AltWeeklies Wire

Martin Sexton Keeps It Simplenew

If music's a tonic for our daily drudgery and everyday frustrations, then Martin Sexton's the vermouth.
Charleston City Paper  |  Chris Parker  |  09-28-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Scott H. Biram Doesn't Like Gadgetsnew

Playing on antiquated six-strings, amps, and wired-up stompboxes, Scott Biram's been rockin' hard on his own punkish blend of traditional blues, old-school country, and zydeco for more than a decade.
Charleston City Paper  |  T. Ballard Lesemann  |  09-22-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

A Dutch DJ's Euro Beatnew

A Q&A with Tiesto, one of the kings of electronic music. He reaches crazed audiences in every corner of the world, from his native Netherlands to the rest of Europe, Asia, and Australia.
Charleston City Paper  |  Jared Booth  |  09-20-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Puddle of Mudd Sees No Reason to Mess With the Saucenew

For some bands, every few years marks a new re-invention. There is a conception that a group can get "stale" if it keeps the same basic sound and writes the same sorts of songs for the duration of its career. Puddle of Mudd doesn't buy into any of that crap.
Charleston City Paper  |  Paul Bowers  |  09-08-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Disco Demolition Knights draw from the gritty sidenew

Charleston rock trio Disco Demolition Knights formed last fall. Brian "BG" Graham, Bob Hylton, and Brooks DuBose had a heavy-duty style in mind.
Charleston City Paper  |  T. Ballard Lesemann  |  09-05-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Sonic Adulthoodnew

When Sonic Youth welcomed indie filmmaker Dave Markey and his 8mm camera during a European tour in 1991, the resulting document was a snarky rockumentary titled 1991: The Year Punk Broke. Released in 1992, it marked a turning point in rock.
Charleston City Paper  |  T. Ballard Lesemann  |  08-31-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

MuteMath Discovers Its Soulful Sidenew

If New Orleans-based rock band MuteMath used to get maximum mileage out of synth-powered dance beats and chilled-out atmospherics, it veers into new sonic territory with its latest effort, Odd Soul.
Charleston City Paper  |  T. Ballard Lesemann  |  08-31-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Austin Lucas Goes From Rebellion to Reflectionnew

Eight years ago, Austin Lucas was a punk unleashing a grinding hardcore cacophony. Now, his lonesome tenor wavers like a cool-night breeze showcasing his new guise as an old-fashioned country adherent.
Charleston City Paper  |  Chris Parker  |  08-24-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Matisyahu Explores the Nature of the Soulnew

Rapper/singer Matisyahu and his backing band the Dub Trio recently released a concert album titled Live at Stubb's Vol. II, It's the Brooklyn songwriter's first offering since 2008's Light.
Charleston City Paper  |  Paul Bowers  |  08-24-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Hootie and the Blowfish keep exploringnew

With Hootie and the Blowfish no longer touring, the annual Homegrown concerts for the Hootie and the Blowfish Foundation have become significant events for fans in the Carolinas.
Charleston City Paper  |  Chris Parker  |  08-09-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Futuristic Reggae-Rocknew

Coming from a rock background, drummer Tommy Benedetti eventually expanded his own musical horizons as a young musician. It's an attitude shared by his mates in the reggae/rock/electronica band John Brown's Body.
Charleston City Paper  |  T. Ballard Lesemann  |  07-27-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Josh Ritter has a Book of Jubilationsnew

Josh Ritter has been called one of America's greatest living songwriters. Everyone from Stephen King to Cameron Crowe has sung his praises; even Joan Baez has sung his songs. But still, 12 years into his musical career, he is floored when you tell him you are a fan.
Charleston City Paper  |  Paul Bowers  |  07-20-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Elvis Costello, Presented in Big-Wheel Fashionnew

Elvis Costello never followed the traditional trajectory of normal pop stars. As a showman, he's a unique class act. Song-wise, his eclectic library of work is massive. And that's what is exciting about this week's concert at the PAC.
Charleston City Paper  |  T. Ballard Lesemann  |  07-14-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

Jimmy Thackery Keeps Winging Itnew

Jimmy Thackery is a great modern blues artist. Or at least that's how he's perceived, though he's forever frustrated by the narrowness of that notion. It's just part of his legacy as a founding guitarist for seminal Washington, D.C., bar band the Nighthawks.
Charleston City Paper  |  Chris Parker  |  07-12-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

David Gray Renews His Soul With a Renovated Soundnew

There's hardly a musician who wouldn't love to have the success David Gray enjoyed with his 1998 multiplatinum album White Ladder and its breakthrough hit, "Babylon." After languishing in obscurity for his first three albums, the self-financed release became an international sensation characterized by a mix of acoustic folk and electronic elements.
Charleston City Paper  |  Chris Parker  |  06-29-2011  |  Profiles & Interviews

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