Album Review: Barns Courtney – The Attractions of Youth ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Andres Alvarado - September 30, 2017 Article by: Andrés Alvarado It’s been a long road for Barnaby “Barns” Courtney. His debut LP The Attractions of Youth finally arrives via Virgin EMI Records; roughly two years since releasing his first single “Glitter and Gold.” Hailing from Ipswich, England, this brash and explosive chap presents us with 13 tracks
Album Review: The Killers – Wonderful Wonderful ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Andres Alvarado - September 21, 2017September 22, 2017 Article by: Andrés Alvarado The boys of Vegas are back at it. After a five-year hiatus, The Killers hand us Wonderful Wonderful; the fifth installment to their already storied discography. Musically, the new effort is lavishly glitzy and glamorous, truly symbolic of the band’s hometown. Lyrically, Wonderful Wonderful ventures into opaque
Album Review: Sløtface – Try Not to Freak Out ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Andres Alvarado - September 19, 2017 Article by Andrés Alvarado Norwegian pop-punk rockers Sløtface seem like a low maintenance, party-hard and kick-ass bunch. If their debut LP Try Not to Freak Out is any indication, they're substantially more. Brimmed of crunchy and catchy hooks, clever coming-of-age tales, and vigorously loud drums, Try Not to Freak Out is
Album Review: Wyclef Jean – Carnival III: The Fall and Rise of a Refugee ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Andres Alvarado - September 16, 2017September 16, 2017 Article by: Andrés Alvarado It’s been 20 years since Wyclef Jean unleashed upon us his solo debut album The Carnival. Back then, those Nynex and Sam Goody rhymes were all we wanted streaming through our disc-mans and car radios. Fast forward to present day and it’s a different world, with different
Album Review: Jake Bugg – Hearts That Strain ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Andres Alvarado - September 10, 2017 Article by: Andrés Alvarado With his 4th album Hearts That Strain, youngster Jake Bugg has seemingly drifted away from that brash persona that appealed to many and made his music noteworthy. While change is not a terrible thing, it is difficult to do it right. Jake Bugg’s new album has plenty
Album Review: Queens of the Stone Age – Villains ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Andres Alvarado - September 2, 2017 Article by: Andrés Alvarado The release of Queens of the Stone Age’s seventh LP Villains just made the race for Album of the Year a little more interesting. This time around the Californian quintet, helmed by Josh Homme, tapped producer Mark Ronson (Adele, Amy Winehouse and Bruno Mars) to assist in
Album Review: Neck Deep – The Peace and The Panic ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Sam Tucker - August 30, 2017 Article by: Angelica Pasquali If you haven't been jamming to Neck Deep since 2012, then it's the perfect time to expand your music horizon! This pop punk band just dropped their latest album, The Peace and The Panic! A very interesting album with a war-time mindset theme touching on a variety of
Album Review: PVRIS – All We Know of Heaven, All We Need of Hell ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Courtney Drake - August 26, 2017 Article by: Courtney Drake Featured Image Cred: Emma Swann PVRIS, an alternative band hailing from Boston, finally released their highly anticipated album All We Know of Heaven, All We Need of Hell on August 25th. In late April of this year, the band ghosted their social media account and deleted all of its
Album Review: Dale Crover- The Fickle Finger of Fate ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Steven Principato - August 22, 2017 Article by: Steven Principato Despite Dale Crover’s life long career as the legendary powerhouse behind the Melvins drum-kit, among countless other acts including Nirvana, It’s a rather surprising fact that The Fickle Finger Of Fate (Joyful Noise, 2017) officially breaks Dale as a first-time solo artist. (I gather the Dale Crover
Album Review: Upright Man (Self-Titled Debut) ALBUM REVIEWS MUSIC by Jason Robey - August 22, 2017 Article by: Jason Robey New York City rockers, Upright Man, just released their self-titled debut album. The album consists of ten genre-bending songs, nodding to the band’s wide variety of influences. The album’s opening track, “Elysia,” bursts out of the gate with a riff reminiscent of material from Led Zeppelin’s Houses of