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Channel: Julian Ring – Consequence
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Dusting ‘Em Off: Led Zeppelin IV

Staff writers Katherine Flynn and Julian Ring work through their love of Led Zeppelin’s self-titled fourth album below, attempting to place it in the larger context of the band’s discography while...

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Album Review: The Fresh & Onlys – House of Spirits

The hero’s journey, according to author John Green, is the journey from strength to weakness. Descending from affluence into poverty, from premier social stature to none, and rising back out with...

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Live Review: Guided by Voices at San Francisco’s Regency Ballroom (6/11)

Photography by Ted Maider Robert Pollard is the most effective kind of frontman — one who espouses an entirely different set of values depending on the place and time. Here’s a guy who, on the one...

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Album Review: Brian Eno and Karl Hyde – High Life

There are certain albums that much of the listening populace has written off — Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music, for one, plus a few ’70s goofs from Gregg Allman, Elvis, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer....

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Album Review: The Mother Hips – Chronicle Man

One of Rick Rubin’s biggest mistakes, aside from forswearing the razor, was dropping The Mother Hips. The California band’s Pacific boogie rock was just beginning to take flight on 1995’s Part-Timer...

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Top 10 Merge Records Releases

Starting today, Merge Records will celebrate its 25th anniversary with the four-day festival down in Carrboro, NC. Personally, I’m kicking myself for not saving up enough loot to attend because not...

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Album Review: Harvey Danger – Where Have All the Merrymakers Gone? [Reissue]

One of the first things you’ll notice about this reissue is the new artwork. There sits the clapboard house, still colorized like a woodcut stained with Cheeto dust, still placed front and center. It’s...

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Album Review: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – Hypnotic Eye

The best moment of Hypnotic Eye is one of its most subdued: track six, “Power Drunk”, about two and a half minutes in. Lead guitarist Mike Campbell has just spun out another set of whisper-wail licks...

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Harvey Danger’s Sean Nelson: The Well-Appointed Ghetto

Sean Nelson still hasn’t made his peace with “Flagpole Sitta”. You’d think, at 41, he’d have gotten some closure by now. It’s been nearly two decades, after all — an eternity in rock years — since the...

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Album Review: Bishop Allen – Lights Out

You may have been following the elitist fight currently underway between William Deresiewicz, an Ivy League-educated writer, and a handful of journalists from Newsweek and The New York Times. The topic...

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Interpol’s Top 10 Songs

No one from the New York indie underground showed up as well-dressed as Interpol did in 2002, but it didn’t take long for the band to prove they were more than the sum of their suits. Turn on the...

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Album Review: Interpol – El Pintor

There are those who believe that when it comes to Interpol, nothing — not even a brutal, lionized smash — will top Turn on the Bright Lights. Can you really blame them? That debut had everything to...

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Dusting ‘Em Off: Led Zeppelin IV

Staff writers Katherine Flynn and Julian Ring work through their love of Led Zeppelin’s self-titled fourth album below, attempting to place it in the larger context of the band’s discography while...

View Article


Album Review: The Fresh & Onlys – House of Spirits

The hero’s journey, according to author John Green, is the journey from strength to weakness. Descending from affluence into poverty, from premier social stature to none, and rising back out with...

View Article

Live Review: Guided by Voices at San Francisco’s Regency Ballroom (6/11)

Photography by Ted Maider Robert Pollard is the most effective kind of frontman — one who espouses an entirely different set of values depending on the place and time. Here’s a guy who, on the one...

View Article


Album Review: Brian Eno and Karl Hyde – High Life

There are certain albums that much of the listening populace has written off — Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music, for one, plus a few ’70s goofs from Gregg Allman, Elvis, and Emerson, Lake & Palmer....

View Article

Album Review: The Mother Hips – Chronicle Man

One of Rick Rubin’s biggest mistakes, aside from forswearing the razor, was dropping The Mother Hips. The California band’s Pacific boogie rock was just beginning to take flight on 1995’s Part-Timer...

View Article


Top 10 Merge Records Releases

Starting today, Merge Records will celebrate its 25th anniversary with the four-day festival down in Carrboro, NC. Personally, I’m kicking myself for not saving up enough loot to attend because not...

View Article

Album Review: Harvey Danger – Where Have All the Merrymakers Gone? [Reissue]

One of the first things you’ll notice about this reissue is the new artwork. There sits the clapboard house, still colorized like a woodcut stained with Cheeto dust, still placed front and center. It’s...

View Article

Album Review: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers – Hypnotic Eye

The best moment of Hypnotic Eye is one of its most subdued: track six, “Power Drunk”, about two and a half minutes in. Lead guitarist Mike Campbell has just spun out another set of whisper-wail licks...

View Article
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