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The concept of “dance-punk" has always been a bit difficult for some punks to grasp/swallow. Some readers may scoff and say that's because those punks simply can't dance (this is possible), but think about it: one of the key elements of punk has always been its urgency. The urgency of punk has always been so potent that it has tended to override any movement as organized as the average dance step, hasn't it? That's why pogo-ing and moshing exist; neither...

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Saturday, 27 April 2013
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Anyone familiar with the history of musicians who try to make the transition from a punk label (like Epitaph or Fat Wreck Chords, for example) to a major conglomerate will understand why both Frank Turner's fans and the singer's critics are looking so awfully hard at Tape Deck Heart – his fifth album, but first for Interscope – and why they're watching every move that gets made around the record. Historically, the albums that punk acts release after they sign...

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Saturday, 27 April 2013
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As much as punk rock has polished up its image in recent years and no matter how many punk rockers aspire to be “artists” now in the twenty-first century, punk rock music still lives, breathes and thrives best in clubs in front of a live audience. Some punks have big names and reputations now? Big deal – if they can't make their music work for them outside of a safe and sterile recording studio, and if it doesn't sound as...

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Saturday, 27 April 2013
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In the early twentieth century, a few very bold writers (including Earnest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald) attempted to illustrate in their writing that there is no hell worse than the drudgery of modern life. It's easy to understand why those writers were preoccupied with such a bleak view; the sense of adventure which came with conquering the American frontier had faded because the North American interior had been settled and well-charted. As soon as that ground was tamed too,...

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Saturday, 27 April 2013
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These days, every musician over a certain age (and some well under it) seems to be writing their memoirs. But, if you're a musician, why write them? Why not sing them? James Cotton, a blues harp player who has been recording for over fifty years, has done just that on his new CD, Cotton Mouth Man. At least half the songs on this album are autobiographical. The title track is obvious. "Mississippi Mud" starts out telling about his youth working...

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Friday, 26 April 2013
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There is a recurring debate in the art world, especially in art criticism, about how important biography is to understanding a piece of artwork. Does knowing that Fitzgerald was unwilling to propose to Zelda until he felt financially secure help us understand The Great Gatsby? Does knowledge of Van Gogh's (supposed) madness help us appreciate "Starry Night," or does it color our interpretation too much? Does it force us to see the swirling colors as evidence of a swirling mind,...

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Friday, 26 April 2013
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Awright, a moment o' silence is in order junky, so bow yer head, I came back early ta pay some respect ta a reckid store thit closed in my neighbahood, Bleecker Bob's Golden Oldies Record Shop. Everybody will tell you dat it wis a dump cause it was; it wis rough an' smelly an' looked cheap, but it wis still special. Those who haven't got a clue will tell you it wis special cause it's where Lenny Kaye met Patti...

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Thursday, 25 April 2013
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As of this writing, it will have been about forty years since Iggy and The Stooges released their seminal album, Raw Power. More specifically, it has been 14685 days since Iggy and The Stooges' first album ("first" in that it featured guitarist James Williamson under the moniker Iggy and The Stooges – The Stooges had already released two albums before that) hit new release racks and started growing within the mainstream (underground or above ground is irrelevant); ultimately reshaping a...

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Tuesday, 23 April 2013
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As one scans back through the last twenty-five years, it becomes pretty easy to see that one of the best producers of new label signing/ new music compilations has been Sub Pop Records. To be fair, the label comps that Epitaph and Fat Wreck Chords used to put out were pretty awesome, but no label has proven to have the same consistency that Sub Pop has; in fact, comps like Sub Pop 100 and 200 have even taken on a...

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Tuesday, 23 April 2013
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Remember back in high school when all the kids who could play instruments eventually began to break down into smaller subsets with the idea of starting bands together? If you looked around, you'd see four guys who all happened to like Neil Young congregate at the same table in the cafeteria and eventually start jamming together after school (or sometimes at lunch), then the punk band and the four guys who could play Beatles songs the best would start their...

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Tuesday, 23 April 2013