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A.D. Amorosi
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Art & Culture
Rob Drew on Unspooling the History, Mystery, and Romance of the Cassette Tape

The author of Unspooled: How the Cassette Made Music Shareable discusses how the ease and affordability of cassettes once democratized the recording and sharing of music.

July 23, 2024
Reviews
Hiatus Kaiyote, “Love Heart Cheat Code”

The psych-soul quartet eschews improvisation for something more focused and melodic, which proves easier on the ears yet often incompatible with their prior clamorous catalog.

July 22, 2024
Reviews
Dr. Dog, “Dr. Dog”

The Philadelphian indie-folk troupe’s 12th album sounds like a greatest-hits package, their shiny and remastered best for the goal of optimum woodsy psychedelic crispness.

July 22, 2024
Reviews
John Lennon, “Mind Games: The Ultimate Collection”

Everything held within this fabulously gluttonous 30-pound cube is designed to physically portray just what was going on inside the Lennon/Ono brain trust in NYC circa summer 1973.

July 16, 2024
Reviews
Linda Thompson, “Proxy Music”

After losing her singing voice, the folk-rock icon pushes her incendiary brand of writing to new heights and humors on her first record in 11 years, abetted by nearly a dozen guest vocalists.

July 15, 2024
Reviews
Johnny Blue Skies, “Passage du Desir”

Under a new moniker, Sturgill Simpson offers up eight cosmic country songs with a new and deeper reverence for space-cowboy blues that don’t stray far from the Sturgill we’ve always loved.

July 12, 2024
In Conversation
Photographer Kevin Cummins Has His Own Way of Looking at David Bowie

From legendary gigs in the early ’70s to studio sessions in the ’90s, Cummins’ new photography book David Bowie: Mixing Memory & Desire captures many phases of the icon’s storied career.

July 08, 2024
Reviews
John Cale, “POPtical Illusion”

Following last year’s collab-heavy solo effort, the Velvet Underground co-founder’s latest is a more personal and approachable statement stuffed with vintage violence and minimalist fury.

June 26, 2024
The Poetry of Motion: Dirty Three on 30 Years of Love Changing Everything

Warren Ellis, Mick Turner, and Jim White discuss their first new collaborative album in 12 years, out now via Drag City.

June 26, 2024
Film + TV
A Clearer Look at the Alluringly Menacing Suburbia of “Blue Velvet”

David Lynch’s quietly disturbing modern-noir masterpiece is now available in director-approved 4K UHD, courtesy of Criterion Collection.

June 25, 2024
Reviews
Various Artists, “Noise for Now Vol. 2”

This installment of the org’s benefit series builds upon its predecessor’s variety, starpower, and vitality with original recordings and other curiosities from David Byrne & Devo, Courtney Barnett, Faye Webster, and more.

June 25, 2024
Reviews
Joni Mitchell, “The Asylum Albums (1976-1980)”

The liberated blues of Hejira and the melodic complexities of Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter and Mingus found the songwriting icon more footloose than ever.

June 21, 2024
Art & CultureIn Conversation
Nona Hendryx on Achieving Her Lifelong Dream of Becoming a Cyborg with “The Dream Machine Experience”

Running through the rest of the month at NYC’s Lincoln Center, the multimedia artist discusses how the project reflects a lifetime of Afrofuturist ideas.

June 20, 2024
Reviews
Brian Eno, Holger Czukay, and J. Peter Schwalm, “Sushi. Roti. Reibekuchen.”

The collaborators’ ambient soundscape created on the spot in 1998 in Bonn, Germany sounds like a jungle-meets-musique-concrète take on Eno’s 1981 collaboration with David Byrne.

June 18, 2024
Reviews
Normani, “Dopamine”

The long-awaited debut from the Fifth Harmony alum is a sleekly chic R&B album that sticks to a one-mood-fits-all soundtrack of listless soul rather than attempting innovation.

June 17, 2024
Reviews
Man Man, “Carrot on Strings”

Honus Honus’ seventh album maintains the project’s mad experimental dips and tipsy lyricism while venturing into unexpectedly pretty new territory.

June 10, 2024
From the Outside: Power of Attorney’s Ron Aikens

50 years after singing on the sole release from the first-ever prison band studio recording, the songwriter talks beginning a new chapter with the help of Brewerytown Records’s Max Ochester.

June 04, 2024
Reviews
Alan Vega, “Insurrection”

The third collection of posthumous recordings since his passing in 2016 finds the Suicide bandleader balanced between shocking melancholy and a sense of optimism.

May 30, 2024
Reviews
Bat for Lashes, “The Dream of Delphi”

Natasha Khan’s sixth studio album is quieter and sparer than its predecessors as motherhood lends her crowded lyrics and arrangements a new sense of loving poignancy.

May 29, 2024
Film + TV
Allan Arkush on Roger Corman and the Pop Art Rebellion of “Rock ’n’ Roll High School”

The 1979 musical comedy’s director connects the dots between the late cult film figure and modernism with the Ramones in tow.

May 23, 2024
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