AltWeeklies Wire

A.A. Bondy: Devilishly Awesomenew

Bondy's high-decibel background recedes further into his rearview with his second folk-music effort.
Tucson Weekly  |  Jarret Keene  |  09-02-2009  |  Reviews

Jack Penate: Taffy and Bassnew

Everything actually isn't new on Peñate's sophomore effort, but several bright tracks are worth the purchase price alone.
Tucson Weekly  |  Sean Bottai  |  09-02-2009  |  Reviews

Greymachine: Apocalypse Knockingnew

This collaboration may not be everyone's cuppa, but for connoisseurs of the heavy, it is unrelenting and earth-shaking.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  09-02-2009  |  Reviews

Obituary: In the Pocketnew

The death-metal pioneers are content to crush eardrums at medium speed.
Tucson Weekly  |  Jarret Keene  |  09-02-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Beatles: I'm Looking Through Them

Rediscovering something that wasn't lost: A few words on the Beatles remasters.
Metroland  |  John Brodeur  |  09-02-2009  |  Reviews

Jucifer's Use of Extremes is Inherent to its Wholenew

Major stylistic shifts are abound in just about all of this two-piece act's recordings. The music suddenly shifts from the calm and free-flowing melody of shoegaze to the harsh brutality of noise or metal. But it always feels as if this dynamism has a rationale.
East Bay Express  |  Nick Schwab  |  09-02-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Oneida's 'Rated O' Feels Like a Watershednew

There aren't many (any?) indie-ish rock bands of whom it can be said that their 11th full-length is their best, especially given that said full-length comes out to much more than "full length" -- nearly two solid hours of music spread across three CDs or LPs.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Lee Gardner  |  09-01-2009  |  Reviews

Arizona Artists Cover Each Other on the 'When in AZ' Compilationnew

With an $8 download card (proceeds benefit charity), you'll get 55 Phoenix-area artists covering songs by other Arizona artists. Along with the recorded output, organizers are planning six shows at the best small venues in town. All in all, pretty cool.
Phoenix New Times  |  Martin Cizmar  |  09-01-2009  |  Music

The Flaming Lips Keep Their Fearless Freak Flag Flyingnew

Put simply, you'd have to be the most loathsome, granite-hearted reptilian cynic this side of Bill O'Reilly -- or quite possibly clinically dead -- not to be moved or uplifted by the Lips in action. Which is all well and good, but Wayne Coyne insists that the evolution of their live shows has been down to a series of happy accidents and a certain degree of "dumb luck."
Baltimore City Paper  |  Neil Ferguson  |  09-01-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Dallas Producer Rob Viktum Serves Up A New, Tasty 'Drink'new

Viktum makes beats all the time, but the beats he's created on a new EP for his latest project, well, they're a bit different. Not in style, mind you, but in creation.
Dallas Observer  |  Pete Freedman  |  08-31-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Blind Boys of Alabama Founder Clarence Fountain Returns With a Soul Albumnew

Stepping Up and Stepping Out stands as an exceptional gospel and soul release that you can spin anytime, anywhere—at a family barbecue, in your car on the way to work, at home alone.
Tucson Weekly  |  Jarret Keene  |  08-31-2009  |  Reviews

The Arctic Monkeys Go in a New Direction on 'Humbug'new

Humbug is the Monkeys at their most sincere and plaintive, and if you're not too cynical to follow them in this new direction, it should make your heart skip a beat or two.
Tucson Weekly  |  Sean Bottai  |  08-31-2009  |  Reviews

Joe Henry Creates His Own Dark Americana on 'Blood From Stars'new

Record-producer extraordinaire Joe Henry takes his own brand of pensive Americana a step deeper into the underworld on this dreamy and brooding album that just may be the peak of his career.
Tucson Weekly  |  Eric Swedlund  |  08-31-2009  |  Reviews

Cara Gives New Life to Lost Songsnew

The quintet infuses Irish-inspired music with modern influences to create both traditional and contemporary music.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  08-28-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

New Modest Mouse Collection is a Fitting Snapshotnew

No One's First and You're Next mixes holdovers from previous LPs plus damaged pop, electrified folk and scrappy rock.
Tucson Weekly  |  Michael Petitti  |  08-28-2009  |  Reviews

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