I wouldn’t have guessed it, I’ll admit — I never figured that NYC noiserockers Parts & Labor could top 2006’s excellent Stay Afraid, much less do it so effortlessly. But here we are with Mapmaker, which truly lives up to its name…
Written on April 17, 2007 | Posted in
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Look no further than Morello’s own interpretation of their musical styling to discover what their new album is all about: “Morello’s debut release Twelve Ways to Breathe is the Irish-Italian answer to American fans who worship Emo/Screamo bands…”
Written on April 17, 2007 | Posted in
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Love Me Destroyer, a four-piece from Colorado, fall somewhere between Jawbox and Braid, with a little thrash thrown in. On The Things Around Us Burn, the songs are mostly protest music in the style of Guy Pizzicato…
Written on April 17, 2007 | Posted in
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Where in the hell did this come from? (Okay, apparently from Portland, and from the ashes of Wisconsin pop-punkers Ben Grim, but you get my meaning.) Get past the goofy cover art concept…
Written on April 17, 2007 | Posted in
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Steve Albini is ruining music. True, he’s probably made a hundred good records and more than a few great ones, but that’s exactly the problem: he’s made so many good records, so many well-loved records…
Written on April 17, 2007 | Posted in
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You can sneer and the stick the ambient-noise CDs in the car stereo all you want, but it’s a fact: done right, nothing beats a good power-pop song. And with I Can’t Go On, I’ll Go On, Silverlake/Echo Park popsters The Broken West…
Written on April 17, 2007 | Posted in
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It’s funny, but while Arbouretum’s “Pale Rider Blues” swipes the title of a classic Eastwood flick, it sure as hell sounds like the band picked the wrong one to swipe from. This is far closer to High Plains Drifter, for my money…
Written on April 12, 2007 | Posted in
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phew…I was frantically trying to get some new reviews up today, primarily because Arbouretum are playing tonight at The Mink, and after (finally) hearing their 2nd album, Rites of Uncovering, holy fucking crap is that show going to be good. Read the review on the site (link below). Go. See. Be stunned and amazed (and […]
Written on April 12, 2007 | Posted in
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Unsane are a very simple band: the NYC threesome have spent their entire career perfecting the heavily syncopated and quite catchy midtempo hardcore that they developed in the late ’80s alongside Helmet and Rapeman…
Written on April 12, 2007 | Posted in
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They just don’t make ’em like this anymore (well, other than this CD, that is). With a tremendous range of musical styling, Motion Commmotion’s newest self-titled EP presents a landscape of spectral talents. From the violin and clarinet to rocking bass guitar…
Written on April 12, 2007 | Posted in
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The Mains are nothing special, but for some reason, everything on The Higher You Get, The Higher You Get works perfectly together. Luckily, the guitar riffs don’t sound like any band in particular, but rather are just what I’d expect from a rock band…
Written on April 12, 2007 | Posted in
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Mabou plays instrumental rock heavily in the My Bloody Valentine vein. They experiment with various kinds of distortion and noise. Their record, Our Last Sleep is Our Final Awakening, is almost entirely instrumental. They play trance-inducing grooves…
Written on April 12, 2007 | Posted in
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I have to admit that I was primed for disappointment with this album — I’ve seen and heard too many reunions-after- long-hiatuses end badly. Despite my doubts, Lifetime is back, and it’s like they never left…
Written on April 12, 2007 | Posted in
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Drummer Zach Hill and guitarist Spencer Seim of Hella gained cult fame for the jaw-dropping density and virtuosity of their work as a duo in the early 2000s, but by 2005 they were showing signs…
Written on April 12, 2007 | Posted in
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Analog Heartbreak made me a little nervous with the liner notes to their self-titled EP. Not only do they thank the big J.C., but the cover features a tattoo bearing the legend “Deo Vindice,” or “protected by god.” Scary stuff for us secular types who still remember when people wore Stryper t-shirts…
Written on April 4, 2007 | Posted in
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Yep, new stuff for the new month, with more to come (hopefully very) soon. For right now, we’ve got a new featured band & some new reviews… Featured Band: Miss Leslie and Her Juke-Jointers. Reviews: Comeback Kid; local H-towners Ragged Hearts; The Comas; Analog Heartbreak; Sue Foley; Mess Up the Mess; The Sleeping (reissue); & […]
Written on April 4, 2007 | Posted in
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Stemage bills itself as “Metroid Metal,” and I have no freakin’ idea what that means. It must be an inside joke, especially since Stemage is the creation of Grant Henry. Mr. Henry plays all the instruments, writes all the lyrics, and does all the singing…
Written on April 4, 2007 | Posted in
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I hate to damn with faint praise, but after repeated listens to the reissue of The Sleeping’s 2004 album Believe What We Tell You, I’m afraid I have to — I’ve got to confess that while the album’s okay, I’m not sure it really merited reissuing…
Written on April 4, 2007 | Posted in
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Okay, so this is really weird. I’d heard of Ragged Hearts off and on for the past few years, so I picked up their debut full-length, Her Bright White Light, on a recent CD-buying binge, figuring I’d see what they were like…
Written on April 4, 2007 | Posted in
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Mess Up the Mess is a hysterical faux-“riot grrl” band from D.C. whose jangly brand of “messcore” reminds me of a prison break from the kitten pound. The music’s mostly in a Buzzcocks-cum-Pixies style, but the harpsichord/keyboard accompaniment truly completes the package…
Written on April 4, 2007 | Posted in
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It’s not every day you randomly run across a noted female blues/roots artist, especially one who has several albums with the Austin-based Antone’s label. Being a Texas gal myself, I’m automatically wary…
Written on April 4, 2007 | Posted in
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It seemed for a while that Victory Records was shifting its focus to more melodic bands, like Spitalfield and Bayside and eschewing the hardcore days of yore. Not the case, it seems. Comeback Kid’s Broadcasting pretty much proves…
Written on April 4, 2007 | Posted in
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No, I’ve never taken drugs (aside, mind you, from an accidental high I got just from being at a House of Pain/Cypress Hill concert, but that wasn’t intentional…). No real good reason why not…
Written on April 4, 2007 | Posted in
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Got some new stuff online, including an interview with Louis Posen (of Take Action! Tour/Hopeless Recs/Sub City) fame and a bunch of reviews: Palomar; Bayside; Unsparing Sea; Karrie Hopper; Jihad Jerry and the Evildoers; Smoke Or Fire; This Moment In Black History; & Tomihira.
Written on March 26, 2007 | Posted in
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Unsparing Sea is the perfect name for this band. This is staring at a slate-grey ocean kind of music, Meryl Streep in The French Lieutenant’s Woman kind of music…
Written on March 24, 2007 | Posted in
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San Francisco songwriter Dean Tomihira challenges audiences to find just one song they like on his eponymous band’s debut full-length, Play Dead…
Written on March 24, 2007 | Posted in
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This Moment In Black History play the same hybrid of garage rock and hardcore punk that has served the Wrangler Brutes and Houston’s own Fatal Flying Guilloteens, but they have some practicing…
Written on March 24, 2007 | Posted in
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“It’s true there is a color divide / It’s not black or white, it’s green.” Nice. I already dig this band’s worldview. I’ve not heard Smoke Or Fire’s previous LP…
Written on March 24, 2007 | Posted in
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Damn, I’ve missed stuff like this. Back when I was a mere musical tadpole, smart, self-deprecating, guitar-heavy indie-rock bands seemed to rule the freakin’ world…
Written on March 24, 2007 | Posted in
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Make no mistake about it, Jihad Jerry, aka Gerry Casale, is Devo, and Devo is the ’80s. The opening bars of “The Time is Now,” the first track on Mine Is Not a Holy War, slap you back to that most maligned…
Written on March 24, 2007 | Posted in
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Karrie Hopper sings old-fashioned sounding folk songs reminiscent of Palace-era Will Oldham. She has a pretty, unaffected alto voice that sounds somewhat innocent and childlike…
Written on March 24, 2007 | Posted in
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Straight up, I’m not really a huge Bayside fan. I had heard of the band before but never really heard much from them up until now. Obviously, I therefore have no real idea how The Walking Wounded stacks up against their previous output…
Written on March 24, 2007 | Posted in
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I know more than a bit premature, but with The Light Divides it sure feels like Winterpills have crafted one of the best damn albums of 2007. Don’t let the whole “loved by NPR” hype…
Written on March 17, 2007 | Posted in
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Yep, new stuff up for the new week. Featured Bands: Sharks and Sailors; The Western Civilization. Live: DragonForce. Reviews: Loney, Dear; Die Hunns; The Jonx; Lucas Cates; Sebadoh re-issue; Teenage Harlets; tvfordogs; & Mike Uva.
Written on March 13, 2007 | Posted in
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I’ve had a bit of a hard time with the music that’s been coming out of Scandinavia (primarily Sweden, actually) for the past year or so. Whether it’s Jens Lekman, Sondre Lerche, Frida Hyvonen…
Written on March 12, 2007 | Posted in
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One of the coolest things about being an observer of the local H-town scene, at least for me, is getting to watch a lot of hometown folks evolve. The band process here works the same…
Written on March 12, 2007 | Posted in
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On his second solo release, Where Have You Been, Cleveland, Ohio-based Mike Uva doesn’t stray too far from bands like The Go-Betweens and singer/songwriters…
Written on March 12, 2007 | Posted in
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Hmm. Lots of comparisons to the Foo Fighters in this one-sheet — color me ready to be disappointed. Indie-rock bands love to compare themselves to the Foo Fighters…
Written on March 12, 2007 | Posted in
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Some bands live to record, and some bands record to live. The Teenage Harlets (their misspelling, not mine) clearly fall in the latter category…
Written on March 12, 2007 | Posted in
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Whenever an album is rereleased with a passel of bonus tracks, there’s a myth that suggests that it’s a classic worthy of being rediscovered by a new generation…
Written on March 12, 2007 | Posted in
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