The Oswald Effect, Love & Sabotage

It seems like everyone wants to be Muse these days. Well, there are worse bands you could emulate. Unlike Muse, however, Love & Sabotage by The Oswald Effect rarely worships at any other altar than that of the god of energetically empty political pretension…

No Age, Nouns

Remember the days (quick caveat: I don’t remember these days, but I think I’m right about this; at least Wikipedia tells me I am) when making music that sounded like how a venue looked was interesting? Those days in the mid-’70s when great musicians were all hanging out together…

The Gena Rowlands Band, Flesh and Spirits

I have been sitting on this review for many months, really unable to get my head around Flesh and Spirits, the third album from The Gena Rowlands Band, an ever-shifting project centered on…

Gallhammer, Ill Innocence

Gallhammer is an all-girl black metal band from Tokyo patterned after Hellhammer and its psuedo-successor Celtic Frost. If that sentence alone does not make you at least check out their Myspace…

Update: Andrew W.K. (7/5!) + Hollywood Black (6/28!) + New Bloggers + Live Reviews + More

Yeah, this last update was a big one — we’re gonna have to skip a week or two after this, as I’ll be flying out tomorrow AM for Arizona, off on The Great Grand Canyon Adventure/March of Death ’08, so we tried to get a large bunch of new things up on the site… First […]

Hollywood Black, Crooked Shepherd EP

I’ve got to be honest, here — much as I wanted to, I just didn’t like Hollywood Black’s debut, Two Thousand Years Of Progress, all that much. It had the right parts in most of the right places, sure, but taken as a whole it felt petulant and immature…

Melissa Giges, Far Beyond the Pacific

Today is a confusing day for me. I swear I spent eight hours at work, but it felt like I was in the waiting room of my dentist’s office. You know the ambience: old musty couches, lamps from the 1970s, and copies of Highlights intermingled issues of Cosmo

Your Black Star, Beasts

A band’s physical album is often an exercise in the art of presentation. Even major label releases with all the money of Midas behind them are often bargain-basement CD cases and booklets little removed from the practical paper sleeve. Why waste money on pictures and lyrics, right?…

Sunny Day Sets Fire, Stranger Remix EP

Sunny Day Sets Fire plays with a colorful sound palette derived from their respective places of origin: Sardinia, Hong Kong, Italy, Canada, and London. If only our little world was as harmonious as this quintet…

The Raveonettes, Lust, Lust, Lust

Lust, Lust, Lust walks you into a distorted world filled with love, sex, desire, and sin. Stripping away the more garage-rock sound of The Raveonettes’ last album, Pretty in Black, Sune Rose Wagner anchors his sound with feedback as ’50s guitar hooks circle…

Plök, You Tie a Rock to Your Leg Cuz it Fits You

Three piece Danish neo-Punk outfit Plök’s first American release, You Tie a Rock to Your Leg Cuz it Fits You, sounds familiar. “Familiar” in that it sounds derivative. “Derivative” in that it sounds stolen. Stolen from something circa Warped Tour 2002…

pArAdOx OnE, Inventing Stars

Inventing Stars, by pArAdOx OnE (also known as Phil Jackson), is one of those albums that you have playing while doing other things. Things like driving, household chores, and general life things that are typically empty without the sound of something musical…

Jon McKiel, The Nature of Things

From the first listen of this CD, it was like meeting someone that you know you’re gonna get along well with. Jon McKiel is another Canadian import and has recently released the CD The Nature of Things, a follow-up to his debut self-titled 2006 disc…

Alkari, Kublai Khan EP

Some days, it can be damn difficult to pin down a band that doesn’t fit in any kind of neat scenesterized box. What are you, if you’re not nu-New Wave, screamo, post-punk, metalcore, or space-rock? Just guitars and drums and a voice — what the hell’s that, these days?…

Update: Latchkey Kids + New Reviews + Three Shows To See Tonight (The Sword/Band of Annuals/Lenny Briscoe!)

[UPDATE: Anybody know how to convert all my blog posts over to WordPress? I posted this damn thing last evening, and yet, when I got back online this AM, lo and behold, it still wasn’t up there. Fuck. Sorry, y’all…] Update time, update time — if you happen to glance at our happy little homepage, […]

Wild Sweet Orange, The Whale EP

There’s a certain type of music that, even upon first listen, makes you miss someone; or, maybe more appropriately, makes you miss a feeling. It’s hard to explain, really, but we all know this type of music — songs that touch the nerve of emotion that gets you…

The Sword, Gods of the Earth

Synchronicity, when it happens, can be a truly beautiful thing. I’ve been stuck in House-Moving Hell for the past month or so, with all my crap boxed and bagged and sitting in one garage or another, and in the process of packing the ridiculous stacks of books in the back of the house…

The Pleasures of Merely Circulating, Four Songs 530 Seconds of Pleasure/The Pleasures of Merely Circulating

The Pleasures of Merely Circulating are from Marfa. If that doesn’t ring a bell, it’s a town of about 2500 near Big Bend. Far from being one of the innumerable backwards hamlets that litter East, West, North, South, and Central Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas…

The Old Haunts, Poisonous Times

Strong bass lines and solid chord structure musically define Poisonous Times, the third release from Olympia, Washington, act The Old Haunts. It’s evident that this garage-rock band won’t have to work late-late nights to keep on the lights…

Normal Love, Normal Love

Normal Love’s musical lineup is basically your standard rock group, but their music is anything but. On their debut album, Normal Love, they play completely composed music. The music sounds like Ruins playing Anthony Braxton-style jazz or maybe 20th century classical music…

The Grand Archives, The Grand Archives

The Grand Archives is the latest project from Mat Brooke (Band of Horses, Carissa’s Wierd). The Archives’ self-titled debut prides itself on being light-hearted and uplifting, and indeed, it’s the audio equivalent of a sunny, cloudless day…

Fuck Buttons, Street Horrrsing

Noise music is a genre rooted in experimentation. Songs that fly past conventional lengths, guitars played in strange tunings just to see what sounds they yield, volume levels turned up just to see how loud they can go — you get the picture. But all of these ideas come within a frame…

The Dagger Brothers, You Don’t Have to Be Mad to Be in The Dagger Brothers but It Does Help

About halfway through this album, I came to the conclusion that it must be a joke. I certainly hope this wasn’t a serious musical venture. I advise The Dagger Brothers to return the Casios they used for both the drum and the synth tones for the album to the 1980s yard sale…

Band of Annuals, Let Me Live

The first time through Let Me Live, the second album by Salt Lake City’s Band of Annuals, I wasn’t blown away. Nowhere close, in fact. It felt slow, a little dull, nearly sleepy at points. I just shrugged and turned off the CD, moving on to other things…

Tonight’s Dilemma: mr. Gnome @ Rudz / Papermoons & Bright Men @ The Mink / Dizzypilot & Murdocks @ Walter’s

Yeah, you read that title right — tonight’s another “damn, I wish I had a cloning machine…” night, with great, great things happening all over our (not-so-)fair city… Option Uno: Tops on my list is tonight at Rudyard’s, where Clevelanders mr. Gnome will be blowing the roof off, setting hair on fire, and creeping everybody […]

The Set of Red Things, Who Touches Pitch Defiles Herself

This album brings out a lot of mixed feelings in me. I really like some of it, but then the bad parts are just too bad to let go. The first track, “Between Tangled Wire & Sand Bags,” was really sweet; it reminded me a lot of Deloused-era Volta or Volcano!…

Scarpoint, The Silence We Deserve

Despite being around for eight years already, Swedish metal band Scarpoint has finally released their debut full-length, The Silence We Deserve. The band was started by Henrik Englund (vocals) and Zoran Kukulj (lead guitar), and with the addition of Eric Holmberg…

My Milky Way Arms, My Milky Way Arms

Dear My Milky Way Arms: thanks for totally ruining my long-time love for (post-Gary Numan, pre-Talking Heads-ish) proto-electronic music. It’s over. Forever. And it’s your fault. Your self-titled debut EP sounds like a junior varsity marriage between Holy Fuck and Hot Chip…

mr. Gnome, Deliver This Creature

It’s really, really hard for me to believe that that voice comes from where it does. One of the absolute best things about Cleveland duo mr. Gnome, comprised of guitarist/vocalist Nicole Barrile and drummer Sam Meister, is Barille’s singing; frankly, it’s incredible…

Local H, Twelve Angry Months

It’s said that hindsight is 20/20, and as many musicians age, it often seems to be the case. Musician Scott Lucas started off angry at the Chicago suburbs on 1995’s Ham Fisted, slammed relationships and unwanted fans on 1997’s As Good As Dead

First To Leave, Forging A Future

Some people just have good yelling voices. Trust me, I know this; I went to military school. And Matt Foster, the frontman for Bay Area band First To Leave, has got the right pipes for scream-singing…

Drag the River, You Can’t Live This Way

Drag the River sounds a lot like Son Volt. More precisely, imagine Jeff Tweedy breaking off to form Son Volt instead of Wilco — that’s what Drag the River sounds like, complete with poppier melodies and vaguer lyrics. The band centers on two guys who sing and write the songs…

Sera Cahoone, Only as the Day Is Long

All of the press releases, record reviews, and magazine articles that come from Seattle all say the same thing about their hometown songstress Sera Cahoone: something like, “finally our city is finding its voice and stripping itself from our once-proud grunge aesthetic”…

ZibraZibra, 777

Cheesy guitar solos, nauseating high-octave boy vocals followed by non-sequitur lyrics and electro-manic music is what embodies spastic quartet ZibraZibra. Those things are not necessarily positive…

Vopat, Sometimes It Will

Honestly, Vopat’s Sometimes It Will is actually a beautiful album, and it stays surprisingly interesting for a collection of Explosions In The Sky-esque instrumental ambient-rock movements…

Sun Kil Moon, April

Mark Kozelek’s sound has become his language, the way he sets himself apart from emulation and the derivatives that seem so common these days. It typically takes three chords to recognize a song as being a Sun Kil Moon composition…

The Ruby Suns, Sea Lion

Though I can’t quite put my finger on it, there’s something about Sea Lion‘s packaging and artwork that perfectly fits the album’s sound. Kudos to artist Amee Kathryn for accomplishing (let alone even attempting) this feat…

La Brea, La Brea

Over the last several years, there have been a growing number of instrumental bands whose musical vision is focused on gorgeous ambient melodies, hypnotic chords, and intense musical progressions…

The Johnbenders, The Johnbenders

The early 2000s saw an influx saw a huge influx of emocore bands anxiously awaiting their chance to make it in the indie club circuit, which begs the question: do we really need one more?…

Update: The Ruby Suns (Tonight!) + Sun Kil Moon + Raconteurs + Goldfrapp + Epochs + More

How do I always end up like this? Argh…the day just slip-slides away from me, I swear… Anyway, I wanted to post ’cause in the past 7 days or so we’ve now put up two separate batches of reviews & such, and I was woefully unable to post about the first bunch before leaving town […]


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