AltWeeklies Wire

Is Monotonix the Best Live Band?new

Though a studio recording, Monotonix's Drag City debut EP Body Language is best appreciated as a memento of the delirious tumult this band puts on live.
Houston Press  |  John Nova Lomax  |  04-29-2008  |  Reviews

A New Radio Home for Indie Artistsnew

Welcome to The Movement Radio, a new internet broadcast based out of Pompano Beach.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Jonathan Cunningham  |  04-29-2008  |  Music

Rootz Underground Takes Spiritual Reggae to Higher Heightsnew

The group's music thumps with rebel basslines and thought-provoking lyrics, not just of yesteryear, but rather it transcends time, a key ingredient of the sound they've been creating in the eight years since the band first formed.
New Times Broward-Palm Beach  |  Jonathan Cunningham  |  04-29-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

The Terrible Twos Come Not to Praise Rock but to Bury Itnew

Inspired by older Detroit punks like the Piranhas and the Clone Defects, the Terrible Twos has evolved into an art-damaged wrecking crew of undeniable force.
Metro Times  |  Wendy Case  |  04-29-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Matt Pond PA to Break Up, but No One Will Leave the Bandnew

Pond has announced plans to end the musical project he began in Philadelphia 10 years ago. Then he'll team up with the same four guys to record and tour as the Dark Leaves. Call it a gimmick, but to Pond it's all about shaking up the band's artistic balance of power.
Isthmus  |  Rich Albertoni  |  04-29-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Girl Talk Melds the Top 40 Hits You'd Never Dance to On Their Ownnew

Greg Gillis talks about his fans ("frat dudes like it, rap guys like it, rock guys like it"), quitting his day job as a biomedical engineer ("real cool"), and sampling culture ("I always understood sampling as an instrument").
New Haven Advocate  |  Vivian Nereim  |  04-29-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Nick Lowe, a Maverick at 60new

For someone who sees himself as relatively obscure, Lowe's been showing up a lot lately. Last June he released his 13th studio album, At My Age, and in February celebrated the 30th anniversary and reissue of his 1978 solo debut, Jesus of Cool.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Margaret Welsh  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

'New Yorker' Pop-music Critic Sasha Frere-Jones Chatsnew

On criticisms of his criticism, the blogosphere and quality vs. quantity.
Pittsburgh City Paper  |  Andy Mulkerin  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

The New Roots Album has Some Feeling Nostalgicnew

I didn't get hardcore Rootsy until '99 when they dropped their commercial breakthrough Things Fall Apart, which people were touting as the last great hip-hop album of the 20th century. (Looking back, it kinda was.)
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Craig D. Lindsey  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Rat Bastard Takes International Noise Conference on the Roadnew

Instead of booking a cross-country Laundry Room Squelchers tour, he decided to hold a different International Noise Conference in a different city nearly every night through April.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Doug Wallen  |  04-28-2008  |  Concerts

Tokyo's Colette Columbirch Hope to Call Philly Homenew

On top of dealing with the usual impression-management of a musical existence (wooing bloggers, bookers, promoters, A&R tools, fans and journalists alike), Japanese hush-tronica duo Colette Columbirch have got to deal with impressing the toughest critic of all -- the U.S. government.
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Caralyn Green  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Laura Veirs Sails Stormy Sea of Lovenew

As Veirs explains from her home, Saltbreakers is both a metaphorical voyage into the brine and a beautifully poetic journal describing the end of one relationship and another's beginning.
The Georgia Straight  |  Alexander Varty  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Sons & Daughters' Gamble Pays Offnew

The Gift finds Scott Paterson, singer-guitarist Adele Bethel, bassist Ailidh Lennon, and drummer David Gow giving their fans something that's decidedly different from past offerings.
The Georgia Straight  |  Mike Usinger  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Pharrell Williams Puts Music Ahead of Moneynew

The in-demand producer hits the road with Chad Hugo and Shay Haley. This time around, though, all three are dedicated to acting like a real band -- even completing a small-venue circuit.
Westword  |  Michael Roberts  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

Kristopher Hull Tries to Bring Classical Music to the Streetsnew

Armed with a full-size upright piano, a repertoire of Chopin's etudes and nocturnes, and his nerves, the 33-year-old pianist planned to storm Miami Beach's Lincoln Road, guerrilla-style.
Miami New Times  |  Arielle Castillo  |  04-28-2008  |  Profiles & Interviews

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