Electric Jaguar Baby
Psychic Death Safari (Rebel Waves Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Psychic Death Safari (Rebel Waves Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Thrill Me! (New Granada). Review by Scott Adams.
Dan Sartain doesn’t really care if you know his name, or any of the songs he plays. He just came to remind you that rock ‘n’ roll can still be unsettling… and Matthew Moyer LOVES it.
In and Out and Back Again (HoZac). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Invisible Violence. Review by Carl F Gauze.
This Town (HoZac). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Another tough year is dead and gone, leaving only the tough and the clever. Carl F Gauze remembers 19 of 2009’s great and not so great dead people.
Exploding Head (Mute). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Scramble (Suicide Squeeze). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Wavvves (Fat Possum). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Matthew Moyer basks in the ramshackle glory of Sacred Harp singing, the oldest, and perhaps most punk, American religious music. This new documentary explains it all.
Alight of Night (Slumberland). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Witching Hour (Oglio). Review by Matthew Moyer.
These Bones Will Rise To Love You Again (Tee Pee Records). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Sardonic Wrath (The End Records ). Review by matthew moyer.
Time Stands Still (Atavistic Records). Review by Matthew Moyer.
The Frog Tape (Skin Graft Records). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Rock’N’Roll Etiquette (Narnack Records). Review by Matthew Moyer.
We Shall All Be Healed (4AD Records). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Lifetime Shitlist (Shitjam Records). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Sharon Van Etten & The Attachment Theory (Jagjaguwar). Review by Peter Lindblad.
This week, Christopher Long goes “gaga” over discovering an ’80s treasure: an OG vinyl copy of Spring Session M, the timeless 1982 classic from Missing Persons — for just six bucks!
Both bold experiment and colossal failure in the 1960s, Esperanto language art house horror film Incubus returns with pre-_Star Trek_ William Shatner to claim a perhaps more serious audience.
You Can’t Tell Me I’m Not What I Used To Be (North & Left Records). Review by Randy Radic.
In this latest installment of his weekly series, Christopher Long is betrayed by his longtime GF when she swipes his copy of Loretta Lynn’s Greatest Hits Vol. II right out from under his nose while rummaging through a south Florida junk store.