Via
Via (Dromedary Records). Review by Peter Lindblad.
Via (Dromedary Records). Review by Peter Lindblad.
Hell on Wheels – Tour Stories: Remembered, Remixed, Remastered will make your liver shudder. Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Disappearer EP. Review by Julius C. Lacking.
The Window (Top Shelf). Review by Judy Craddock.
A tribute to Low and a whole lot of nervous energy join forces to make a memorable evening of music for Julius C. Lacking.
In/Out/In (Three Lobed Recordings). Review by Scott Adams.
This week’s compendium of five carefully selected albums are all connected by a change encounter with Julius C. Lacking … maybe it was the tags, or perhaps the artwork, but the results are clear.
New Long Leg (4AD). Review by Julius C. Lacking.
Sound Salvation takes on current events with a playlist addressing the current fight for racial and social justice in America and the battles playing out in the streets in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd.
If the LAPD is hassling your punk rock show, move it out into the desert and bus the punks out to party in peace.
Frozen Flowers Curse the Day (Trace Elements Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Prospect of the Deep, Volume One (Indivisible Music). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
No Sense EP (Fire Talk Records). Review by Jen Cray.
Adventure (Good Charamel Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Anti-Hero (I’m Single Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Bully greets Orlando with apathy and anger toward one of its theme parks. Jen Cray smiles and thinks, “Man, this band would have fit in well in the nineties!”
Cemetery Highrise Slum (Collect Records). Review by Jen Cray.
An expansive and exhaustive behind-the-scenes account of Nirvana’s meteoric rise to fame, and the untimely death of its iconic frontman, Kurt Cobain.
Flutes, leather vests on bare skin, werewolf songs, and kids on stage. It’s not your average recipe for a rock show, but then, as Matthew Moyer points out, Faun Fables is not a rock band.
Good things come to May Terry, who waited through a half-dozen bands before Grass Widow closed out the Panache Northside Showcase in NYC.
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.