AltWeeklies Wire

Boston's Dropkick Murphys Find Success in 'The Meanest of Times'new

As Elvis is to Memphis and the Beatles are to Liverpool, the Dropkick Murphys are to Boston, Massachusetts. Need proof? Check out The Departed.
San Antonio Current  |  Johnston Farrow  |  11-13-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Dirty Little Heaters Live Better Through Rock 'n' Rollnew

This high-energy, high-emotion soul-punk-rock act comprises three rock 'n' roll lifers who committed to this band after tough bouts with life, love and other bands that didn't last.
INDY Week  |  Grayson Currin  |  11-13-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Former Miles Davis Saxophonist Bill Evans Blends Jazz, Bluegrassnew

Evans isn't your average young musician: The 50-year-old leads Soulgrass, a jazz/ funk/ bluegrass hybrid that, over the years, has featured some of the finest musicians in the world.
INDY Week  |  Andrew Ritchey  |  11-13-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Brightblack Morning Light Makes Music Off the Gridnew

The band's latest album title (Motion to Rejoin) refers to the back-to-the-land movement, and Nathan "Naybob" Shineywater and Rachael "Ra Ra" Hughes fully embrace the philosophy, having lived off the grid on a New Mexico mesa 9,000 feet up for almost three years, with four solar panels powering their home recording.
New York Press  |  Amre Klimchak  |  11-13-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

A Dresden Doll Goes Solo on 'Who Killed Amanda Palmer'new

Deviance is also a key topic on Amanda Palmer's debut solo album, but she examines it in a somewhat more personalized -- and occasionally even tender -- manner.
Washington City Paper  |  Casey Rae-Hunter  |  11-13-2008  |  Reviews

The Bill Mike Band Reaches Across Party Lines to Find a New Sense of Unitynew

The band's new album, Truce, is really all about searching for Obamatopia.
City Pages (Twin Cities)  |  Andrea Swensson  |  11-13-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Knux: From Street Warfare to Soirees with Socialitesnew

Krispy Kream and his brother Rah Al Milio have morphed from Cajun survivalists to Hollywood up-and-comers, becoming the toast of the underground rap scene in only a few years.
SF Weekly  |  Ben Westhoff  |  11-13-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Longtime Portland MC Mic Censhaw Finally Makes a Solo Standnew

Sure, his name is in the liner notes for experimental hip-hop projects Hungry Mob and Suckapunch, and more traditional beats-and-ryhmes duo the Cleveland Steamers, but Thinking Out Loud is the first full-length album the MC has ever released under his own name.
Willamette Week  |  Casey Jarman  |  11-12-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

After 20 Years, Mudhoney Gets Back to Basicsnew

This year, Mudhoney hit their 20th-anniversary and re-released a deluxe edition of their debut EP, Superfuzz Bigmuff. They also offered up a new release, The Lucky Ones, and it's no coincidence that their latest album sounds so much like their first.
San Diego CityBeat  |  Scott McDonald  |  11-12-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

This is Marnie Stern -- Long May She Shrednew

The electric feminist explosion that is This Is It masks deep personal anxieties, something she describes as a "combination of zen and extreme loneliness." It's why she lyrically reaches for zen bliss. It's the musical equivalent of making lemonade from lemons.
San Francisco Bay Guardian  |  Mosi Reeves  |  11-12-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Blue Horns' Attention Span is Short; Its Songs are Even Shorternew

The band's self-titled debut, out this week, is full of catchy, throwback rock; at eight songs and just over 30 minutes, it's sequenced like the vintage LPs the band reveres.
Willamette Week  |  Michael Mannheimer  |  11-12-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Richard Lloyd Turns Off the Televisionnew

But Lloyd does still have plenty to say about the band and its other guitarist (and primary songwriter), Tom Verlaine.
New Haven Advocate  |  Peter Gerstenzang  |  11-11-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Shiny Toy Guns' Sophomore Album is Varied and Boringnew

It's clear that Shiny Toy Guns didn't want to simply make a soundtrack to sweaty nights on dance floors. Which is admirable from an artistic standpoint, sure. But that doesn't mean Season of Poison is any fun to listen to.
OC Weekly  |  Albert Ching  |  11-11-2008  |  Reviews

Jazz Violinist Billy Bang Revisits Vietnam in Music for Veterans Daynew

"When I was writing that music, I remember actually crying again and seeing the nightmares I'd been trying to get away from."
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Mike Shanley  |  11-11-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Will Black Milk Become the Latest Rap Superstar from Detroit?new

On street corners and message boards around the world, rap fans have hailed 2008 as the year that Michigan's underground hip-hop scene went "overground." It's producer-emcee Black Milk (born Curtis Cross), who stands at the forefront of this movement.
Metro Times  |  William E. Ketchum III  |  11-11-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

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