The Candy Snatchers
Moronic Pleasures: The Lost Album (Hound Gawd! Records). Review by Scott Adams.
Moronic Pleasures: The Lost Album (Hound Gawd! Records). Review by Scott Adams.
Johnny Thunders retreats to New Orleans to break his heroin addiction, but ends up dead in a cheap hotel.
Punk heroes unite to give a rowdy look at the classic L.A.M.F. album 40 years down the road.
Kicked Out Of Eden (Saustex Media). Review by James Mann.
A riveting and rare glimpse of rock’s original glam-punk junkies, onstage and behind the scenes during their short-lived glory days.
Gail Worley talks with drummer Paul Cook of Sex Pistols and Manraze.
Few things are as Rock ‘n’ Roll as 30-year punk rock veterans Social Distortion, as Jen Cray and a sold-out crowd at Orlando’s House of Blues recently witnessed.
Even with only two original members remaining, New York Dolls still dazzle, as Jen Cray discovered at a recent Orlando show.
Even if you’re not a child of the ’70s, sweep the comic books off your coffee table – Matthew Moyer thinks you should make room for New York Dolls: The Photographs of Bob Gruen.
Matthew Moyer is glad that Holly George-Warren and the other compilers of this coffeetable-riffic collection of punk photos fetishize image as much as he does.
P.I.N.S. (NDN Records). Review by Matthew Moyer.
You Will Gasp And They Will Breathe (Reservation). Review by Stein Haukland.
Are You Ready For An Organ Solo? (Three.One.G). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Never Bet the Devil Your Head (Cosa Nostra). Review by Brian Kruger.
Tom “Tearaway” Schulte has probably listened to it and reviewed it before you’ve even heard of it. This month he includes vinyl reviews and longer pieces on Tom Waits and Fred Frith.
Tom “Tearaway” Schulte joins our big happy family, and will be bringing us regular installments of Outsight! This time around he skips from angry oi to tribal drums to goth and makes it seem oh so easy.
Eat Shit +1 (Junk). Review by Matthew Moyer.
Testing Underway (Bong Load). Review by Marcel Feldmar.
The New Too Much Junkie Business (ROIR). Review by Tom Minarchick
The New Too Much Monkey Business (ROIR). Review by David Lee Beowülf
A young dancer becomes a legal genius in this fun and fast musical comedy.
Forgotten ’70s action film Fear Is the Key is as gritty as the faces of the men who populate it. Phil Bailey reviews the splashy new Blu-ray.
Coffin Joe returns in a comprehensive Blu-ray collection from Arrow Video, Inside the Mind of Coffin Joe.
Bob’s been looking for a replacement copy of the rare John Cale release Sabotage/Live (1979, Spy Records) since 1991. He still hasn’t found a copy at a reasonable price, but a random YouTube video allowed him to listen and reminisce.
Hidden gem and hallmark of second-generation martial arts film, 1978’s The Shaolin Plot manages to provide a glimpse of things to come. Charles DJ Deppner reviews Arrow Video’s pristine Blu-ray release, which gives this watershed masterpiece the prestige and polish it richly deserves.
The HawtThorns invite you to soar, with the premiere of “Zero Gravity.”
There’s nothing as humiliating as a cattle call. Unless it’s a cattle call in your undies.