AltWeeklies Wire

Origami Ghosts Are Neither Complicated Nor Scary; Discussnew

Origami Ghosts' music is not complicated nothingness, and it's far from frustrating--it's actually quite the opposite: minimalist everythingness, if you will, easy to listen to and surprisingly playful.
Tucson Weekly  |  Annie Holub  |  02-20-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

A.A. Bondy Prefers Recording in Barns to Fiddling with Computersnew

There are two types of successful indie-folk musicians: the kind that takes your breath away, and the kind that breaks your heart.
Tucson Weekly  |  Jarret Keene  |  02-20-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Is the King of Pop's Neverland Booty Our Folly Too?new

Life is hard, and economists searching for a symbol to the End of an Era need look no farther than Neverland Ranch, Michael Jackson's 2,800-acre Valhalla outside Santa Barbara.
L.A. Weekly  |  Randall Roberts  |  02-20-2009  |  Music

Jessica Lea Mayfield Has a Lifetime of Experiencenew

Jessica Lea Mayfield can sound as old as the earth, bearing the wisdom of generations in her placid voice. But like the very best pop music, Mayfield's songs are motored by the hopes and desperation of adolescence, which stands to reason: She's only 19.
The Portland Mercury  |  Ned Lannamann  |  02-19-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Second Coming of Antony and the Johnsonsnew

Despite the long history of androgyny and gender confusion in pop music, Antony Hegarty has had a unique talent for creating majesty out of his confusions.
Boston Phoenix  |  Daniel Brickman  |  02-19-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

Jayhawks Flocking Together Once Againnew

Founding members Mark Olson and Gary Louris rekindle their musical partnership.
City Pages (Twin Cities)  |  Andrea Swensson  |  02-18-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

India.Arie's Latest Has the Political Bite of Denturesnew

Testimony: Vol. 2, Love & Politics is too false and bright to be mistaken as real.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  L. Michael Gipson  |  02-18-2009  |  Reviews

Wolves in the Throne Room: Green Metal?new

The Olympia, Wash., group skews the typical scorched earth imagery to commune with Mother Nature's malevolence in a slow aural grind.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Chad Radford  |  02-18-2009  |  Reviews

Soul-Searching Songwriter Stays True to Her Artnew

Carrie Newcomer is the kind of songwriter's songwriter whose work is as deeply emotional as it is beautifully crafted.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Bill Forman  |  02-17-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

George Porter on the Meters, Galactic and the Voice of the Wetlandsnew

James Brown may have invented funk, but the Meters perfected it. The group laid down a mix of buoyant melodies and sophisticated syncopation that has yet to be surpassed.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Bill Forman  |  02-17-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

206 Zulu Keeps the Principles of Hip-Hop Alivenew

One of the Northwest's most respected hip-hop organizations, 206 Zulu is based in Beacon Hill and is the local chapter of the legendary Universal Zulu Nation, a grassroots hip-hop advocacy group first formed in the Bronx in 1974 by rap pioneer Afrika Bambaataa.
Seattle Weekly  |  Jonathan Cunningham  |  02-17-2009  |  Music

The Snake Charmers' 'Been Gone Too Long' Opts Out of Anything Flashynew

The muted Allman Brothers boogie of "No Mercy" and "Hoochie Mama" suggests the band is more than capable of cutting loose. Choosing not to, though, gives Been Gone Too Long a touch of class, and elevates it a step above run-of-the-mill barroom blues.
Houston Press  |  Chris Gray  |  02-17-2009  |  Reviews

Musicians are Hardly Immune to the Twitter Bugnew

Is the "microblog" Internet phenomenon the next leap forward for musicians or just a tweeting waste of time?
Houston Press  |  Chris Gray  |  02-17-2009  |  Music

Seven Unsexy Songs About Sexnew

With apologies to Big Black, here are seven songs about fucking that are unlikely to inspire any actual fucking.
OC Weekly  |  Albert Ching  |  02-17-2009  |  Music

Fucked Up Blazes New Path of Peace and Sanity

Damian Abraham has a solid idea of what the endgame for his band, Toronto's Fucked Up, will look like and it's sure to involve knives, firearms, blood and broken bones.
The Reader  |  Chris Aponick  |  02-17-2009  |  Profiles & Interviews

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