AltWeeklies Wire

Red Bull Music Academy Breaks Boundariesnew

Atlanta-based DJ/producer Rasta Root participates in Red Bull Music Academy, where up-and-coming artists get to study with some much-sought-after, behind-the-scenes music makers. The goal is to expand traditional musical boundaries.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Tony Ware  |  11-26-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Thin-Mustached Dude Behind Our Favorite Holiday Albumnew

This oddball collection skips the predictable stuff and instead offers some rare archival recordings that are guaranteed to make you laugh and/or really creep you out.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Craig Seymour  |  11-24-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

Album Takes an Unconventional Approach to Hip-Hopnew

Williams shows how spoken word can be explosive-tipped and delivered in propulsive patois that puts many a mercurial MC to shame.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Tony Ware  |  11-18-2004  |  Reviews

Second Album Mix of Bubblegum Pop and Post-Punknew

Brooklyn's the Rogers Sisters could just as well be from Athens circa 1982. The group's latest release has you wondering if you've run across a perfectly preserved artifact from over two decades ago.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Tony Ware  |  11-18-2004  |  Reviews

Album Pays Tribute to a Pioneer of American Musicnew

In a market flooded with tribute albums varying in quality from terrible to tremendous, Bloodshot Records manages to hit the higher end of the scale with a fairly well-balanced tribute to the first lady of rockabilly, Wanda Jackson.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  James Kelly  |  11-18-2004  |  Reviews

Helmet Regroups and Changes Its Sound with Mixed Resultsnew

Founder/vocalist/guitarist Page Hamilton has revived Helmet for Size Matters, the group's sixth full-length album. The result is a dated and artistically questionable new record.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Chad Radford  |  11-18-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

Gospel's Donnie McClurkin Takes On His Gay Criticsnew

McClurkin's autobiography, Eternal Victim, Eternal Victor, recounts how, from age 8 to 13, he was repeatedly molested by an uncle -- and offers such abuse as a cause of his later homosexuality. He's been criticized for his claim that religion "delivered" him from being gay.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Ronda Racha Penrice  |  11-18-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

Four Musicians Have a Hell of a Way with Soundsnew

Sung Tongs is a baptism of blissful squalls threaded with melodic wisps, fuzzy pop ritualistically sifted from droning sediment. It reflects the group's varied influences, which include the Beach Boys, Syd Barrett, Captain Beefheart and the Incredible String Band.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Tony Ware  |  11-11-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

Life Seems Neither Morose or Obtuse Enoughnew

Type O Negative's first album in four years features all the group's hallmarks: lyrics both mournful and puerile, delivered in Steele's grave, guttural voice.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Tony Ware  |  11-04-2004  |  Reviews

Trio Takes Much-Needed Turn Toward Substantial Songwritingnew

Slowing down the post-punk velocity and balancing raw electronic textures against stripped-down arrangements and an introspective tenor, Q and Not U has definitely come into its own.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Chad Radford  |  11-04-2004  |  Reviews

Aussie Country Singer Back With New Albumnew

Motherhood will certainly change one's outlook on life, and it has only served to enrich the artistic spirit of Australia's alt-country darling Kasey Chambers. In preparation for her upcoming U.S. tour supporting her third CD, Chambers reflects on how life on the road merges with parenting her 2-year-old.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  James Kelly  |  11-04-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

First CD Remastered, Remixednew

Cerberus Shoal's 1994 self-titled debut walks a fine line between cool exploration and formulaic wankery. The remixed CD reissue of the group's initial album offers a comprehensive look at the group's then-budding yet often misguided sound.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Chad Radford  |  10-28-2004  |  Reviews

Interpol Aims for the Top of the Popsnew

Interpol's second LP, Antics, is a band-on-the-bus record. The tension of Bright Lights is largely replaced by a more confident sound. The album's effect is more immediate, and the band is tighter.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Nikhil Swaminathan  |  10-28-2004  |  Profiles & Interviews

Not a Single Note Rings Superfluousnew

Despite the sinister history behind "Abaddon" -- a Hebrew word for a destructive hell (and as easily a play on abandon) -- Pinback's third full-length is the duo's most assured and plotted.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Tony Ware  |  10-21-2004  |  Reviews

DJ Has Come Into His Own With New Albumnew

Put the name aside, however, because Jaku is still fraught with delicious tension. Live shakuhachi flute, Kodo drums, turntable jabs and free jazz piano all punctuate his melancholic, melodic laments.
Creative Loafing (Atlanta)  |  Tony Ware  |  10-21-2004  |  Reviews

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