The Kooks
Inside In/Inside Out (Astralwerks/EMI). Review by Ben Varkentine.
Inside In/Inside Out (Astralwerks/EMI). Review by Ben Varkentine.
Brit-pop smash Starsailor is working on a foothold in America. Chris Catania sat down with James Walsh to find out about breaking in a new country, Bright Eyes and why American crowds giggle during “Alcoholic.”
Whiskey Drown (self-released). Review by Tim Wardyn.
The Jan Martens Frustration (Hidden Agenda). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Singles (Epic/Independiente). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Oasis and the White Stripes… opposing ends of the stylistic spectrum, or left glove and right glove? J. Noise exposes the taxonomy.
Bone (Koch Records). Review by Sean Slone.
The Gurus (Rainbow Quartz International). Review by Sean Slone.
The Gurus (Rainbow Quartz International). Review by Sean Slone.
Waves: Seventeen original BBC recordings from the Radio 1 sessions (1990-1994) (The First Time). Review by Eric J. Iannelli.
Take Them On, On Your Own (Virgin). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Think Tank (Virgin). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Fly Below the Radar (Food Chain). Review by Sean Slone.
Unbroken (Roam). Review by Daniel Mitchell.
Beneath Medicine Tree (The Militia Group). Review by Daniel Mitchell.
London Crawling (Rub Wrongways Records). Review by Daniel Mitchell.
Human Conditions (Virgin). Review by Sean Slone.
Truth, Soul, Rock & Roll (Sparrow Records). Review by Daniel Mitchell.
Whirlington Sessions (self-released). Review by Stein Haukland.
Remixed (Sparrow). Review by Daniel Mitchell.
Charles DJ Deppner takes a look at a new book of artwork by DEVO’s Mark Mothersbaugh, and discovers the book is actually looking back at him.
Kid Congo & The Pink Monkey Birds’ “Wicked World” video features Alice Bag, previews That Delicious Vice, out April 19 on In The Red Records.
Despite serving up ample slices of signature snark, FOX News golden boy Jesse Watters, for the most part, just listens — driving the narrative of his latest book, Get It Together, through the stories of others.
Brooklyn rapper Max Gertler finds himself a bit ground up on “Put My Heart in a Jay,” his latest single.
The dissolution of a wealthy Russian family confuses everyone involved.