Music Reviews

Sort By:  Post Date TitlePublish Date
Brett Milano  |  Jun 03, 2007  | 

Ken Richardson  |  Jun 03, 2007  | 
Hats Off to the Buskers 1965/Columbia
Music •••½ Sound ••½
Entering the U.K. charts at No.
Billy Altman  |  May 30, 2007  | 

Billy Altman  |  May 30, 2007  | 
The Reminder Cherrytree/Interscope
Music ••• Sound •••½
Given Leslie Feist's history as a punk-turned-chanteuse indie princ
Jeff Perlah  |  May 30, 2007  | 

Parke Puterbaugh  |  May 30, 2007  | 

Mike Mettler  |  May 10, 2007  | 

Ken Richardson  |  May 03, 2007  | 

Porcupine Tree: Fear of a Blank Planet (Atlantic). As personified by this concept album's young protagonist, the worldview of the Planet isn't just blank.

Brett Milano  |  Apr 30, 2007  | 

Rob O'Connor  |  Apr 30, 2007  | 

Steve Simels  |  Apr 30, 2007  | 

Billy Altman  |  Apr 16, 2007  | 

Ken Richardson  |  Apr 16, 2007  | 

Ken Richardson  |  Apr 16, 2007  | 

Steve Guttenberg  |  Apr 16, 2007  | 
Wide Open
The Doors’
Perception breaks on through. The Doors’ self-titled first album was in an altogether darker, more theatrical, sinful, and sexual musical realm than anything heard in 1967. It was one hell of a debut, and, 40 years on, it still sounds incredibly unique. The band functioned with a collective spirit, and its four members—Jim Morrison, vocals; Ray Manzarek, keyboards; Robbie Krieger, guitar; and John Densmore, drums—shared songwriting and arranging credits on most of the tunes.

Pages

X