AltWeeklies Wire

Buck 65 Supposes He Makes Hip-Hopnew

Ever since the press and the public caught wind of Buck 65, aka 35-year-old Richard Jerfry, in the late '90s, his identity -- that of a white rapper from Nova Scotia -- has been his onus.
INDY Week  |  Grayson Currin  |  11-16-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

Robyn Hitchcock, Psych-Pop Survivornew

His "children's songs for adults" only improve with age.
Montreal Mirror  |  Johnson Cummins  |  11-16-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

i see rowboats Takes Halifax by Stormnew

Earlier this year i see rowboats didn't even have a name. Nine months later, the chamber-pop quintet has sailed up the campus radio charts to become one of the city's favorite indie bands.
The Coast, Halifax's Weekly  |  Mike Landry  |  11-16-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

Montgomery Moth's Hard-Rock Sound Stays Freshnew

The band's new release, Go Crazy, goes hard on the rock and light on the image.
The Coast, Halifax's Weekly  |  Ian Gormely  |  11-16-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

New Generation of Bluegrassnew

The fourth album by this quintet will have you asking: Who are these guys?
Tucson Weekly  |  Jim Lipson  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

Honky-Tonk Heronew

Teddy Thompson reinterprets the old-school country classics.
Tucson Weekly  |  Jarret Keene  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

Rock That Swingsnew

Page Hamilton and his new Helmet lineup still perform the band's classics.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Tone Collectornew

Baltimore musician, writer, and record-store owner Ian Nagoski's colection of pre-war 78s offers an enigmatic mix of Northumbrian bagpipe music, Javanese gamelan, Greek rebetika, Laotian Buddhist chants, Spanish flamenco, and Ukrainian folk songs.
Boston Phoenix  |  Susanna Bolle  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

My Teacher is a Rockstar?new

From 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. every weekday, the former Dismemberment Plan bassist Eric Axelson morphs into Mr. Axelson, a mild-­mannered English teacher who quizzes his juniors on The Crucible at Columbia Heights' Bell Multicultural High School.
Washington City Paper  |  Jessica Gould  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

His Prerogativenew

New Jack king schools us on his contributions to Atlanta's music scene.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Rodney Carmichael  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Velvet Teen's Albatrossnew

Seemingly every review manages to reference the same band (it starts with "radio," ends with "head"), claiming the two are of the exact same ilk, with the Teen aping more than just a similar-sounding lead singer.
The Portland Mercury  |  Rob Simonsen  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

Isis Celebrates a Decadenew

Isis began life in Massachusetts; a few years later, Isis packed up and traversed the continent to Los Angeles.
The Portland Mercury  |  Tobias Carroll  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

Dragging an Ox Through Water Navigates Noise and Popnew

Live, Brian Mumford is a mesmerizing performer, able to consistently win over diehard noise aficionados as well as pop purists with a single song.
The Portland Mercury  |  Cary Clarke  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Music and Mythology of M.I.A.new

It was up to M.I.A. to prove that she wasn't a fluke, and she did just that with Kala, a global journey of underground dance, weaving together samples from the Clash, guest spots from Nigerian rappers, cues from Bollywood soundtracks, seizure-inducing album art, and quasi-political phrases
The Portland Mercury  |  Chas Bowie  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

Spiritualized's Severely Diminished Grandeurnew

The problem is that without the usual instrumental bombast, the audience focuses on the lyrics -- and Pierce can be a very mediocre lyricist.
SF Weekly  |  Jennifer Maerz  |  11-15-2007  |  Profiles & Interviews

Narrow Search

Category

Narrow by Date

  • Last 7 Days
  • Last 30 Days
  • Select a Date Range