Deftones: Koi No Yokan
Deftones: Koi No Yokan We’ve all got bands that we have grown up with. They crafted our favorite albums with songs that seemed to…
Read MoreDeftones: Koi No Yokan We’ve all got bands that we have grown up with. They crafted our favorite albums with songs that seemed to…
Read MoreJan: Jan What can I say, I’m a sucker for female singers/songwriters and Kim Talon, the woman behind Jan, is quite a performer. Her…
Read MoreJaggery: Private Violence The primal qualities of humanity are often worn just below the surface of “normalized” society. We can sense them there beneath…
Read MoreNeil Nathan Inc.: Sweep The Nation Rock and roll has always had a good relationship with progressive social movements and political protest. Whether it…
Read MoreDolfish: I’d Rather Disappear Than Stay The Same One of my favorite things about being a music critic is the experience of something new….
Read MoreThe Sword: Apocryphon The Sword is one of those bands that should have been around four decades ago when the classic metal rock gods…
Read MoreSkyline Drive: Topanga Ranch Motel The genre known simply as Americana is a wide and wondrous place. Home to country, rock, blues, and occasional…
Read MoreBetween the Buried and Me: Parallax II: Future Sequence The seeming importance of our individual lives often takes precedence over the existential quandaries that…
Read MoreDevereaux: Cacti Pace EP The debut EP from South Carolina native Devereaux (W. Heyward Sims) is an aggressive, exuberant journey into the realms of…
Read MoreWindsor Drive: Wanderlust Electropop, like hair metal, is one of those genres that developed in the late seventies, pervaded the eighties, and then was…
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