Burgess Shale
No Rest for the Weary (Skeptical Records). Review by Kyrby Raine.
Faced with the rich sonic twister of music ever churning around us, our writers strap on headphones and hunker down with these tunes and their words to lead everyone to the bottom of what sounds good right now.
No Rest for the Weary (Skeptical Records). Review by Kyrby Raine.
Head For The Door (Virgin). Review by Andrew Ellis.
The Singles (). Review by Kyrby Raine.
Yahboy! (). Review by Kyrby Raine.
Paranoid Social Club (On Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Wolf Parade (Sub Pop). Review by Aaron Shaul.
eMOTIVe (Virgin). Review by Andrew Ellis.
American Minor (Jive Records). Review by Jen Cray.
Her Love Is Real… But She Is Not (DeSoto Records). Review by Matthew Moyer.
These Are the Shoes We Wear (Fractured Discs). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Glissandro 70 (Constellation). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Band - Girls - Money (TVT). Review by Andrew Ellis.
The Vice and Virtue Ministry (Undeniable). Review by Aaron Shaul.
Failures and Sparks (Galaxy Gramophone). Review by Aaron Shaul.
vol. 10 (Epitaph). Review by Jen Cray.
Hazy Dreams (Not Just) - A Jimi Hendrix Tribute (Kock Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Bands You Love, Have Heard of, and Should Know (Drive Thru/Pure Volume). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Making Beds in a Burning House (Lookout Records). Review by Sean Slone.
From the Sky (Neurodisc Records). Review by Carl F Gauze.
Sardonic Wrath (The End Records ). Review by matthew moyer.
Marvelous martial arts masterpiece To Kill a Mastermind is finally released from the Shaw Brothers’ vault.
Possessing all the coziness of a gawk-worthy car crash, Permanent Damage, the salacious memoir from the notorious, outrageous “groupie” Miss Mercy Fontenot and celebrated pop culture journalist Lyndsey Parker, provides a surprise payoff.
Michelle Wilson soaks up the jam band vibes when Warren Haynes Band brings their Million Voices Whisper Tour to Jacksonville.
Midge Ure brings his Band In A Box tour to historic Mount Dora, Florida, where Michelle Wilson revels in ’80s nostalgia.
Lily and Generoso review director Kazik Radwanski’s poignant comedic drama Matt and Mara, which explores the emotionally nuanced relationship between two longtime friends.
Sejin Suzuki’s unorthodox Yakuza film, Tattooed Life (1965) makes its Blu-ray debut from Radiance Films.
Hang out with some cool musicians as they make a record in a mountain cabin in Appalachia.