Marvelous 3
IV (Marvelous 3). Review by Christopher Long.
IV (Marvelous 3). Review by Christopher Long.
Pop music’s modern-day messiah, Butch Walker delivered a headliner performance despite his opening act billing.
Sycamore Meadows (Original Signal Recordings/Power Ballad). Review by Christopher Long.
The Rise and Fall of…Butch Walker and the Let’s-Go-Out-Tonites! (Epic/One Haven). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Open Letter To The Damned (Octone). Review by Andrew Ellis.
What’s the difference between young bands and old bands, and why would you want to be one and not the other? Lynn Wallace talks to Allister and finds out.
Andrew Ellis talks The Sopranos, Nintendo oh, and music, with Danny Roselle, frontman for hot NJ band The Crash Moderns.
The Crash Moderns (Maxim Artists). Review by Andrew Ellis.
Letters (Epic Records). Review by Tim Wardyn.
Ink 19 kicks off our 2002 “Top 19” lists with 19 examples of rock star wisdom from the talented Gail Worley.
Tomorrow (RCA). Review by James Mann.
From Ink 19 ad rep to the Marvelous 3 to a career as a solo artist, songwriter, and producer, it’s been an interesting journey for Butch Walker, and he discusses it all in a candid interview with Gail Worley.
November 2000 Cover (Ink 19, November 2000)
Did you know that back in the day, the Marvelous 3’s Butch Walker was an ad rep for Ink 19? It’s true! But now he’s the frontman for the popular Atlanta-based rockers, and is sharing his philosophy on rock n’ roll in the Information Age with Andrea Thompson.
Elliot James & the Snakes at Smith’s Olde Bar in Atlanta, GA on July 30, 2000. Concert review by Roi Tamkin.
Event Review by Frank Mullen
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.