Cheap Trick|Cheap Trick|Cheap Trick
Cheap Trick (Epic/Legacy). Review by Kurt Channing
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.
Cheap Trick (Epic/Legacy). Review by Kurt Channing
Various Artists (Lo Fibre/Invisible Records). Review by drew West
Marc Ribot y Los Cubanos Postizos (Atlantic). Review by Jason Plender
Full Circle (Moonshine). Review by Carole Jaszewski
Hotdogwater Cocktail (ACME Entertainment). Review by Jason Feifer
Grind Bastard (Nuclear Blast). Review by David Lee Beowülf
Bio-Vital (Metropolis). Review by Jorge C. Galban
Paris Combo (Tinder). Review by Sarah Ludwig
Let’s Talk About Feelings (Fat Wreck Chords). Review by Gail Worley
Listen Up, Baby! Split CD (Man’s Ruin). Review by David Lee Beowülf
The Question (Hellcat). Review by Julio Diaz
Various Artists (Tommy Boy). Review by LeRoy Watson
’90s Teen Bands Vs. ’80s Teen Movies (Cheap Date/Rhino). Review by Julio Diaz
Carrots and So On (PopLlama). Review by Ian Koss
Psychedelic Souls (Pow Wow). Review by Phillip Haire
The Sound of a New World Being Born (Lookout!). Review by Andrew Chadwick
The Otis Redding Anthology (Rhino). Review by David Whited
Teletubbies: The Album (Kid Rhino). Review by Charles D.J. Deppner
Florida Ska, Volume 2 (Citrus). Review by Andrew Chadwick
Heavy Love (Silvertone). Review by David Lee Beowülf
A pair of early “girls with guns” action films from superstars Michelle Yeoh and Cynthia Rothrock have arrived from 88 Films.
A very focused memoir of a singular year in Robyn Hitchcock’s early life provides Ian Koss with insight on basement Happenings and more.
Get ready for an incredible lineup from Seattle’s 51st Bumbershoot Arts and Music Festival, this Labor Day weekend.
A pair of Tinto Brass films from the ’90s reminds viewers we weren’t always so uptight. Phil Bailey gets erotic with All Ladies Do It and Frivolous Lola from the esteemed Italian director.
Christopher Long takes us on a personal journey of rediscovering the magic of music. It’s just the inspiration I needed to continue my own.