Ed Harcourt
Lustre (Nice Music Group). Review by Sean Slone.
Lustre (Nice Music Group). Review by Sean Slone.
Rain on the City (Bar None). Review by Sean Slone.
Magpie (Fiction). Review by Sean Slone.
Love Is Red (7 Twenty). Review by Sean Slone.
The Internet’s first on-line songwriting service proves to be a big hit. “Trespassers May Be Eaten”, “My Dad Thinks I’m Gay” and “My Mother Doesn’t Like You” are just some of the products of a virtual request-a-song service that is hitting all the right notes with site visitors. Andrew Ellis finds out more.
The Unstudied Sea (Sincere). Review by Sean Slone.
Autumn Sweet (Laughing Outlaw). Review by James Mann.
Home Away (Waxy Silver). Review by Sean Slone.
Eternal Youth (Instinct). Review by Ben Varkentine.
Various Artists (Palm). Review by Sarah Ludwig.
Listening to Kasey Chambers’ debut album, The Captain, it’s not hard to believe that she grew up in the South. The kicker, though, is that her incredibly authentic country music originates from the South of Australia! Sean Slone talks with the gifted young artist about the roots of her music and life in the outback.
Event Review by Michael D. Fellows
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.