AltWeeklies Wire

Where Hip-hop Wentnew

Gold: New Jack Swing, a genre overview, and and What Does It All Mean?, the collected works of cut-up pioneer Steinski, tell the story of rap going beyond itself.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Michaelangelo Matos  |  06-24-2008  |  Reviews

Legendary Avant-Garde Musician and Philosopher Henry Flynt Performs Again After 25 Yearsnew

Before he called it quits in 1984, he recorded long drone pieces and shorter country jams, collaborated with Tony Conrad, Pandit Pran Nath, and Yoko Ono, and even replaced John Cale in the Velvet Underground for two weeks in 1966. He also pursued mathematics at Harvard and New York University and economics at the New School.
Baltimore City Paper  |  Marc Masters  |  06-24-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Canadian Proto-Punk Legends Simply Saucer Hit Detroit ... Finallynew

When Canadian avant-garde punk legends Simply Saucer make their Motor City debut, it will be the fulfillment of a dream that dates back decades. From the SRC and the MC5 to the Stooges and ? & the Mysterians, the musical spirit of Detroit has loomed heavily on the Saucer's radar since the group's formation in 1973.
Metro Times  |  Michael Hurtt  |  06-24-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Bill Frisell Still Views Music as Humanity's Common Groundnew

What connects his eclecticism? Restlessness perhaps. But it's all part of Frisell's ongoing investigation of music as a way to obliterate boundaries.
Metro Times  |  Chris Handyside  |  06-24-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Major Labels Could Learn a Thing or Two About File-Sharing from Lil Waynenew

Lil Wayne's Tha Carter III, which came out June 10 on Universal subsidiary Cash Money, was one of the most anticipated albums of 2008, even though the sheer amount of material Wayne has already released in the past year -- including dozens of web-only tracks and several album-length mix tapes -- threatened to try his fans' patience as well as overload their hard drives.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  06-24-2008  |  Music

Putting the Pemberton Festival on the Mapnew

The B.C. summer-concert season's much-hyped mega event, Pemberton Festival, didn't come together by accident. Still, the three-day showcase, which will see 100 acts descend on the town of Pemberton, B.C., from July 25 to 27, could just as easily have ended up elsewhere.
The Georgia Straight  |  Mike Usinger  |  06-23-2008  |  Concerts

Your R. Kelly's-been-acquitted Mixtapenew

It's become reasonable to suspect that if you're rich enough or famous enough, there's little you can be put in prison for. Combine the two, and you couldn't be convicted if you wanted to -- even if you committed your crime on videotape.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Brian McManus  |  06-23-2008  |  Music

Stop Trying to Make Alanis Morissette's Latest 'Jagged Little Pill, Part 2'new

The thing is, Flavors of Entanglement is a breakup album, but it's not, y'know, raw like Pill. Its anger is contained, matured. Ripe and self-possessed.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Caralyn Green  |  06-23-2008  |  Reviews

How a Cartoon Band Landed a Real-life Tournew

Brendon Small earned his hardcore musical cred in a most unusual manner – through a cartoon. He is the creator, writer and main voice actor of the hit cartoon series, Metal­ocalypse.
NOW Magazine  |  Evan Davies  |  06-23-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Rose Hill Drive is Retro, So Deal With Itnew

Moon is the New Earth features several entertainingly excessive blues-rock booglarizers, the groups expands their horizons to include power pop, garagey rave-ups and even vintage psychedelia.
Westword  |  Michael Roberts  |  06-23-2008  |  Reviews

Lil Wayne Proves He Can Make a Cohesive Albumnew

Tha Carter III is pop rap to giggle to and marvel at, from "Phone Home," where Wayne gives his outer-space shtick the full treatment, to "Misunderstood," in which he disses Al Sharpton and imparts that he lives next door to a child molester.
Westword  |  Ben Westhoff  |  06-23-2008  |  Reviews

Weezer Phones in Its New Albumnew

The group's latest self-titled release is practically a novelty disc, albeit a notably lazy one.
Westword  |  Michael Roberts  |  06-23-2008  |  Reviews

Sub Pop's Twentieth Anniversary Spurs Denver's Unlikeliest Band Reunionnew

The Fluid was the first group based outside the Pacific Northwest to ink with Sub Pop, the indie that served as the launching pad for what became known as the grunge sound; as such, it became a key component of a musical revolution that helped define the late-'80s/early-'90s rock era.
Westword  |  Michael Roberts  |  06-23-2008  |  Music

Dove Hunter Finally Drops Anticipated Debutnew

Dove Hunter hasn't just been playing small, one-off gigs in various spots around the region or to sparse audiences; the band's been wowing crowded rooms at Dallas', Fort Worth's and Denton's favorite clubs with its intricate roots- and alt-country-influenced brand of rock since forming two years ago.
Dallas Observer  |  Pete Freedman  |  06-23-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Weezer Makes One-Third of a Decent Albumnew

The rest, though: unlistenable, nothing to see here, move along.
Dallas Observer  |  Robert Wilonsky  |  06-23-2008  |  Reviews

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