Album Reviews

I Love You But I’ve Chosen Darkness: Fear Is On Our Side

Isolation is the central theme here, from the band’s name to the sound found on Fear Is On Our Side; it seeps through the casket cracks like rain water. A remote gasping vocal delivery of lines like “Reaching/For the end/Never make a sound.” place you squarely back in 1986 at a Cure/Depeche Mode double bill, while the music behind those lines manages to raise the stakes.

Read More

The Whipsaws: Ten Day Bender

These Alaskan country-fried players sure have some depressing Ten Day Benders; they also have enough good ‘ole boy in them to pump a shotgun and pick a fiddle simultaneously.

Read More

Ani DiFranco: Reprieve

or the first time in years, Ani DiFranco recently took some time off, as the touring grind was finally wearing her down. Following a live album (Carnegie Hall 4/6/02) released earlier this year, DiFranco has returned with Reprieve. Never one to back down from a political firestorm, DiFranco was forced to leave New Orleans during Reprieve

Read More

Josh Ritter: The Animal Years

The Animal Yearsis a great listen, with little to no filler and a lingering feeling that makes you wonder where those forty-nine minutes snuck off to.

Read More

Live At KEXP Vol II: Various Artists

The progressive programming and the continuous breaking of new artists has solidified both terrestrial and online listening audiences that respond with intense loyalty.

Read More

Thom Yorke: The Eraser

When Thom Yorke sings, people listen. For that reason alone, Yorke making a solo album, makes perfect sense. On his solo debut, The Eraser, Yorke’s gnarled voice work its magic alongside an assortment of synthesizers, drum machines, loops.

Read More

View posts by year