AltWeeklies Wire

Hercules and Love Affair Storm the Stage with Disco Deliverynew

The exuberant, self-titled debut album from Hercules and Love Affair, the heroically named dance-music project led by longtime New York DJ Andrew Butler, lives up to the lofty expectations its mythical moniker entails.
New York Press  |  Amre Klimchak  |  08-07-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Rules for Surviving All Points Westnew

After years of hauling to California, the U.K., Austin, Tex., and everyplace in between, a music festival with real teeth is finally coming to New York.
New York Press  |  Crispin Kott  |  08-07-2008  |  Concerts

Atlanta's Rock Scene Explodes into Brooklynnew

Through their often-astonishing live shows and impressive recordings, the Black Lips and Deerhunter, have drawn attention to a locale that has not typically been seen as a breeding ground for independent rock.
New York Press  |  Amre Klimchak  |  07-31-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Fans are Too Old for Smack, Not Spiritualizednew

After releasing Spiritualized's latest album, A + E, fresh off a battle with a life-threatening illness, Spaceman seems slightly more cautious about glorifying that "hurricane in [his] veins."
New York Press  |  Maggie Serota  |  07-31-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Queens-born Rapper Homeboy Sandman is Headed For the Big Timenew

Actual Factual Pterodactyl is not only the best-named album to come out of the New York hip-hop underground this year; it has the added benefit of being exactly the kind of album that you would hope for from something bearing its name.
New York Press  |  Hamilton Nolan  |  07-24-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Gypsies, Tramps and Reeds Take the Stage as Balkan Bands Blow Upnew

Beyond seeking respite from mainstream songs, one reason Balkan-style music has gained such a following is that it makes you want to dance.
New York Press  |  Linnea Covington  |  07-24-2008  |  Music

The Mae Shi is Like Los Angeles: Sprawling, Vast, Dynamicnew

The Mae Shi is the sort of group that can lose a lead singer (in this case founding member Ezra Buchla) but remain comfortably intact, enlisting a brand-new member (Jonathan Gray) to yelp into the mic without losing its manic stride.
New York Press  |  Greg Burgett  |  07-17-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Yaz, the '80s Electropop Duo, 'Reconnects' After 25 Years Apartnew

The communication between the members of Yaz is much better on its current "Reconnected" tour than it was when they broke up. Then again, a lot has changed in the lives of keyboardist Vince Clarke and singer Alison Moyet. Now they can perhaps talk about one thing they have in common: parenthood.
New York Press  |  David Chiu  |  07-17-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

White Rabbits Spoon Out More Creepy, Honky-tonk Calypso Soundsnew

Though an interest in world music and an affinity for ska and New Wave perked it up a bit, their first album, Fort Nightly skewed toward the macabre.
New York Press  |  Callie Enlow  |  07-10-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Brooklyn Hip-Hop Festival Organizers Confront the Genre's Image Crisisnew

Wes Jackson has planned a broad lineup that represents various stages in hip-hop's existence from new artists to performers fro mteh golden age and elder statesmen.
New York Press  |  Billy Jam  |  07-10-2008  |  Music

Emperor X Speaks a Private Language that Remains Accessible to Allnew

I watched Matheny, who records and plays out solo under the Emperor X moniker, strum a charmingly small six-string acoustic as pedal-delayed tones pouring out of his tiny amp.
New York Press  |  Greg Burgett  |  06-26-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Despite Smaller Fan Bases, '90s Acts Like Polvo Continue to Reunitenew

"We're not a nostalgia act. We're trying to stay relevant to the times and ourselves," vocalist and guitarist Dave Brylawski says, adding that with a new drummer, Brian Quast, the band undoubtedly sounds different.
New York Press  |  Amre Klimchak  |  06-19-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Immortal Technique Proves That Mindful Hip-Hop is Anything but Deadnew

The ever explosive, articulate and militant musician is leading the charge of this hidden side of contemporary hip-hop with his new album, The 3rd World.
New York Press  |  Billy Jam  |  06-19-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Where's This Year's Song of the Summer?new

After Gnarls Barkley raised the bar, we're still waiting for this summer's hook-filled hit. And Walter Meego has my vote.
New York Press  |  Greg Burgett  |  06-19-2008  |  Music

Teenage Jesus and the Jerks Return to the Stagenew

The seminal No Wave freak scream act, will play two shows at the Knitting Factory. The performances are timed with the release of No Wave: Post Punk. Underground. New York 1976-1980, a photographic and oral history edited by Thurston Moore and Byron Coley.
New York Press  |  Georgia Kral  |  06-12-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

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