Avion
Avion (Console/Image Entertainment). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Avion (Console/Image Entertainment). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Films About Ghosts…The Best Of (Geffen). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Crossfade (Columbia/ Earshot). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Between Here and Gone (Sony Nashville). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Something Beautiful (Rounder/Zoe). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Generation of the Numb (Retrospect). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Embedded (Liberation/Warner). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Strange Seasons (Trampoline). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Singer/songwriter duo Wilshire’s major label album New Universe is a tale of perseverance, bravery and great songs. Andrew Ellis gets the scoop from husband and wife team Micah and Lori Wilshire about their rise to the top.
New Universe (Sony). Review by Andrew Ellis.
The Internet’s first on-line songwriting service proves to be a big hit. “Trespassers May Be Eaten”, “My Dad Thinks I’m Gay” and “My Mother Doesn’t Like You” are just some of the products of a virtual request-a-song service that is hitting all the right notes with site visitors. Andrew Ellis finds out more.
Thickskin (Blind Man Sound). Review by Andrew Ellis.
As Steve Bertrand returns with a new band Avion, the former Tories frontman tells Andrew Ellis why five heads are better than one.
Go (RCA). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Natural Selection (Epic). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Stop All the World Now (Epic). Review by Andrew Ellis.
For Never and Ever (Atlantic). Review by Andrew Ellis.
For Stars and Moon. Review by Andrew Ellis.
Greatest Hits Vol. II (Trampoline Records). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Danny Wilde – and his band The Rembrandts – saw a dream come true, then become a nightmare as their theme from Friends skyrocketed up the charts. After some years in hiatus, Wilde and the Rembrandts have returned. Andrew Ellis chronicles the journey.
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.