Blued, Bright and Certain

Judging by the song “Perpetual Leather,” Blued is comprised of a bunch of cheeky buggers, but you know what? It’s cool. That song is all about making it big and being able to say, “Yeah baby, that’s right, that’s right it’s for real”…

Tokyo Police Club, A Lesson in Crime

A volatile musical adventure through interplanetary influences such as David Bowie and Radiohead, Tokyo Police Club makes their first mark on the new millennium with their new CD, A Lesson in Crime, making futuristic indie-rock…

Silversun Pickups, Carnavas

I’ve wondered for years that what would’ve happened if My Bloody Valentine had followed up 1991’s Loveless with some further step in the evolution of overdriven, fuzzed-out shoegazer rock; now I think I know…

Anthill, Waiting for the Sun

Anthill has been growing on me. One of the difficulties with reviewing a bunch of stuff at the same time is that it’s easy to get hooked on the album that creates the biggest splash or makes the strongest first impression. This framing effect is even stronger when the other albums are less accessible…

Aspen It Is, Release Me! From the Weights of Gravity

Just like the infamous line from Dumb and Dumber, Aspen It Is reminds me of my adolescent days spent shooting Nerf guns and dueling it out on Nintendo-64. Their album Release Me! From the Weights of Gravity deals with…

Various Artists, Hair: Chicago Punk Cuts

Hair: Chicago Punk Cuts, as you would expect from the title, compiles fourteen unreleased songs by different Chicago punk bands, spanning the range of punk and hardcore. From Explode and Make Up’s ’90s pop-punk, to The Killing Tree’s hardcore thrash…

The Slits, Revenge of the Killer Slits

The Slits are back! After making us wait for 25 years, they’ve rewarded our patience with a new record. The Slits’ new EP,Revenge of the Killer Slits, shows them in fine form. With two new songs and one unreleased old one…

Liz Phair, Somebody’s Miracle

I recently watched Martin Scorsese’s fascinating, very nearly illuminating Bob Dylan documentary No Direction Home, and between the clips of British fans denouncing him, the chaotic and mythical Newport Folk Festival performance…

Elevator Action, Society, Secret

Within seconds of hitting the Play button, Elevator Action has the hook: thick guitars and good melodies with grit and crunch. “Surely You Know,” the lead-off on the band’s new album, Society, Secret, has a quivering vocal which is quite Bowie-esque…

The East Village Opera Company, The East Village Opera Company

Over the years, musicians have collaborated to bring their listeners fresh new sounds with an edge. The first time I ever remember such a commingling of musical genres was back in the ’80s, when Run DMC and Aerosmith brought us their rapping/rocked-out version…

Deadsy, Phantasmagore

About the band’s new album, Phantasmagore, Deadsy frontman Elijah Blue says, “We just wanted to make a rock record in the spirit of [Lou Reed’s] Transformer.” Sorry Mr. Blue — not even close…

Cheer-Accident, What Sequel?

Cheer-Accident is a long-running Chicago band that’s known for complicated, intense music which embraces a wide range of abrasive sounds. What Sequel?, however, is not like most of their records, in that it’s made up of relatively ordinary pop songs…

Les Georges Leningrad, Sangue Puro

Post-punk, aka electro-punk, aka avant-garde rock. Who the hell is Les Georges Leningrad (not to be confused with the notorious gypsy punk band from Russia, Leningrad), and what the hell are they doing to my headphones?…

The Lemonheads, The Lemonheads

After being subjected to wave after wave of pseudo new wave/indie rock/’80s inspired (Note: As I am sure half of said bands were barely born in the ’80s, I feel compelled to inform you that this reference to the ’80s sound is merely a reference point…)

Jucifer, If Thine Enemy Hunger

Since the invention of recorded music, engineers have struggled with the challenge of hearing the sound of a band playing in a room and replicating it using only small paper cones. No artist exemplifies this challenge better than Athens duo Jucifer…

Portastatic, Be Still Please

As huge of a Superchunk fan as I am, I’ve never really jumped on the Portastatic bandwagon. (Obligatory explanatory digression: Portastatic is the side-project of Superchunk frontman Mac McCaughan. We now return you to the review, already in progress)…

Griddle, Klimty Favela

Griddle has the potential to completely rock out, as the band demonstrates on the first track of Klimty Favela, “City Made of Teeth.” Starting out with a dark, indie-rock sound, the song quickly erupts with ridiculous falsetto vocals…

Weekly Update

Yep, new stuff up, just in time for Halloween. Just some new reviews up this time out: Wolf Eyes, Alexisonfire, Headlights, and Arms of Kismet. More to come next (er, this) week…

Arms of Kismet, Cutting Room Rug

Mark Doyon, the sole force behind Arms of Kismet, describes his new album, Cutting Room Rug, as a jigsaw puzzle. “Sometimes the puzzle falls off the table,” he says. “You can put it back together, or you can do something else with the pieces”…

Wolf Eyes, Human Animal

Firstly: Wolf Eyes should be commended for their brevity. In the world of noise music, where the 80-minute capacity of the CD is often mistaken for the ideal run time, it’s great to have an album that clocks in at a sprightly 33 minutes and change…

Headlights, Kill Them With Kindness

Over the years, the definition of “pop music” has changed dramatically in my eyes. For a long time, I genuinely believed that announcing that pop music was your primary music drug of choice made you appear to have no taste in music whatsoever…

Alexisonfire, Crisis

Take a listen to Alexisonfire. No, not “Alex-is-on-fire”; the band’s name is Alexis-on-fire, taken from the world’s only lactating contortionist. And yes, you should be able to milk their new album for a few good tunes. I haven’t heard any of the albums before the band’s latest…

Anti-Flag, For Blood and Empire / Strike Anywhere, Dead FM

I’ve tried to write reviews for both of these discs, Anti-Flag’s For Blood and Empire and Strike Anywhere’s Dead FM, for a while now, and it just hasn’t worked. I keep finding myself viewing them both together, rather than separately…

Just A Fire, Spanish Time

“Produced by J. Robbins.” At this point in the indie-rock game, you can almost guess what a band’s going to sound like just from that one sentence fragment. That’s not a dig at either Robbins or the bands he’s produced — he’s produced and played on some of my favorite records…

Glue, Catch As Catch Can

It’s always been my sincere belief that Music can work as a unifying medium that brings two or more opposing forces together in harmony, even if said unification is temporary. With the world changing in rapid and unsettling ways…

Aloha, Some Echoes

The last time I heard Aloha (prior to listening to their newest album, Some Echoes), I was making my babygirl a mix-tape and I pulled out Sugar, from like 2002. I scanned through it, however, and realized that all of the songs sounded the same to me and none were comp-worthy…

Weekly Update

What the hell? Yes, we’ve got even more stuff up, folks, and it ain’t yet November. Welcome to the first step towards becoming a real-live weekly e-zine — if all goes well, we’ll be putting reviews, live reviews, and interviews online every single freakin’ week from now ’til eternity. This time out, we’ve got love […]

Update for October

New month, so there’s new stuff up — interviews with rapper Del the Funky Homosapien and pop-rockers OK Go, both just in time for their appearances in or around H-town this weekend (check the shows list for details). Beyond that, we’ve got some cool live reviews and reviews of everything from White Whale to J […]

Motor, Klunk

Klunk, Motor’s first release, is brought to you by French drummer Mr. No and Minnesota native Bryan Black. They apparently met when Black watched one of Mr. No’s shows and became fast friends because of their mutual love of Prince…

The Wiggins, Greatest Apes EP

Though the dog days of summer are past, there’s a certain musical reddening still available to us — the Wiggins’ Greatest Apes EP is a summer record in the best of ways: it’s loud, euphoric, and indifferent to taste…

White Whale, WWI

A good indication of whether I like an album or not is whether I choose to listen to it outside of my reviewing duties. Many a reviewed album gets spun only a few times, then relegated to a pile that reminds you that “getting to keep what you review”…

Jeff Walker und Die Fluffers, Welcome to Carcass Cuntry

I’ve been hearing a lot of noise about grindcore lately, and I have to say that there’s nothing wrong with the genre; if you like screaming and guitars that sound like grinding metal, then it’s gravy. Jeff Walker pioneered the genre with his band Carcass…

((sounder)), There is another sun clouded over with meticulous care

((sounder))’s There is another sun clouded over with meticulous care is jammy, drone-y, and long. It drags in the middle under its own ponderous weight. The album and song titles are cumbersome, and most of the songs could be cut…

Samiam, Whatever’s Got You Down

I can remember that the first time I came across Samiam, back in the early ’90s, they were labeled a punk band, and the tag threw me off right from the start. For one thing, vocalist Jason Beebout actually sang, something I honestly didn’t expect…

Riverboat Gamblers, To the Confusion of Our Enemies

After 2003’s Something to Crow About demonstrated their balls, charm, attitude, and sense of humor, Denton’s Riverboat Gamblers were poised to become one of the country’s best garage-punk bands. Instead, they chose to move to Austin…

Pretty Flowers, Pretty Flowers

Is this the state of punk? I hope not. Pretty Flowers’ three-song EP has all of the romantic trappings of old-school punk but none of the guts. It’s as if the band knew they should include every attribute of the best punk albums of the late ’70s…

Cale Parks, Illuminated Manuscript

There is nothing flashy about Cale Parks, but he makes geek look good. In between albums for the indie band Aloha, Parks decided to take it upon himself to release his first full-length debut, Illuminated Manuscripts

Millionaire, Paradisiac

Okay, so I hate giving bad reviews for anything, but I’m going to be honest here because I believe that’s my duty as a reviewer: Millionaire’s latest EP, Paradisiac, is not good. I’m not going to use any inappropriate words…

Ladyhawk, Ladyhawk

This is the self-titled debut album for Vancouver-area band Ladyhawk, and it starts off slow. Not slow in tempo, but slow in terms of quality. The first full three songs (“48 Hours,” “The Dugout,” and “My Old Jacknife”), unfortunately, are indie-rock clichés…

J Dilla, The Shining

J Dilla’s album The Shining was released after he passed away from lupus, completed by his friend Karriem Riggins after J was gone. Needless to say, the rappers that performed on the record perform with obvious love for J Dilla…


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