type of artist who simply doesn't come from any one locale or belong to any one time.
Fast Forward Weekly  |  Mark Hamilton  |  03-19-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Obits Serve a Death Notice to Indie-Rock Clichesnew

On the band's debut, I Blame You, myriad shades of punk, post-punk, new wave and even '80s pop begin to materialize from amidst the sheen of guitar reverb.
New York Press  |  Saby Reyes-Kulkarni  |  03-19-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Nowhere Men Are Going Somewhere Fastnew

Even though their music is getting played on alternative-rock radio, the three members of Nowhere Men aren’t even stars yet in the halls of La Jolla High School. But they’re slowly getting there.
San Diego CityBeat  |  Seth Combs  |  03-18-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Four Tet Jumps Genres, But Its Meaningful Abstractions Stick Like Gluenew

Four Tet's music is sticky. The word works as a description of Kieran Hebden's gluey way of making precious, melodic samples adhere to languid hip-hop beats. It also conveys that Four Tet's sound not only bears down into your memory, it also becomes a medium for memories in its own right.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Brandon Bussolini  |  03-18-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Post-Hardcore Titans Thursday Headline the Taste of Chaos Tournew

With Common Existence, Rickly and company have reexamined the essential pieces of post-hardcore, spinning them into a web sticky with British shoegaze guitar textures and a humanities degree's worth of source subject matter.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Arielle Castillo  |  03-17-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Forward-Thinking Pittsburgh Band Drugdealer Releases 'Tits' EPnew

Drugdealer's Tits EP is a tiny masterpiece of art-damaged skree, reminiscent of Hella, Naked City and Ruins and inundated with odd time signatures and lots of twists and turns.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Manny Theiner  |  03-16-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Butch Walker Rises From the Ashesnew

Butch Walker's music has grown more nuanced, and he's also grown quite successful as a pop producer -- think Katy Perry, Avril, Pink, The Academy Is and so on.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Aaron Jentzen  |  03-16-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Manilow Buries Christopher Cross, Rick Astley, and the 1980snew

There's nothing ironic about the crooner's latest covers collection.
Seattle Weekly  |  Mike Seely  |  03-16-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

The 'It' Factor of the Wong Boysnew

Hailing from the land of Lego and blue cheese, the Wong Boys are a pair of Danish music-scene vets who "talk punk and walk rave," as they put it, which essentially means they bang out obtuse, ass-kick electro-pop that's rank, dank, raunchy and stupid in an exceptionally clever manner.
Montreal Mirror  |  Rupert Bottenberg  |  03-13-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Dave Gossage and the Annual Saint Patrick's Mindwarpnew

Known to local Celtic music buffs as Montreal's most prominent pied piper, and to a recent influx of young Irish pub-goers as "flute guy," Hurley's and Old Dublin mainstay Dave Gossage is one of Montreal's go-to musical performers when it comes to traditional Irish and Scottish reels and jigs.
Montreal Mirror  |  Erik Leijon  |  03-13-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

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