Nada Surf
Live at the Neptune Theatre (PledgeMusic). Review by Laura Pontillo.
Live at the Neptune Theatre (PledgeMusic). Review by Laura Pontillo.
Lower Alabama: The Loxley Sessions (Royal Potato Family). Review by James Mann.
Black Beauty (High Moon). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Phantasmagoria VI - posted by Carl Gauze on October 11, 2015 20:04
Sherlock in Love - posted by Carl Gauze on October 11, 2015 20:00
Television’s Greatest Hits in Living Color - posted by Carl Gauze on October 11, 2015 11:50
Marina Jurica - posted by Carl Gauze on October 09, 2015 22:16
Overweight and middle aged, Mikael Kawa loses his wife and compensates by traveling to Kurdistan and trying out for the local professional soccer team. You CAN go home. Sort of.
Incidental Hum (Bar/None Records). Review by James Mann.
Goodfellas turns 25. Rob Levy looks back at Martin Scorese’s mob masterpiece.
The Loneliest Man I Ever Met (Avenue A Records/Thirty Tigers). Review by James Mann.
It was a night of metal and moshing in the sold-out House of Blues, with Motörhead and Anthrax in town. Carl F Gauze elbowed his way through the madness.
You Can’t Take It With You - posted by Carl Gauze on October 04, 2015 14:34
Six Characters in Search of an Author - posted by Carl Gauze on October 04, 2015 14:22
Realms of the Untold - posted by Carl Gauze on October 03, 2015 12:48
Janet Jackson is pop music royalty and proved it in Orlando. Jen Cray can’t believe she witnessed it!
The Atco/Atlantic Singles 1968-1974 (Omnivore Recordings). Review by James Mann.
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.