Q&A with Tumbledown
Fronted by musical mastermind Mike Herrera (MxPx and Arthur) and backed by Trotland brothers Harley and Marshall and guitarist Jack Parker, Tumbledown has taken country music and punk to a whole new level.
Read MoreFronted by musical mastermind Mike Herrera (MxPx and Arthur) and backed by Trotland brothers Harley and Marshall and guitarist Jack Parker, Tumbledown has taken country music and punk to a whole new level.
Read MoreIt isn’t nostalgia that makes Young Buck inherently more interesting now than he was in 2004. It’s a thinning of values, a dearth of quality that the ensuing six years have brought us.
Read MoreEvan Brightly is unique, artistic and multifaceted. Evan Brightly has written a novel, produced an album and is an established painter. Evan Brightly isn’t even a man.
Read MoreHe was different, dirty and, more often than not, drugged up, but like him or not, Jimi Hendrix’s raw talent is undeniable.
Read MoreFor her new LP, Robyn leads off with “Indestructible,” a song revamped from a skeletal framework on Body Talk Part 2, and a perfect encapsulation of Robyn’s Body Talk series, making it perhaps the most comprehensive and valuable first single of the bunch.
Read MoreThe raucous sounds of punk rock. An atmosphere of youthful hubris.
Read MoreIt may be an acronym to pay attention to, as it will be sweeping our country in a vile wave of destitution.
Read MoreWith 1988’s Nothing’s Shocking, Jane’s Addiction burst from the Los Angeles club scene onto the national stage, ushering with them a new style of sound.
Read MoreFirst came Ten, and it was good. Then came Nevermind, and it was a game-changer…
Read MoreStevens keeps his typical and bizarre structuring of instrumental sections intact on “Too Much.”
Read MoreLeo Mintek is tired.
Read MoreMeanderthal is a record collector’s dream come true.
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