AltWeeklies Wire

Gov't Mule's Main Man Says He Takes Time Off, But We Don't Believe Himnew

Warren Haynes reveals the depth of his blues knowledge on Gov't Mule's latest album, last year's By a Thread, which he released on his own Evil Teen label.
Houston Press  |  Chris Gray  |  02-23-2010  |  Reviews

With its Fourth Album, Story of the Year Stays the Coursenew

Four albums into its career, the St. Louis quintet continues to defy critics – and resist pigeonholing. Exhibit A: The Constant, the band's second LP for Epitaph Records and fourth album overall, which it recorded last summer with producer Elvis Baskette
Riverfront Times  |  Annie Zaleski  |  02-19-2010  |  Reviews

Dreams of Life and Death: Looking Back with Patti Smithnew

Patti Smith and Robert Mapplethorpe were barely 20 when they met, a couple of androgynous hippies newly arrived in New York City to live among the bohos and Beats, the Factory divas and "extravagant bums" swirling around the boroughs, the Bowery and the Chelsea.
L.A. Weekly  |  Steve Appleford  |  02-19-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Everything You'd Expect From Johnny Cash, Reallynew

An album full of hurt, devotion, malaise and dejection — American VI: Ain't No Grave is everything, really, that you’d expect from a well-rounded Cash album.
The Inlander  |  Leah Sottile  |  02-17-2010  |  Reviews

Sade's 'Soldier of Love' Worth the 10-Year Waitnew

On her long-awaited new album, Sade continues to practice a now-classic style of exquisite heartbreak and desperate desire while slipping from blissed-out funk to heady R&B revivalism.
Tucson Weekly  |  Gene Armstrong  |  02-17-2010  |  Reviews

Goodie Mob Reconnects, Gets Back to the Musicnew

It's hard to love Southern hip-hop and not love Goodie Mob. It seems like the mere mention of the group that gave us "They Don't Dance No Mo," "Cell Therapy" and coined the phrase "Dirty South" makes fans get all nostalgic.
Creative Loafing (Charlotte)  |  Mike McCray  |  02-11-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Thermals Write An Olympic Anthemnew

Well, isn’t this good timing. Just three days before the Winter Olympics start in Vancouver, BC, everyone’s favorite punk band the Thermals have penned an ode to the land of hockey, poutine, and mounties.
Willamette Week  |  Michael Mannheimer  |  02-10-2010  |  Reviews

The Second Coming of Retribution Gospel Choirnew

Alan Sparhawk doesn't have a reputation for writing exciting music, which makes his ascent into the exuberant rock of Retribution Gospel Choir's aptly titled second coming, 2, so remarkable.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Chad Radford  |  02-09-2010  |  Reviews

Flip It and Reverse It: The Magnetic Fields' 'Realism'new

Not even Morrissey could pull off a line like "I want you crawling back to me, down on your knees, like an appendectomy sans anesthesia" without a hint of irony; but that's the power of Stephin Merritt.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Chad Radford  |  02-09-2010  |  Reviews

Los Angeles Beatmaker Nosaj Thing's a Deft Distillernew

Like many young musicians, Los Angeles–based beatmaker Jason Chung (aka Nosaj Thing) isn’t much more than the sum of his influences. What’s remarkable about Chung is how deftly he distills and commingles secondhand sounds.
The Georgia Straight  |  Martin Turenne  |  02-08-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Gil Scott-Heron's Remarkable New Record, 'I'm New Here'new

Gil Scott-Heron is the gruff-voiced griot and spoken-word poet who laid a good chunk of the foundation for what we know today as rapping. I'm New Here is his unremitting self-portrait of a man who's had years to catalogue and now capture his paranoia, thrills and agitations.
INDY Week  |  Eric Tullis  |  02-04-2010  |  Reviews

Discarded Album Revives Forgotten Chapter of Minneapolis Music Historynew

t all started with Shelley Pierce hunched over the vinyl bin at Cheapo. She had most of the albums she wanted, but enjoyed the thrill of the hunt. As she finished flipping through the new arrivals, a short, plump woman in her 50s came in the front door of the store, lugging a crate full of used vinyl records.
City Pages (Twin Cities)  |  Emily Kaiser  |  01-27-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Will Dondria Have to Check Her Personality at the Door?new

What started with a $15 webcam and the simple idea to post YouTube vids of herself singing a cappella R&B covers turned into an Internet phenomenon after her rendition of Ciara's Promise garnered more than 1 million hits. That's when Jermaine Dupri came calling.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Rodney Carmichael  |  01-26-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Patti Smith on Christ, Cobain and Robert Mapplethorpenew

Twenty years after the death of her friend and lover, photographer Robert Mapplethorpe, punk-rock pioneer Patti Smith has released Just Kids, her memoir of the couple's bohemian, hardly-fed days in late-'60s New York City.
Seattle Weekly  |  Chris Kornelis  |  01-25-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

Tooth & Nail’s Latest Cover Boy, a Grammy-Nominated Seattleitenew

Rural Appalachia is not generally regarded as a breeding ground for the arts, but it was in a house on a hillside in the West Virginia woods that Jordan Butcher cut his teeth as a rock-'n'-roll designer.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian J. Barr  |  01-25-2010  |  Profiles & Interviews

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