Here to Be Heard: The Story of the Slits
Groundbreaking all women reggae-infused punk group the Slits finally get the documentary treatment.
Groundbreaking all women reggae-infused punk group the Slits finally get the documentary treatment.
11 Short Stories of Pain and Glory (ADA Music). Review by Joe Frietze.
Thank You Captain Obvious (Collectible Escalators). Review by Tim Wardyn.
Alright kids, take your seats and listen up, because Carl F Gauze is going to be screening a Very Important Film about a Very Important Band. onetwothreefour…
Kiss & Tell (RCA). Review by Ben Varkentine.
Evolution Of Energy (Geffen/Interscope). Review by Mary Ellen Gustafson.
dead flowers, bottles, bluegrass and bones (Fat Wreck Chords). Review by Rob Walsh.
Knock Knock Knock EP (Sub Pop). Review by Ian Koss.
Music Midtown is a great chance to catch bands you might never get to see otherwise. Frank Mullen took some chances at this year’s festival in Atlanta, and found out what he’d been missing from the likes of Jimmy Cliff, BR5-49, the Jungle Brothers, and Bjorn Again, as well as a pre-Noel Gallagher walk-out Oasis.
55th Anniversary Super Deluxe Double LP (Don Giovanni Records). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Macabre masterpiece The House that Screamed gets a stunning Blu-ray makeover, revealing a release good enough to convert non-believers. Phil Bailey reviews.
Ink 19’s Stacey Zering talks with writer Doug Bratton, who takes us inside his indie murder mystery comic book series, Isolation.
On today’s show, Charley Deppner, Eszter Balint, and Pat Greene enjoy a discussion of terror, punk rock, and the duality of musical genius.
In this episode, Jeremy Glazier talks with Tim Bluhm and Greg Loiacono of The Mother Hips, just as their entire back catalog is released on vinyl in partnership with the Blue Rose Foundation.
This week, savvy shopper Christopher Long scores an abused vinyl copy of The Long Run, the 1979 Eagles classic, from a local junkie for a pack of smokes and a can of pop.
Black Holes Are Hard to Find (Nemu Records). Review by Carl F. Gauze.
Carl F. Gauze reviews his second As You Like It in three days, the latest a candy-colored complexity from Rollins College’s Annie Russell Theatre.