The Baseball Project
Grand Salami Time! (Omnivore Recordings). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Grand Salami Time! (Omnivore Recordings). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
In the news today: Fall Out Boy, Billy Joel, Veruca Salt, AI, Lil Yachty
This week, vinyl purist Christopher Long does the unthinkable: he reviews one of those shiny Walmart reissues. Relax, it was a gift — he got it for FREE. Plus, it’s Led Zeppelin III, so cut the poor guy some slack, why don’t ya!
In the news today: Rivers Cuomo, Steely Dan, The Bear, Legends, Hawthorne Heights, Thrice
Teenage angst plays out in a high school reunion.
The upbeat pop song by REM becomes an uplifting children’s story.
Keturah (Hen House Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Marleen Gorris’s feminist classic A Question of Silence (1982) receives a long overdue North American home video release from Cult Epics. Phil Bailey reviews.
The boss is all tied up, but the staff keeps on improving the workplace in the Dolly Parton classic 9 to 5.
Ladytron premiere Serbian DJ and music producer Space Motion’s “Destroy Everything You Touch” Remix video today on Ink 19!
Make an Entrance. Review by Stacey Zering.
In the news today: Naked Rayon, Hot Water Music, Face to Face, Quicksand, Little Dragon, Cannibal Corpse, Mayhem, Gorguts, Blood Incantation
The Summer of Green Tour brought Les Claypool’s Fearless Flying Frog Brigade and co-headliners Jerry Harrison and Adrian Belew to the Hard Rock Events Center in Tampa, Florida. Bob Pomeroy reviews.
In the news today: Baroness, Beck, Phoenix, Jarvis Cocker, Wes Anderson, Seu Jorge, M. Ward, First Aid Kit
Brown Acid: The Sixteenth Trip (Riding Easy Records). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
This week, Christopher Long discovers MORE vinyl treasure stashed in his OWN garage — a scratched and scuffed-up copy of Fandango! the 1975 barn-burner from ZZ Top.
In the news today: Aphex Twin
Moods. Review by Stacey Zering.
In the news today: Ministry, Arlo Parks, Arctic Monkeys
An evening with poet, singer, and musician Jackson Browne brings meaning, memories, and a fair bit of chair-dancing to an audience of a certain generation. Roi J. Tamkin screams along at the Louisville Palace and beats the cops when it’s over.
Judy Craddock has a pulled pork sandwich after Colby Acuff’s set, not missing a beat of Midland’s wild west tour stop. Grand Junction, Colorado, gets “lucky sometimes.”
The granddaddy of old dark house mysteries, The Bat (1926) creeps onto Blu-ray from Undercrank Productions.
The Shadow Boxing, a neglected part of the Chinese Hopping Vampire cycle, returns on a spooky Blu-ray from 88 Films.
Daniel Rachel gives us a comprehensive account of the 2 Tone Records label and the innovative ska bands who fueled the movement in Too Much Too Young, the 2 Tone Records Story: Rude Boys, Racism, and the Soundtrack of a Generation.
Our Ancestors Swam to Shore (Free Dirt / PM Press). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Jason Vorhees is back in 2009’s soft reboot of Friday the 13th, and it is time for a re-evaluation of the most recent film in the long running franchise.
Squeeze and Boy George dazzle in Clearwater, Florida, as Michelle Wilson ticks two off her Bucket List.