Lo-fi WavvesBy
Dryw Keltz
This is a sunny, beach pop album…on peyote. Yes, there are some vibrant melodies and pop nuggets to be found on this release, but they are buried beneath so much harsh sounding fuzz. What this really sounds like is a slightly more straight-forward pop version of No Age. Or, even better, slightly experimental indie rock drenched in digital fuzz. Returning to the Scene of the MindcrimeBy
Metal Marcy
One of prog metal’s most enduring statements, and easily one of the more memorable concept albums, Queensryche’s 1988 opus magnum, Operation: Mindcrime tells the story of a man becoming disillusioned with American society who joins in a conspiratorial plot to assassinate its corrupt leaders. An Interview with Larry Fast of SynergyBy
Brian Castleberry
Synergy’s Cords marries Larry Fast’s incredible compositional skill with the synthesizer to a driving pop format. This final touchstone in our brief review of important 1978 recordings is yet another key entry in the history of electronic music during its most experimental and free-thinking heyday. Radiohead Reissue: Pablo HoneyBy
JBev
Were it not for “Creep,” an unlikely single that the band wasn’t even that crazy about, Radiohead might never have become the best band in the world. The single and its legend somewhat overwhelms the album which contained it. That album, 1993’s Pablo Honey, is being re-released with a bonus disc of extras. Ten Predictions For The 2009 Phish Reunion TourBy
Dryw Keltz
With Phish back on the road for a reunion tour, here are ten things you might find at the year’s most anticipated musical traveling nostalgia circus. The Johnny Cash of Communism and Other Black-clad PinkosBy
Mark Peters
I love Johnny Cash more than anyone else I’ve done this feature about, so I feel a bit queasy about taking his name in vain, lest the kind of earthly pain and divine retribution Cash sang about rain down on me. Rings of fire are bad for my feet. Blood on the Tracks: Ch. 2 – Excerpts from the New Dylan-Inspired NovelBy
Tom Grasty
Author Tom Grasty’s first book is a taut thriller inspired by the life and music of Bob Dylan. JamsBio Magazine is happy to share an excerpt from this up and coming novelist. Texas Psychedelic MusicBy
Rick Sawyer
Yellow roses weren’t the only flowers sprouting in Texas in the sixties. Psychedelic music found a hospitable home in the state’s fertile soil. |
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