LP Review
Noah and the Whale ‘Last Night on Earth’
Noah and the Whale’s new release, ‘Last Night on Earth’, is an album so completely different than anything we heard on their previous release, The
Morning Teleportation ‘Expanding Anyway’
Expanding Anyway, the Kentucky native’s debut LP, is just as exciting and fresh as their live performance. Their youthful vibrancy shines throughout the album and
G. Love ‘Fixin’ to Die’
G. Love is back to his roots with his fourth solo album, Fixin to Die, a 13 track compilation of immortal covers and some saucy
Radiohead ‘The King of Limbs’
Radiohead toys with the industry and their fans like a lion plays with its prey – letting its guard down, waiting for the perfect moment
Bright Eyes ‘The People’s Key’
It took 13 years, but Conor Oberst has finally created what he had in mind when Bright Eyes began in
Nathan Moore ‘Dear Puppeteer’
Nathan Moore has embraced his Appalachian roots with melodic sensibility to turn in what is living up to be Moore’s finest work to date
Gregg Allman ‘Low Country Blues’
True to the laid-back Georgian jellyroll, the LP boasts devil bleeding blues covers from Otis Rush, Skip James, and Muddy Waters
Stereolab ‘Not Music’
Stereolab deserves some serious attention as their body of work is perhaps even more notable than their tabloid poised band history which incorporates everything from
Brian Eno ‘Small Craft on a Milk Sea’
Brian Eno is not a member of Generation X and was not fed the music software or music production technology as we were at birth
Iggy Pop & James Williamson ‘Kill City’
What inflates the intrigue behind the reissue of Kill City is the key moment that it marks between the Stooges and Iggy Pop
The Walkmen ‘Lisbon’
The Walkmen have long been one of the most reliable bands of the last decade. Each major release has successfully reaffirmed their ability to ride
Deerhunter ‘Halcyon Digest’
Halcyon Digest [2010] realizes in every way the potential that Deerhunter has always suggested it could reach