Flatt & Scruggs
The Best of Flatt & Scruggs (Mercury). Review by Phil Bailey.
The Best of Flatt & Scruggs (Mercury). Review by Phil Bailey.
Diarrhea of a Madman (Metal Blade). Review by Nathan T. Birk.
Time Travel is Lonely (Barsuk). Review by Julio Diaz.
Various Sellouts (UTV). Review by Ian Koss.
Stay Human (Six Degrees). Review by Julio Diaz.
Various Artists (Victory). Review by Nathan T. Birk.
A Voyage Into Trance (Hypnotic/Dragonfly). Review by Troy Mayhew.
Discography 1994-1997 (Second Nature). Review by Nathan T. Birk.
Meet the Tyrants in Therapy (Emotional Coathanger). Review by Julio Diaz.
Weezer (“The Green Album”) (Geffen). Review by Liza Hearon.
Sacred Ground (LMB). Review by David Lee Beowulf.
Hey Jimmy, look at all o’ them flowery words over at Cat Dissections…
Shards of Pol Pottery: The 2001 Remixes (Digital Hardcore). Review by Kiran Aditham.
When you can’t reproduce, you might as well just disappear. Visual testimony courtesy of Transparancy.
This is Where I Came In (Universal). Review by Vanessa Bormann.
Music legend Nick Drake is profiled in Jeroen Berkvens’ documentary A Skin Too Few. James Mann reviews this loving look at a voice that spoke to millions, but died thinking it went unheard.
Mathing Moonlight (Spectra Mobile). Review by Daniel Gill.
The Dismemberment Plan, with Enon, Dälek, and The Gena Rowlands Band at The Sapphire Supper Club in Orlando, FL on May 19, 2001. Concert review by Julio Diaz and Andrew Chadwick. Photos by Ian Koss.
De Loin, Les Choses (Radio Khartoum). Review by Terry Eagan.
Power-Dive (LMB). Review by David Lee Beowulf.
With the thirty-fifth anniversary of debut album Whirlpool, UK shoegaze outfit Chapterhouse is back together again and touring the US as part of Slide Away Music Festival.
The Englert theater hosted Little Feat as they embark on their Last Farewell Tour.
Meiko Kaji’s katana is sharp and looking for revenge in Wandering Ginza Butterfly and its sequel, She Cat Gambler, a stylish pair of early ’70s action films.