Ray Brown Trio
Some of My Best Friends Are … Guitarists (Telarc). Review by Bill Campbell.
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.
Some of My Best Friends Are … Guitarists (Telarc). Review by Bill Campbell.
The Best of Peggy Lee: The Millennium Collection (MCA). Review by Matt Cibula.
Version Soul (Atavistic) and Fugues And Flowers (Squealer). Review by Matthew Aurealis.
The Way I Feel Today (Mantra / Beggars Banquet). Review by Stein Haukland.
Darkness And Light (Sideburn). Review by Stein Haukland.
Lights Out (Global Underground). Review by Bill Campbell.
Hybrid Vigor (Accretions). Review by Stein Haukland.
Remnants Of Deprivation (Retribute). Review by Daniel Mitchell.
Remission (Relapse). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Plankton Man vs. Terrestre (:\run recordings). Review by Matt Cibula.
It’s Still Artastic (ROIR). Review by James Mann.
Left And Leaving (Sub City). Review by James Mann.
Astronomicon (Earache). Review by Daniel Mitchell.
Trouble Bound (Hightone). Review by James Mann.
This Machine Kills / JR Ewing (Dim Mak). Review by Stein Haukland.
The Recline (Telarc). Review by Bill Campbell.
Systems of Social Recalibration (Aspects Of Physics). Review by Carl Glaser.
Beautiful Trash (BYO). Review by Daniel Mitchell.
Another Way to Go (Dualtone). Review by Sean Slone.
Love & War (Dreamworks). Review by Matt Cibula.
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.
Three strong women oust their evil boss and bring reasonable policies to the workplace in this hit musical.
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.