AltWeeklies Wire

Gnarls Barkley Never Meant to Go Crazynew

How do you follow up a signature hit for the entire decade? Easy. Stop trying.
Westword  |  Michael Roberts  |  06-30-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Unlikely Pairing of Earth and Jeese Sykes Bring Ambient Doom Metal and Roots Music Closernew

Since Sykes and Earth front man Dylan Carlson met, the individual styles of both Earth and Sykes' band, Jesse Sykes & the Sweet Hereafter, have begun to resemble each other.
Seattle Weekly  |  Brian J. Barr  |  06-30-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Katy Perry on Kissing Girls, Dissing Boys and Making it Bignew

Between her hit single and her gossip-fueling relationship, it seems Perry has already reached full-blown pop star status. But the Santa Barbara-raised youngster asserts that her road to fame has not been easy. Prior to recording and releasing One of the Boys, Perry was just another pretty girl struggling to make it in the industry.
Santa Barbara Independent  |  Aly Comingore  |  06-30-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Ry Cooder Caps His Ambitious 'California Trilogy'new

The good-natured I, Flathead is a juicy celebration of hot rods, desert rats, sci-fi and So Cal culture.
Pasadena Weekly  |  Bliss  |  06-30-2008  |  Reviews

Three 6 Mafia's Long-delayed New Album Exploits Memphis Crimenew

But while grounding their music in the city's crime epidemic, Three 6 Mafia don't actually put much thought into the topic, particularly what it might be like to be the victim of the criminality they glorify.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Chris Herrington  |  06-27-2008  |  Reviews

Prophetic Bridges Milwaukee's Disparate Hip-Hop Scenesnew

Like just about everything in the city, Milwaukee’s hip-hop scenes are divided by racial and geographical boundaries. Without pandering to either demographic, his upcoming album, Mo Profit, Mo Progress, holds appeal to East Side backpackers and North Side trappers alike.
Shepherd Express  |  Evan Rytlewski  |  06-27-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Constantines Get Older, and Betternew

Kensington Heights, their new album, is still rigidly post-punk and sharp as a shimmering blade, but the pace of the record is deliberately restrained and the band's gnashed-teeth anger is more focused, and less wild, than ever before.
The Portland Mercury  |  Ezra Ace Caraeff  |  06-27-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

No One Does It Better Than Spinderellanew

She's uncharacteristically humble in light of her membership in the iconic rap group Salt-n-Pepa, whose relevance has possibly been overshadowed by Cheryl "Salt" Wray and Sandra "Pepa" Denton's recent reality TV appearances.
The Portland Mercury  |  Jalylah Burrell  |  06-27-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Seattle's Fleet Foxes Make Languid, Woodsy Rocknew

The group like their timpani, and their echo, love the sound of waves bouncing off walls, dig the high, lonesome wail of falsetto in harmony. Can a flutist be far behind?
L.A. Weekly  |  Randall Roberts  |  06-27-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Whack Rider: Travelin' 800 Miles for Tomnew

Seeing Tom at the hardware store or coffee shop is ordinary in our town. Flying 800 miles to see him in Phoenix is another trip entirely.
North Bay Bohemian  |  Gabe Meline  |  06-27-2008  |  Concerts

Motley Crue's Latest is a Conscious Effort to Return to '80s Glory Daysnew

Saints tries hard to sound tough and succeeds about half the time, but the Crue used to be much better when they didn't have to constantly remind people how dangerous they were.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Josh Bell  |  06-27-2008  |  Reviews

'Lie Down in the Light' is Will Oldham's Most Countrified Disc Yetnew

There's a subtle, laid-back twang throughout, arriving via fiddle, banjo, pedal-steel guitar, organ, clarinet (?!) and, above all, the old-world voice of Ashley Webber, who proves a better singing partner for Oldham than the more heralded Dawn McCarthy did on 2006's The Letting Go.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Spencer Patterson  |  06-27-2008  |  Reviews

Public Enemy's Chuck D on Nas, Obama and Rhetoricnew

"I think for about six months after, if he gets elected, there will be a sense of euphoria all around the world. Then the real world will set in. He might take some right-wing stances, he's going to try to appease certain elements in society that I don't necessarily gel with. But also, the support and belief in him could lead those factions to sway away from the right."
Montreal Mirror  |  Narcel X  |  06-27-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

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

Weezer's Red Album: Vacuously Tolerablenew

The group's latest CD may be OK when played on a crappy boombox at a pool party; otherwise, it makes a great coaster.
Tucson Weekly  |  Michael Petitti  |  06-26-2008  |  Reviews

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