Knievel
The Name Rings a Bell That Drowns out Your Voice (In ,Music We Trust). Review by Eric J. Iannelli.
The Name Rings a Bell That Drowns out Your Voice (In ,Music We Trust). Review by Eric J. Iannelli.
Change (DeSoto). Review by Julio Diaz.
Athens, GA has always had a fertile music scene, but 2001 was a particularly good year. Our man in Athens, Jeff Montgomery, runs down the 19 best albums the city had to offer this year.
Grand (Ascend). Review by Vanessa Bormann.
Under A Sun (MCA). Review by Terry Eagan.
Steal This Record (Hollywood). Review by Brian Kruger.
100 Broken Windows (Capitol). Review by Marcel Feldmar.
Songs in a Northern Key (E-Squared/Artemis). Review by Sean Slone.
Everyone But You (Intelligent). Review by Julio Diaz.
The Blue Law (Peek-A-Boo). Review by Randall Stephens.
Hold My Breath (Catapult). Review by Terry Eagan.
Laying Low and Inbetween (Alyosha). Review by Terry Eagan.
Lohio (Checkered Past). Review by Sean Slone.
Amnesiac (Capitol). Review by James Mann.
Reveal (Warner Bros.). Review by Kiran Aditham.
Marrying British psychedelia to American jangle pop and roots music may sound like an odd combination, but this band’s heartfelt dedication and songcraft makes it work. Terry Eagan makes a call on The Red Telephone, and singer/guitarist Matt Hutton answers.
The Indigo Girls, with Spearhead (Chastain Park, Atlanta, GA, June 2, 2000). Concert review by Jeff Montgomery; photos by Shannah Cahoe Montgomery.
Up (Warner). Review by Brent Dey
Up (Warner). Review by Jeff Montgomery
R.E.M. in the Attic: Alternative Recordings 1985-1989 (EMI/Capitol). Review by Jeff Montgomery
Two new releases from Free Dirt Records use sound and music to tell stories about our history.
A lady Tarzan and her gorilla have a rough time adapting to high society in Lorraine of the Lions (1925), one of four silent films on Accidentally Preserved: Volume 5, unleashed by Ben Model and Undercrank Productions, with musical scores by Jon C. Mirsalis.
Carl F. Gauze takes in See You at the Movies, another exciting Winter Park Playhouse Spotlight Cabaret featuring Orlando’s own Tay Anderson.
A small town woman finds peace with her family in Rachel Hendrix, part of the 2024 Florida Film Festival, an Oscar®-qualifying festival now in its 33rd year.
Look to the East, Look to the West (Merge Records). Review by Bob Pomeroy.
Christopher Lee presides over sex and torture in Jess Franco’s exploitation gem, Night of the Blood Monster now in 4K!
An idyllic campground filled with interesting people faces destruction in Happy Campers, part of the 2024 Florida Film Festival, an Oscar®-qualifying festival now in its 33rd year.
An American success story of rum and sex and hula dancing. The Donn of Tiki was part of the 2024 Florida Film Festival, an Oscar®-qualifying festival now in its 33rd year.