AltWeeklies Wire

When Tristan Prettyman Get So Popular?new

a) Who is this chick? b) Why is she suddenly so insanely popular? c) Why do I have no idea who she is? d) Why does this unfamiliarity make me feel so inadequate?
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Caralyn Green  |  05-05-2008  |  Reviews

John Reis Drops His Other Efforts to March to One Drumnew

Indeed, See You in Magic, the Night Marchers' debut (co-released by Vagrant Records and Reis's own imprint, Swami), pulls together many of the styles that he's touched upon over the years: punk, early rock, superpowered R&B and more.
Westword  |  Michael Roberts  |  05-05-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Dizzee Rascal Returns to His Promising Startnew

Maths + English has its flaws -- focusing a little too much, yes, on how much cred Rascal has (or should be seen as having) -- but it mostly serves as a resounding return to form for an oddly voiced rapper.
Dallas Observer  |  Pete Freedman  |  05-05-2008  |  Reviews

Psych Freaks Indian Jewelry Are Out Therenew

The band is a total aesthetic package, and I can see how a photo shoot would rank higher for them than an interview. Words are words and whatever, but dressing up like a militant cult member is performance art. And when they do it, at least, it's a show worth seeing.
Chicago Reader  |  Miles Raymer  |  05-05-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Portishead is Back and More Depressing than Evernew

As a minimalist distillation of the emotional judo that's the band's specialty, Third is an undeniable coup. Beth Gibbons and company have graduated to a new sophistication, conveying with tiny gestures and rough stabs what used to take them long builds and whole songs.
Chicago Reader  |  Brian Nemtusak  |  05-05-2008  |  Reviews

Foals Aren't in It for the Money or the Famenew

If every so-called "new Radiohead" group sounded as energetic, enthusiastic and decidedly unlike any overwrought Thom Yorke self-indulgence as these reformed math rockers, the music world would be a much better place.
NOW Magazine  |  Tim Perlich  |  05-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Robyn Repositionednew

People on this side of the pond are finally catching on to the reinvented Swedish future-pop darling; her latest album is getting a proper release here after much hype and blog love from the likes of Perez Hilton and hipster music sites like Pitchforkmedia.
NOW Magazine  |  Evan Davies  |  05-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Jay Reatard Grows Upnew

Memphis' garage-punk rising star on rowdy fans, obsessive collectors, prospecting record companies, and a career-changing embrace of melody.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Andrew Earles  |  05-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Handmadenew

Yeltsin is still the tight as sardines band that they've always been; they just rock a little harder now.
Eugene Weekly  |  Jeremy Ohmes  |  05-02-2008  |  Reviews

The Intimate Confessions of Tegan and Saranew

The Quin sisters charm, mope and brood their way through the album, calculating each emotional ebb and flow to manipulate their romantic interests.
Shepherd Express  |  Evan Rytlewski  |  05-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Returning Band Members Renew Testamentnew

Depending on how you want to score it, Testament ranks as either the No. 5 or 6 all-time-greatest thrash band -- the riff-roaring kings of the junior varsity, trailing behind Metallica, Slayer, Anthrax, and Megadeth.
Cleveland Scene  |  D.X. Ferris  |  05-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Me vs. Coachellanew

Four days camping in the desert for the sake of music.
Las Vegas Weekly  |  Aaron Thompson  |  05-02-2008  |  Music

Nortec Collective's Bostich + Fussible Stay Groundednew

Nortec Collective Presents Bostich + Fussible: Tijuana Sound Machine is all about returning to roots and root inspirations, while constantly evolving as electronic composers.
Los Angeles CityBeat  |  Will K. Shilling  |  05-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Robyn Returns in Command of Her Own Careernew

While many of her tabloid-bait contemporaries have crashed and burned, today the 28-year-old Swede is a comeback queen.
Montreal Mirror  |  Erik Leijon  |  05-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Kills are on Targetnew

The duo weathered hurricanes, new-age hippies and tabloid hell to make Midnight Boom.
Montreal Mirror  |  Lorraine Carpenter  |  05-02-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

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