The Hunt Sales Memorial
Get Your Shit Together (Big Legal Mess / Fat Possum). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Get Your Shit Together (Big Legal Mess / Fat Possum). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Benton County Relic ( Single Lock Records). Review by James Mann.
I Don’t Prefer No Blues (Big Legal Mess Records). Review by James Mann.
Everlasting Arms (Bloodshot Records). Review by James Mann.
Sabougla Voices (Big Legal Mess Records). Review by James Mann.
Darker the Night (In Music We Trust). Review by James Mann.
After Two But Before Five (Fuzzmaster Records, In Music We Trust). Review by Tim Wardyn.
First Recordings (Fat Possum). Review by James Mann.
Bad Man (Fat Possum). Review by Bill Campbell.
First Recordings (Fat Possum). Review by James Mann.
Pushin’ My Luck (Fat Possum). Review by Bill Campbell.
Stingray (Fat Possum). Review by James Mann.
ThirdShiftGrottoSlack (Artemis). Review by James Mann.
Hydraulic Groove (Tone Cool). Review by Bill Campbell.
You Better Run: The Essential Junior Kimbrough (Fat Possum). Review by James Mann.
Hard Grind (Fat Possum). Review by Bill Campbell.
Just Do Me Right (Fat Possum). Review by Bill Campbell.
With the year drawing to a close, we thought it’d be appropriate for our staff to tell you what they thought the best stuff all year was. Features Editor James Mann kicks off with his choices for the Top 19 Albums of 2001.
Various Artists (Fat Possum). Review by James Mann.
Mississippi Hill Country Blues (Fat Possum). Review by Troy Mayhew.
A young dancer becomes a legal genius in this fun and fast musical comedy.
Forgotten ’70s action film Fear Is the Key is as gritty as the faces of the men who populate it. Phil Bailey reviews the splashy new Blu-ray.
Coffin Joe returns in a comprehensive Blu-ray collection from Arrow Video, Inside the Mind of Coffin Joe.
Bob’s been looking for a replacement copy of the rare John Cale release Sabotage/Live (1979, Spy Records) since 1991. He still hasn’t found a copy at a reasonable price, but a random YouTube video allowed him to listen and reminisce.
Hidden gem and hallmark of second-generation martial arts film, 1978’s The Shaolin Plot manages to provide a glimpse of things to come. Charles DJ Deppner reviews Arrow Video’s pristine Blu-ray release, which gives this watershed masterpiece the prestige and polish it richly deserves.
The HawtThorns invite you to soar, with the premiere of “Zero Gravity.”
There’s nothing as humiliating as a cattle call. Unless it’s a cattle call in your undies.