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.
For Lily and Generoso, 2023 was a fantastic year at the cinema! They select and review their ten favorite films, six supplemental features, and one extraordinary repertory release seen at microcinemas, archives, and festivals.
The hidden gem of the French New Wave, Le Combat Dans L’île gets a lovely Blu-ray from Radiance Films.
This fall, Ani DiFranco brought new Righteous Babe labelmate Kristen Ford to Iowa City, where Jeremy Glazier enjoyed an incredible evening of artistry.
This week Christopher Long grabs a bag of bargain vinyl from a flea market in Mount Dora, Florida — including You’re Never Alone with a Schizophrenic, the classic 1979 LP from Ian Hunter.
Bob Pomeroy gets into four Radio Rarities from producer Zev Feldman for Record Store Day with great jazz recordings from Wes Montgomery, Les McCann, Cal Tjader, and Ahmad Jamal.
Bob Pomeroy digs into Un “Sung Stories” (1986, Liberation Hall), Blasters’ frontman Phil Alvin’s American Roots collaboration with Sun Ra and his Arkestra, the Dirty Dozen Brass Band, and New Orleans saxman Lee Allen.
Roi J. Tamkin reviews A Darker Shade of Noir, fifteen new stories from women writers completely familiar with the horrors of owning a body in a patriarchal society, edited by Joyce Carol Oates.
Mandatory: The Best of The Blasters (Liberation Hall). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Feeling funky this week, Christopher Long gets his groove on while discovering a well-cared-for used vinyl copy of one of his all-time R&B faves: Ice Cream Castle, the classic 1984 LP from The Time, for just a couple of bucks.
During AFI Fest 2023, Lily and Generoso interviewed director Lkhagvadulam Purev-Ochir, whose impressive debut feature, City of Wind, carefully examines the juxtaposition between the identity of place and tradition against the powers of modernity in contemporary Mongolia.
Juliana Hatfield Sings ELO (American Laundromat Records). Review by Laura Pontillo.