News
LISTEN: Lucy Clearwater’s “There Goes The View” Is Poetic Folk With Psychedelic Undertones
Lucy Clearwater is a Los Angeles–based folk/Americana singer-songwriter who writes songs the way some people keep journals. Honestly, carefully, and with a deep respect for feeling. With a background in classical violin and a sound rooted in acoustic instruments and human-scale storytelling, her music carries emotional clarity, wit, and the warmth of California folk traditions. […]
New to Glide
Joey Quiñones Ushers In New Era of Contemporary Soul With Solo Debut ‘Inna Soul Steady Situation’ (ALBUM REVIEW)
The contemporary soul revival scene is due for a renaissance. Much like how The Temptations and Norman Whitfield began adding hints of psychedelia to the pop-tinted Motown sound in the late sixties, it is time for modern soul acts to enter into a similar phase of experimentation. With a plethora of new artists joining the […]
Interviews
Bassist Reed Mathis Talks About Long-Awaited Return Of Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey (INTERVIEW)
After over a decade of estrangement, Jacob Fred Jazz Odyssey will play two rare shows this week, both in Northern California. The first will take place on Wednesday, May 27, 2026, at The Chapel in San Francisco, and the other on Thursday, May 28, at The Crepe Place in Santa Cruz. These shows follow two […]
Ryan Bingham Rides Toward the Horizon On ‘They Call Us The Luck Ones’ With The Texas Gentlemen (FEATURE)
There has always been dust in Ryan Bingham’s music. Not the cosmetic kind Nashville sometimes sprays onto records to make them sound “authentic,” but the real thing—the dust kicked up from rodeo arenas, West Texas highways, desert wind, and nights spent drifting between cheap bars and stranger towns. His voice still sounds like it has […]
Hunter Morris Finds New Ground Between Music and the Mountains With ‘Nowhere, NW’ (FEATURE)
For most of his adult life, Hunter Morris has existed between motion and stillness. One version of his life unfolds onstage, in studios, and in the long, uncertain pursuit of making records. The other begins before daylight in the mountains of North Georgia, where he guides clients through cold trout streams and spends long days […]
‘Shaping Sounds’ Biography Follows Robert Margouleff’s Human Career In The Synth Revolution (INTERVIEW)
On May 19th, Robert Margouleff’s autobiography, titled Shaping Sounds: Stevie Wonder, Devo, The Synth Revolution and My Life Behind The Music, arrives on Jawbone Press, chronicling his life in music so far. It’s arriving in print, digitally, and even as an audiobook. With a career spanning about seventy years, Grammy Award winner Margouleff is best […]
Joey Quiñones Ushers In New Era of Contemporary Soul With Solo Debut ‘Inna Soul Steady Situation’ (ALBUM REVIEW)
The contemporary soul revival scene is due for a renaissance. Much like how The Temptations and Norman Whitfield began adding hints of psychedelia to the pop-tinted Motown sound in the late sixties, it is time for modern soul acts to enter into a similar phase of experimentation. With a plethora of new artists joining the […]
Kurt Vile Crafts Curious Autobiographical Ode On Colorful ‘Philadelphia’s been good to me’ (ALBUM REVIEW)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, represents a plethora of things to many people from many different walks of life. Some see it as the destination of their morning commute from the suburbs, while others see it as the place their rival sports team houses its stars. For a lot of people, though, including the incomparable Kurt Vile, Philly […]
Francis of Delirium Unleashes Cathartic Indie Rock On Refreshing ‘Run, Run Pure Beauty’ (ALBUM REVIEW)
Jana Bahrich, the mastermind behind the emotional and epic music by Francis of Delrium, is growing up before our very eyes. With the artist’s debut EP arriving just as the multi-hyphenate was graduating high school in 2020, and thanks to her prolific nature, fans have seen her grow into an unabashed poet, more akin to […]
Pianist Emmet Cohen Honors Miles & Coltrane On Imaginative ‘Universal Truth’ (ALBUM REVIEW)
Most of today’s jazz fans recognize pianist Emmet Cohen from his popular livestream series, Live From Emmet’s Place. Though Cohen typically plays in the piano trio format, he has a legacy of inviting prominent guests to his livestream series. Still, other than his Master Legacy Series, Cohen’s albums have mostly featured his trio at the […]
Nathan Evans Fox Mines the Trials and Tribulations of Modern Southern Life with Emotionally Resonant Americana Songs on ‘Heirloom’ (ALBUM REVIEW)
Nathan Evans Fox’s Heirloom is an album born out of generational trauma, a dying economy, and religious questioning. Raised in rural North Carolina, surrounded by shuttered mills, Fox attended seminary and trained as a hospital chaplain, but ultimately walked away from that job to focus on music full-time after the death of his father and […]
Alabama Shakes & JJ Grey & Mofro Lull Red Rocks Into A Communal Reverie (SHOW REVIEW)
On Sunday, May 24, Alabama Shakes and fellow Southern rockers JJ Grey & Mofro took the Red Rocks audience on a swampy adventure before conjuring a communal reverie that transported the venue into a heavenly daydream. The over nine-thousand capacity amphitheater was sold out for this first night in a romping two-night run. The most […]
Trey Anastasio Launches Acoustic Tour With Rarities and Pacific Northwest Phish Lore at Portland, OR’s Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall (SHOW REVIEW)
Few artists could spend a marathon nine nights rocking the most technologically advanced arena in the world only to flip the script a few short weeks later and embark on a stripped-down solo acoustic tour. Yet, Phish frontman Trey Anastasio can and is doing exactly that with a brief run of shows in the kind […]
David Lee Roth’s Frontman Charisma Beams At Boston’s Citizens House of Blues (SHOW REVIEW/PHOTOS)
The rainstorm that came splashing down on Lansdowne Street this Sunday, May 24th, almost ruined the whole holiday weekend. While a miserable New England storm drowned Boston outside, a beautiful contingent of die-hard rock purists packed into the Citizens House of Blues, trading soaked jackets for the heavy, humid heat of an old-school club gig. […]
DelFest 2026: Toy Factory Project, Punch Brothers, Sierra Hull, Infamous Stringdusters & More Lead Another Spirited Get-Together (FESTIVAL REVIEW)
Since 2008, bluegrass legend Del McCoury and his cadre of family, friends, and musical cohorts have spent their Memorial Day weekends transforming the sleepy Appalachian town of Cumberland, MD, into the stuff that a live music lover’s dreams are made of: DelFest. The four-day musical extravaganza, intimately situated in the Appalachian Mountains-abutting Allegheny County Fairgrounds in western Maryland, […]
Family Worship Center Celebrate New LP ‘Only Visiting’ with Psyched Out Rock and Soul Dance Party at Portland, OR’s Polaris Hall (SHOW REVIEW)
Among the bustling indie music scene in Portland, Oregon, Family Worship Center has carved out a niche and steadily built a following for their big-band take on Southern rock and roll. With a visual and musical aesthetic that falls somewhere between the cult-like technicolor of the Polyphonic Spree and the piano-driven rock of Leon Russell, […]
The Case For ‘PussyCake’ (2021) As A Rock N Roll Movie (FILM REVIEW)
Calling PussyCake (2021) a rock ‘n’ roll movie is a bit like calling Friday the 13th a movie about summer camp. It misses the point. PussyCake embodies the spirit of the music. The horror movie—firmly entrenched in the grindhouse tradition—is the story of an all-female rock quartet: the titular PussyCake. And if you can’t guess […]
Occupational Hazard: A Candid Documentary of Jimmy Buffett’s Early Career, Told With Love By Those Who Were There (FILM REVIEW)
Before the private jets, the billion-dollar hospitality empire, and the globally recognized shorthand for coastal escapism, Jimmy Buffett was, in the words of guitarist Roger Bartlett, “a mere mortal.” Bartlett was the first-ever member of the Coral Reefer Band, and he is one of many past Buffett collaborators to speak in Occupational Hazard: The First […]
Is ‘Josie and the Pussycats’ (2001) Really Even A Rock N Roll Movie? (FILM REVIEW)
The satirical romp Josie and the Pussycats (2001) is a fun movie. But is it a great rock ‘n’ roll movie? Eh, not so fast on that second one. Welcome back to Glide’s quest for what makes a good rock ‘n’ roll movie. Last month, we looked at Almost Famous, a great launching pad because […]
Almost Perfect: Why ‘Almost Famous’ Sets the Gold Standard for Rock Movies
A good rock ‘n’ roll movie remains a tough prospect. Why? It’s a question that has remained elusive for years, and for 2026, the rabbit hole beckons. That’s why, coming to you from the screening room at Glide Magazine HQ, we’ve decided to do a bit of research. Every first Friday of the month, we’ll […]
‘Licorice Pizza’ Can’t Carry Weight Of Its Parts (FILM REVIEW)
Rating C+ The thing about Paul Thomas Anderson is that his talent is so great that even his bad movies are, well, pretty good. His technique and craft are such that his worst movie still has plenty worth noting and considering. Inherent Vice was, by most accounts, not a great movie. And yet there was […]
‘A Quiet Place II’ Leaves Much to Be Desired (BLU-RAY REVIEW)
The Blu-Ray release of A Quiet Place II is a lot like the film itself–inconsequential.
‘Hammer Films: The Ultimate Collection’ A Schlocky Ode to Britain’s House of Horror (BLU-RAY REVIEW)
The legendary house of schlock celebrates some less revered works in this stunning box set.
‘2001’ 4K Transfer is a Must Own for Cinephiles (4K BLU-RAY REVIEW)
A stunning new transfer allows you to see the Kubrick classic like never before.
‘A Simple Favor’ Brings Christmas Early (BLU-RAY REVIEW)
One of the year’s most surprising treats comes home for the holidays.
‘The Evil Dead’ 4K Release Offers A Mixed Bag (Blu-ray 4K Review)
The transfer is glorious but the lack of special features disappoints.
Greg Anton’s ‘It’s About Time’ Covers Triumphs & Trials Of One Musician With Poetic Poise (BOOK REVIEW)
As a longstanding professional musician, Greg Anton knows full well the archetypes of that universe as well as their attendant cliches, which, like most truisms, actually contain kernels of truth. Accordingly, he has no qualms about turning the platitudes inside out and on their head during the course of unreeling his fictional story of disputed […]
‘U2 – Until The End of the World’ By Bradley Morgan (BOOK REVIEW)
The efficiency of Bradley Morgan’s U2 Until The End of the World belies its heft. In the 240 pages of the 11″ by 9″ hardcover, the author provides a fairly thorough chronicle of the mega-successful Irish band’s history, without any overt agenda or slanted editorializing. And while the writer doesn’t delve too deeply into the […]
Richard Manuel: His Life and Music, from The Hawks and Bob Dylan to The Band (BOOK REVIEW)
The smiling visage of the late Richard Manuel that adorns the dust cover of Stephen T. Lewis’ biography belies the sorrowful tragedy of the musician’s life. And intentionally or not, the author’s narrative follows the ups and downs of the man’s troubled existence. As a result, the clear-eyed insights Lewis offers are worth the effort […]
Heartbreakers Guitarist Mike Campbell Humbly Chronicles an Epic Career in ‘Heartbreaker: A Memoir’ (BOOK REVIEW)
Mike Campbell might just be the most humble musician in rock music. As guitarist for Tom Petty And The Heartbreakers, he has co-written some of the most iconic American rock songs of his generation (“American Girl,” “Running Down A Dream,” “Refugee,” “Here Comes My Girl”). He served in one of Bob Dylan’s backing bands, he […]
‘Brothers’ By Alex Van Halen Serves Up Intimate Tales Of Rock’s Most Electric Band (BOOK REVIEW)
“Ed’s talent was an asset, not just to me but to him. It was an asset to our band; this thing that was bigger than us would be the vehicle for all of our dreams. Of course, the band was more or less imaginary at this point, but if Ed could play guitar like that, […]
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