Phoenix Shares Live Album For Free
If you’re a big fan of Phoenix’s breakthrough album, Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix, like we are, you’ll want to head to the band’s website for a free download called Live in
If you’re a big fan of Phoenix’s breakthrough album, Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix, like we are, you’ll want to head to the band’s website for a free download called Live in
After sitting on the shelf since 2008, the second biopic about Chess Records founder Leonard Chess – who was responsible to putting out records by Muddy Waters, Etta James, Chuck
Back in 1995, hell, even 2005, you would’ve never pegged the Disco Biscuits for an act to get one of their videos in rotation on one of MTV’s music channels. Yet, if you tuned into MTV2 or MTVU at the top of any hour yesterday, you caught an airing of the Philadelphia-based quartet’s video for On Time. To celebrate the band’s accomplishment, we’re devoting this month’s Through The Years column to the Disco Biscuits.
The earliest Disco Biscuits video on YouTube was shot in 1998, so we started our playlist with a clip from ’98 and included one video from each year through 2009. We finish with the Hidden Track premiere of On Time.
Disco Biscuits Through The Years Playlist
READ ON for a listing of the tracks we used for this playlist…
The Gaslight Anthem, known for their joyous, euphoria-inducing live show, will hit the road for a two-month run of headlining tour dates. The tour kicks of April 15th in Solana
Ben Harper and Relentless7 have just finished recording their follow-up to 2009’s White Lies For Dark Times. Titled Give Till It’s Gone, the self-produced album will be out in the
The New Pornographers will return May 4th with Together, their new LP via Matador. "Crash Years," the album’s first single, is available today via iTunes, and if you pre-order Together
Neil Young will play a short batch of acoustic shows in the Southeast beginning in May. These shows—Young’s first southern dates in nearly 10 years—will see him playing solo in
Longtime Hidden Track readers might recall watching me fall in love with the music of Crowded House after catching the power popsters at the Masonic Lodge in NYC way back
Just as quickly as it started, HT’s Cover Wars March Madness tournament is racing towards the end as we’re down to the final four contestants. In the last round, PGroove put a beating on Give Us The Money Lebowski, Trey Anastasio and Phish won by slim margins over YARN and Pearl Jam respectively. Also, Umphrey’s won big over Built to Spill. In each matchup, our readers came out in large numbers to vote so we thank you for that.
For today’s semi-finals, we made Phish face off against Trey while PGroove goes up against Umphrey’s. Regardless, it’s clear a HT Favorite will take this year’s title.
Let’s take a look at this year’s semifinal matchups…
1. PGroove – This Must Be The Place vs. UM – Can’t You Hear Me…
2. Phish – Curtis Loew vs. Trey Anastasio – Sultans of Swing
Our first bout finds Perpetual Groove’s cover of This Must Be The Place (Naive Melody) by the Talking Heads squaring off against Umphrey’s McGee’s version of the Rolling Stones’ Can’t You Hear Me Knocking…
Perpetual Groove – This Must Be The Place (Naive Melody)
Audio: 2-10-2007
[audio:https://glidemag.wpengine.com/hiddentrack/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/pgroovenaive.mp3]
Video: 12-13-2009
Umphrey’s McGee – Can’t You Hear Me Knocking
Audio: 12-30-2007
[audio:https://glidemag.wpengine.com/hiddentrack/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/umknock.mp3]
Video: 12-30-2007
READ ON to place your vote on this week’s bouts…
[Originally Published: September 29, 2009]
One of my favorite bands was, is, and always shall be Pink Floyd if you haven’t noticed. And like the psychedelic pioneers of space rock, I never met an idea I couldn’t use more than once or thrice. So, here, this week, we present an amalgamation of several Hidden Flick thought patterns as we continue our thesis study on “What is Cinema?” Why are the alleged great films usually bores, while the weird flicks are the post-everything gems?
And yes…a mixture of patterns sleeping in the dirt outside the Hidden Theatre as we wait to get inside to start an evening of unexpected fun and heady pre-Halloween no-goodery. Press replay, repeat, and then play the new stuff, please (“thesis” is used in jest, brah).
Well…time for more popcorn, Red Vines, Raisinettes, and a refill of that 97-ounce soda. We take a break from our regular look at obscure films with another edition of Intermission, which means another look at a cinematic chestnut that may have been lauded or groundbreaking in the past, but has since been forgotten in history’s hourglass.
READ ON for more of this week’s installment of Hidden Flick…