In the Pink

While The Who’s Tommy has landed firmly in the jazz hands of community theaters across the country, that other infamous concept-album-cum-stoner-film, Pink Floyd–The Wall, doesn’t get much stage time. That’s not surprising, really. The 1982 Roger Waters/Alan Parker film is essentially a visual riff, the story of a spoiled rock…

Descendents

Go back in time and destroy every copy of the Descendents’ 1982 Milo Goes to College, and the Warped Tour never happens. Because without that record, and the band that made it, there would be no Blink-182 and, oh, about 100 other bands. They aren’t fawned over and fetishized like…

Los Lobos

East L.A.’s greatest-ever band has so far spent the 21st century backing away from the formal and textural experimentation that marked the work the group did in the 1990s. In 2002, Good Morning Aztlán winningly showcased the band’s roots–a hard, Latin-keyed rock and soul with plenty of swing–but felt a…

Mystic Chords of Memory

It’s safe to assume that the shaggy-coifed dudes of Mystic Chords of Memory wouldn’t pass the company drug test. Their self-titled platter has all the stoner charm of the psychedelic folkies they serviceably emulate. Spark one up and press play on the languid “Barry Creek Falls.” Sound a little familiar?…

Mission of Burma

In the two decades since Mission of Burma dismantled, its members have risen to the rank of indie-rock legends. Fans who discovered their manic, unique destruction of rock precedents a few years too late got a second chance when the lineup reunited for concerts in 2002, and after 22 years…

Juliana Hatfield

Juliana Hatfield seemingly has everything going for her. She has a girly, interesting voice, a cooler-than-thou attitude, and she carries plenty of indie cred courtesy of her stint in the on-again/off-again Blake Babies. Still, on every one of her solo albums she’s managed to disappoint. In Exile Deo, her seventh,…

Twist at the End

The world at large remembers the Porky’s movies, if it remembers them at all, as the precursors of the American Pie films, a way station between Animal House and the most recent crop of movies that encourage us to laugh at young people and their genitals. The more savvy film…

The Wurlitzer Prize

You could assume a lot of things about a Dallas band that takes its name from a Waylon Jennings song–but you shouldn’t. This Wurlitzer Prize has little to do with Jennings other than a standard vocals/guitars/keyboards/drums setup and some good, clean, simple songs about love and frustration. There’s nothing fancy…

Only a Mountain

Not enough people love Pleasant Grove. On its albums, PG sounds like a band with a huge cult following: the kind with crazed Internet discussions, endless bootleg trading rings and packed club concerts. The Dallas band combines the thickly brewed melodies of Whiskeytown, the tempered melancholy of Morphine and even…

What She Is Now

The first time I met Edie Brickell was in the summer of 1988. “What I Am,” the first single from Shooting Rubberbands at the Stars, her band’s major-label debut, was in heavy rotation on Q102, and the newly famous Edie Brickell and New Bohemians played a show outdoors in the…

Dropped a Bomb on Me

Late last Saturday night, I was headed to the Cavern on Lower Greenville for a late-night smackerel when something caught my eyes. Well, not caught them so much as stung them, badly. My throat began to burn in the weirdest, most unnatural way. As I reached the corner of Eight…

The Lost Trailers

Last year Alabama’s Drive-By Truckers wooed a nation of hipsters with their terrific Decoration Day, an album of Southern hard-luck stories told with you-are-there detail and delivered with there-you-are muscle. From the sound of Welcome to the Woods, their major-label debut, Atlanta’s Lost Trailers would like to seduce those same…

Loretta Lynn

White out Jack White’s name as producer and collaborator, and Loretta Lynn’s latest probably flies under the radar and into the discount bins sooner than later. Such is the usual fate of the country legend deemed too old for radio or resurrection at this late date. Never mind her stature…

French Kicks

The Brooklyn bands just don’t know when to leave the party. They’re lingering at the Pabst keg in tight pleather and blasting dopey new wave records. And if you had a nickel for every conversation that included the word “electro,” every last OMD T-shirt on eBay would be yours. French…

Diana Krall

Semi-stranded in the Czech Republic in April 2002, I found succor in Canadian crooner Diana Krall’s The Look of Love, an easy-riding pop-jazz confection that feels like a million bucks when you’re staring down your third meal of conspicuously vegetable-free goulash a fellow traveler more accurately dubbed “oil soup.” Pre-Norah…

Detachment Kit

These New York-based indie-rockers (recently relocated from Chicago, where they recorded both their albums at Steve Albini’s Electrical Audio studio complex) figure there’s no reason you can’t work up a dense lather of electric-guitar distortion in one song and reduce another to a few plucked notes beneath a pretty harmony-vocal…

Toni Price

I discovered Toni Price as a junior at the University of Texas, still sputtering from a breakup that left me cradling wet tissue on the couch and canceling plans so I could stare at the phone, cruelly silent. I filled those lonely–nay, pathetic–hours with Price’s bluesy minor-masterpiece Hey, a 13-song…

Forever and Now

A quick survey of the aftermath of a Little Grizzly show. Singer/ guitarist George Neal is hunched at center stage, face red, veins still throbbing in his forehead from screaming. His knuckles are white from beating his chest in time to the bass drum. Bassist Jacob Barnhart is lying on…

Destroy the Riverboat Gamblers

“Do I need earplugs?” my friend asked, half-joking. I was taking him to his first Riverboat Gamblers show. I wondered: If I told him he needed a hard hat, would he back out? That night the Gamblers played to a packed room at the Cavern. Outside, the air was chilly,…

Going Through Changes

A snapshot of the artist as a family man: Salim Nourallah, 35 years old, Coke-bottle glasses on a handsome face. A Beatles pin on the lapel of his Western-cut shirt. Scruffy hair, casually unshaven. He speaks passionately about his new role as a father, about three–three!–new recordings coming out in…

Franz Ferdinand

Like the Strokes and the Rapture before them, these well-dressed Scots make an effortlessly stylish sound. On their buzzed-about debut they underpin scratchy guitar fuzz with insistent disco beats and body-rocking bass lines, while singer Alex Kapranos oozes the sophisticated, world-weary charm of a young man who’s been to too…

Patty Griffin

Patty Griffin hasn’t wasted her second chance in the record industry. After a four-year drought caused by label woes, the Austin songwriter has since banged out two albums and a live disc in two years, and she has abandoned her attempts at Alanis-rock that weighed down her old work. Not…