Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Bumbershoot 2007: Eddie Vedder, Wu-Tang Clan, Panic! At the Disco and More at Seattle's Big Festival: Kings of Leon, Fergie, The Shins and More Onstage




Tue, Sep 04 2007 02:17 PDT









Eddie Vedder joins Crowded House during their performance at Bumbershoot on September 1, 2007 in Seattle. Photo



The Wu-Tang Clan perform on day three of Bumbershoot, September 3, 2007, in Seattle. Photo



Panic! At the Disco take the stage during Bumbershoot's first day, September 1, 2007, in Seattle. Photo



Kings of Leon perform on day two of Bumbershoot, September 2, 2007 in Seattle. Photo




Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Walk It Out - Unk










Unk Photo

Artist:
Unk


Song:
Walk It Out

Album:
Beat'n Down Yo Block



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Relationships - Body Count










Body Count Photo

Artist:
Body Count


Song:
Relationships

Album:
Murder 4 Hire



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Sound of Melodies - Leeland










Leeland Photo

Artist:
Leeland


Song:
Sound of Melodies

Album:
Sound Of Melodies



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Professional - Scotch Greens










Scotch Greens Photo

Artist:
Scotch Greens


Song:
Professional

Album:
Professional



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Undefeated - Meliah Rage










Meliah Rage Photo

Artist:
Meliah Rage


Song:
Undefeated

Album:
The Deep And Dreamless Sleep



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

An Epiphany - The Send










The Send Photo

Artist:
The Send


Song:
An Epiphany

Album:
Cosmos



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Ask A Columnist: Rolling Stone Executive Editor Joe Levy Answers Your Questions











Photo






We all have our opinions on why the music "industry" is sliding
on CD sales. This is my question to you: Has anyone mentioned MTV's
lack of video play as a possible cause for a slide in the music
biz? MTV is on almost every cable network in the US. It could still
reach kids instantly if they used this as a medium. --
KingLeer

I'm sure someone's mentioned it. Everyone certainly bitches
about it. Of course, MTV cut back on video play ten years ago or
more, long before CDs sales fell lower...





Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Exclusive Audio: M.I.A. Found Hip-Hop Via Thieves, Thinks U.S. Music Is Too Digital











Photo



--From Issue 1034



M.I.A. recently sat down with Rolling Stone associate
editor Brian Hiatt to discuss her new album, Kala (check
out our video and written reviews). The globe-trotting MC chatted
about everything from her childhood crackhead neighbors to her
obsession with "organic" sounding music. Here's a bit of their
interview:








Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

My List: Sean Kingston











UNIVERSAL CITY, CA - AUGUST 26: Singer Sean Kingston poses in the press room during the 2007 Teen Choice Awards held at The Gibson Amphitheatre on August 26, 2007 in Universal City, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Sean Kingston Photo



The seventeen-year-old pop-reggae crooner scored the jam of the
summer with "Beautiful Girls" Here are his fave summer jams



Jay-Z: Lost One
[Listen]


"I love the vibe," Kingston says of the Kingdom Come tune, on which
Hova dissects fame's pitfalls over Chrisette Michele's sweet hook.




Stevie Wonder: Ribbon in the Sky
[Listen]


Kingston's mom used to play the Motown legend's 1982 ballad when
Sean was a kid. "I like Stevie's soft stuff - he's one of my
biggest influences."



Bob Marley: No Woman, No Cry



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

50 Cent: Taking Care of Business











Photo



--Excerpt from Issue 1035



He has said that he will retire if Kanye West
sells more records than him. He has also said that he would like to
challenge West to a televised debate. And he has argued that nearly
all of the current interest accorded West is entirely owed to him.
He has a showman's flair in moments like this, Don King meets
Muhammad Ali, selling a spectacle, drumming up business, popcorn,
peanuts, cotton candy, come one, come all. His words will bring the
masses. That's what hustlers do, and that's what...



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Kanye: A Genius in Praise of Himself











Photo



--Excerpt from Issue 1035



It's the wee hours of a Monday night in
London, and inside Stringfellows strip club, about a dozen scantily
clad women form a rough semicircle around Kanye West and his small
entourage. The girls let him know that for just one twenty-pound
note (about forty dollars), they will drop their knickers and
gyrate in his face for the length of one song, and while I
contemplate how low the U.S. dollar has plummeted, West scans the
room and kicks back on a couch, armed with a stack of bills.

Over...





Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

The King of Kong










Photo

Starring:

Walter Day, Billy Mitchell, Todd Rogers, Steve Sanders, Doris
Sel...

Review:

Who would have guessed that a documentary about gamers obsessed
with scoring a world record at Donkey Kong would not only be
roaringly funny but serve as a metaphor for the decline of Western
civilization? Using Billy Mitchell?s need to stay champ and Steve
Wiebe?s need to beat him, director Seth Gordon deftly manages to
show how age, marriage, fatherhood and so-called ethical thinking
will not stop man?s need to go to war, no matter how stupid the
reason.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Eastern Promises










Photo

Starring:

Naomi Watts, Vincent Cassel, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Viggo Mortensen

Review:

How like David Cronenberg -- the master of body horror as a path to
the soul -- to begin his mesmerizing power-punch of a thriller with
a hemorrhage. The bloody fetus that we watch a fourteen-year-old
Russian girl?s uterus struggle to expel is a child of rape. But in
Cronenberg, be it the exploding heads of Scanners or the
imploding ids of The Fly, brutality and beauty are
inextricably linked. The baby becomes a promise and a threat in the
eyes of the film?s central characters. Anna Khitrova (Naomi Watts),
a midwife at a London hospital, tries to unite the baby with its
Russian family from clues she finds in the dead mother?s diary. Her
path leads to Nikolai Luzhin (Viggo Mortensen), a driver and
butcher for a Russian crime ring, led by Semyon (a magisterially
scary Armin Mueller-Stahl),...


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Shoot 'Em Up










Photo

Starring:

Monica Bellucci, Clive Owen, Paul Giamatti, Greg Bryk, Jane
McLea...

Review:

This wet dream for action junkies leaves out logic and motivation
--you know, all the boring stuff. It?s eighty-two minutes of
hardcore pow. Clive Owen, relieved of saving the world a la
Children of Men, is having a ball as Mr. Smith, a loner who?d kill
you as fast with a carrot as with a gun. His mission, other than
spewing one-liners and hitting on a hooker (megababe Monica
Bellucci), is to save a baby from the clutches of gun-crazy Hertz
(Paul Giamatti).
The shooting starts when the baby is born --a bullet cuts the
umbilical cord --and doesn?t stop. Writer-director Michael Davis
seems to have washed down the collected works of John Woo and
Sergio Leone with all the caffeine left at Starbucks. The dazzling
and daffy result isn?t really a movie at all, it?s a live-action
cartoon that...


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

King of California










Photo

Starring:

Michael Douglas, Evan Rachel Wood

Review:

With a crazed glint, a bushy beard and a firm desire to fly over
his own cuckoo?s next, Michael Douglas gives one of his best
performances ever as Charlie, the just-released mental patient at
the core of the hilarious and heartfelt King of
California. Back home after two years, Charlie becomes the
unwanted responsibility of his sixteen-year-old daughter, Miranda
(the ever-wonderful Evan Rachel Wood), who?s been getting by
selling Big Macs. Now she?s being dragged into Dad?s scheme to find
seventeenth-century Spanish treasure he?s convinced is buried under
the local Costco. In updating Shakespeare?s The Tempest,
writer-director Mike Cahill focuses on the magic worth finding
between a father and daughter. That?s why the film sticks with you.
It?s a gift.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

In the Shadow of the Moon










Photo

Starring:



Review:

You might think you already know everything you need to know about
the Apollo space program that galvanized America in the 1960s. But
David Sington?s remarkable documentary proves you wrong. Using
never-seen NASA archive footage of the nine moon missions attempted
from 1968 to 1972 and fresh interviews with all the surviving
astronauts, save the elusive Neil Armstrong, the film is a bracing
reminder of a moment in history in which pride is justified. OK,
the rah-rah gets a bit thick at times, especially a soundtrack that
won?t stop at rousing. But the insipid soon becomes inspiring as
the astronauts recall raw details, and we watch in amazement at the
wonder and tragedy on view. Want to know what the ?right stuff?
really is? Take a look.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

3:10 to Yuma










Photo

Starring:



Review:

Back in the Pleistocene Era (1957), Elmore Leonard?s short story
?3:10 to Yuma,? became a tense, tight High Noon knockoff
of a Western about a rancher (Van Heflin) trying to get an outlaw
(Glenn Ford) on a train to Yuma prison so he could collect a reward
and pay his debts. By the end ? it?s a three-day trip through
Apache territory -- no one would help the poor bastard.
The same plotlines run through this flashily entertaining remake
from Walk the Line director James Mangold, who already
updated the material in 1997?s Cop Land. The story?s moral
code clearly speaks to Mangold, and he?s put two top-notch actors
in the saddle. Christian Bale is the anti-American Psycho as
rancher and family man Dan Evans, and a dynamite Russell Crowe
practically licks his lips as charm-boy villain Ben...


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Children of Men










children of men Photo

Starring:

Clive Owen, Julianne Moore

Review:

Just in case you're one of the deprived who let Alfonso Cuaron's
Children of Men slip by at the multiplex, grab this DVD
and hold on for rock-the-house image and sound. It's a ride, but
not quite what you expect. This tale of a futuristic dystopia is
the anti-Blade Runner. The focus isn't in the action up
front, it's there in the background where the film's themes take
root. Cuaron, filling every frame with his passion and intellect,
takes on a 1992 novel by P.D. James set in 2027 in...


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Ace in the Hole









Starring:

Kirk Douglas, Jan Sterling, Robert Arthur

Review:

Criterion Director Billy Wilder painted too dark a picture for
1950?s America with this tale of an unethical reporter (a never
better Kirk Douglas) who manipulates the story of a man trapped
inside a cave into national news. Nowadays, the film should be
required in journalism school.


Rating: 4 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Zodiac









Starring:

Jake Gyllenhaal, Robert Downey Jr.

Review:

David Fincher, who directed Se7en, loves his crazies.
But this film doesn?t just tell the story of the serial killer who
plagued 1970s California. Fincher shows how the lives of cops and
journalists were ruined when they got too obsessed with the case.
Witness Robert Downey Jr. as a reporter turned cokehead.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

You're Gonna Miss Me










Photo

Starring:

Billy Gibbons, Patti Smith

Review:

This documentary traces the life of Roky Erickson, a pioneer of
60s psych-rock whose life becomes ruined by smoke, smack and
schizophrenia. It?s a familiar arc, sure, but the clich�s
are averted when the focus turns to the cause of his madness: his
bat-shit crazy mother.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Hot Fuzz









Starring:

Simon Pegg, Nick Frost

Review:

Who knew? Apparently, there are English hipsters out there who
revere trashy big-budget buddy-cop flicks like Lethal
Weapon and Bad Boys. Hot Fuzz is the latest
from the U.K. geek squad behind the cult comedy Shaun of the
Dead: writer/director Edgar Wright, writer/star Simon Pegg,
and demented plus-size sidekick Nick Frost. Together, they parody
cop movies with the same fanaticism Shaun of the Dead
brought to zombie flicks. For the first half or so, it's bloody
brilliant. Pegg and Frost are...


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

The Host









Starring:

Bong Joon-Ho

Review:

Need proof that South Korea is the epicenter of cool Asian
cinema? Look no further than The Host, where a family
battles a huge, contagion-carrying ? fish monster? The film is
hilarious and the action is out-of-control ? simply one of the
greatest monster flicks ever made.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Silverchair - Young Modern










Photo


Artist:
Silverchair

Review:
In the mid-nineties, the Australian trio Silverchair was a true boy
band - very young men playing strong, original hard-rock songs on
their own instruments. Drummer Ben Gillies, bassist Chris Joannou
and singer-guitarist-songwriter Daniel Johns are still young (in
their late twenties). They are also aggressively modern in the long
reach of Young Modern, their first studio album in five
years, from the balled-fist fuzz of "Mind Reader" to the sumptuous
glam of "Strange Behaviour" (with strings...


Rating:
4 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Rilo Kiley - Under The Blacklight










Photo


Artist:
Rilo Kiley

Review:
Because Rilo Kiley's More Adventurous was a triumph of the
well-made narrative song, its markedly terser and beatier
follow-up, which is also the band's true major-label debut, will be
accused of sellout. Instead, it's yet more adventurous, a
prosperous band's challenge to its comfortable cult. Always too
cute for serious indie cred, Jenny Lewis slips four songs about
dangerous sex in which she herself might be indulging -- right now,
in her pretty prosperity -- into music that's defined...


Rating:
4 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Architecture in Helsinki - Places Like This










Photo


Artist:
Architecture in Helsinki

Review:
What happens when indie-prog miniaturists decide to go for the long
bomb? "Heart It Races," if they're lucky -- the Australian
twee-dweeb aesthetes devise a real pop song even trippier than the
fake ones they keep snapping into fragments, a spaced-out bit of
calypso crossed with dance hall that keeps getting bigger until it
finally floats away. With its sexed-up beats, cowbell, nonsense
chants and wigged-out Casio-keyboard psychedelia, Places Like
This
turns its sound-effect juxtaposition...


Rating:
3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Talib Kweli - Eardrum










Photo


Artist:
Talib Kweli

Review:
Talib kweli earns the respect he gets. He's got plenty of brains
and enough flow, and though his attempts to make conscious rap
commercial inspire purist sniping, he's balanced the two with
integrity and grace. But four solo albums in, it can't be an
accident that he's done his signature work with collaborators ? Mos
Def (Black Star), Hi-Tek (Reflection Eternal) and many, many cameos
(try the z "My Favorite Mutiny"). The man simply lacks spark.
Kweli's Warner debut features yet more cameos -- ...


Rating:
3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Junior Senior - Hey Hey My My Yo Yo










Photo


Artist:
Junior Senior

Review:
Where can we buy the happy pills Junior Senior are taking? Hey
Hey
is the Danish duo's second straight album full of
megabright electro disco, something on the order of KC and the
Sunshine band partying with Abba, only with better keyboards and a
knowing wink. The album's enthusiasm sounds almost cartoonish at
times, and its title tells you all you need to know about their
lyrical approach. But Junior Senior's track-building smarts and way
with a hook add up to non-annoying bliss on a handful of...


Rating:
3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

The Grateful Dead - Three From the Vault










Photo


Artist:
The Grateful Dead

Review:
This show, the second of six at the Capitol Theater in Port
Chester, New York, in 1971, has been a trader's favorite since
ancient times, when live Dead music circulated on cassettes. The
week began with a drag ? drummer Mickey Hart quit after the first
night, not to return until 1976. But the Dead had recently made
Workingman's Dead and American Beauty and were on
an inspired roll. At Port Chester, they debuted imminent set
fixtures like "Playing in the Band" and "Wharf Rat." The
improvising is...


Rating:
4 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Monday, September 3, 2007

Walk It Out - Unk










Unk Photo

Artist:
Unk


Song:
Walk It Out

Album:
Beat'n Down Yo Block



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Relationships - Body Count










Body Count Photo

Artist:
Body Count


Song:
Relationships

Album:
Murder 4 Hire



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Sound of Melodies - Leeland










Leeland Photo

Artist:
Leeland


Song:
Sound of Melodies

Album:
Sound Of Melodies



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Professional - Scotch Greens










Scotch Greens Photo

Artist:
Scotch Greens


Song:
Professional

Album:
Professional



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Undefeated - Meliah Rage










Meliah Rage Photo

Artist:
Meliah Rage


Song:
Undefeated

Album:
The Deep And Dreamless Sleep



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

An Epiphany - The Send










The Send Photo

Artist:
The Send


Song:
An Epiphany

Album:
Cosmos



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

The Great Iraq Swindle:











President Bush speaks at a meeting of the Associated General Contractors of America on May 2, 2007 in Washington, DC. Photo



How Bush Allowed an Army of For-Profit Contractors to Invade the
U.S. Treasury

--From Issue 1034




How is it done? How do you screw the taxpayer
for millions, get away with it and then ride off into the sunset
with one middle finger extended, the other wrapped around a chilled
martini? Ask Earnest O. Robbins -- he knows all about being a
successful contractor in Iraq.

You start off as a well-connected bureaucrat: in this case, as
an Air Force civil engineer, a post from which Robbins was
responsible for overseeing 70,000 servicemen and contractors, with
an annual budget of...





Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Ask A Columnist: Rolling Stone Executive Editor Joe Levy Answers Your Questions











Photo






We all have our opinions on why the music "industry" is sliding
on CD sales. This is my question to you: Has anyone mentioned MTV's
lack of video play as a possible cause for a slide in the music
biz? MTV is on almost every cable network in the US. It could still
reach kids instantly if they used this as a medium. --
KingLeer

I'm sure someone's mentioned it. Everyone certainly bitches
about it. Of course, MTV cut back on video play ten years ago or
more, long before CDs sales fell lower...





Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Exclusive Audio: M.I.A. Found Hip-Hop Via Thieves, Thinks U.S. Music Is Too Digital











Photo



--From Issue 1034



M.I.A. recently sat down with Rolling Stone associate
editor Brian Hiatt to discuss her new album, Kala (check
out our video and written reviews). The globe-trotting MC chatted
about everything from her childhood crackhead neighbors to her
obsession with "organic" sounding music. Here's a bit of their
interview:








Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

My List: Sean Kingston











UNIVERSAL CITY, CA - AUGUST 26: Singer Sean Kingston poses in the press room during the 2007 Teen Choice Awards held at The Gibson Amphitheatre on August 26, 2007 in Universal City, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Sean Kingston Photo



The seventeen-year-old pop-reggae crooner scored the jam of the
summer with "Beautiful Girls" Here are his fave summer jams



Jay-Z: Lost One
[Listen]


"I love the vibe," Kingston says of the Kingdom Come tune, on which
Hova dissects fame's pitfalls over Chrisette Michele's sweet hook.




Stevie Wonder: Ribbon in the Sky
[Listen]


Kingston's mom used to play the Motown legend's 1982 ballad when
Sean was a kid. "I like Stevie's soft stuff - he's one of my
biggest influences."



Bob Marley: No Woman, No Cry



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Simpsons Movie










Photo

Starring:

Dan Castellaneta, Julie Kavner, Yeardley Smith, Nancy
Cartwright,...

Review:

Look, there's no way you can go wrong spending ninety minutes at
the multiplex with animated characters who have raised the bar
sky-high on quality TV. Created by Matt Groening and produced by
James L. Brooks, who could be buried alive in their justly won
Emmys, The Simpsons is TV for the time capsule. For two
decades and counting, this dysfunctional Springfield family, drawn
in yellow and dripping with comic irreverence, kept us in whoo-hoo
euphoria.
So why did I leave the film version feeling entertained but
frustrated? Expectations are part of the problem. How do you please
rabid fans, me included, who pore over the past 400 episodes like
holy writ? As for new audiences who never bothered to watch the
show and wouldn't know Krusty the Clown from Apu, frankly I don't
give a...


Rating: 2 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Bourne Ultimatum










Photo

Starring:

Matt Damon, Julia Stiles, Joan Allen, David Strathairn, Paddy
Con...

Review:

Matt Damon damn near jumps off the screen, returning for the third
and (he says) final time to his career-crowning role as amnesiac
Jason Bourne, a killing machine out to go whup-ass on the CIA
operatives who made him. The Bourne Ultimatum is a wow of
an action movie with a soul that isn't computer-generated.
Like the two previous films, this Bourne borrows only the name
and the central character from Robert Ludlum's best-selling spy
novel. Paul Greengrass (United 93), who directed the last
two films (Doug Liman did the first), digs out all the provocation
in the script, co-written by Tony Gilroy, to plumb the violence of
the minds behind global terrorism. With his handheld camera,
Greengrass keeps the suspense taut as Bourne trots the globe. In
Madrid, Bourne tilts emotionally with...


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Interview










Photo

Starring:

Steve Buscemi, Tara Elders, Molly Griffith, Robert Hines,
Jackson...

Review:

The controversial dutch film-maker Theo van Gogh had intended to
make this movie before he was murdered by a Muslim extremist. So
Steve Buscemi took over as director and co-writer. He also takes
the lead role of Pierre, a snob of a D.C. correspondent who gets
his nose out of joint when assigned to interview Katya (Sienna
Miller), a sex-kitten actress he ranks below Paris Hilton. The film
is unashamedly a claustrophobic exercise, shot in one room in which
two characters strip away layers of pretense to get at the truth.
Stick with it for Miller?s gutsy tour de force and the kick of
watching Buscemi, as actor and filmmaker, turn an experiment into a
mesmerizing battle of wills.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

The King of Kong










Photo

Starring:

Walter Day, Billy Mitchell, Todd Rogers, Steve Sanders, Doris
Sel...

Review:

Who would have guessed that a documentary about gamers obsessed
with scoring a world record at Donkey Kong would not only be
roaringly funny but serve as a metaphor for the decline of Western
civilization? Using Billy Mitchell?s need to stay champ and Steve
Wiebe?s need to beat him, director Seth Gordon deftly manages to
show how age, marriage, fatherhood and so-called ethical thinking
will not stop man?s need to go to war, no matter how stupid the
reason.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Children of Men










children of men Photo

Starring:

Clive Owen, Julianne Moore

Review:

Just in case you're one of the deprived who let Alfonso Cuaron's
Children of Men slip by at the multiplex, grab this DVD
and hold on for rock-the-house image and sound. It's a ride, but
not quite what you expect. This tale of a futuristic dystopia is
the anti-Blade Runner. The focus isn't in the action up
front, it's there in the background where the film's themes take
root. Cuaron, filling every frame with his passion and intellect,
takes on a 1992 novel by P.D. James set in 2027 in...


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Ace in the Hole









Starring:

Kirk Douglas, Jan Sterling, Robert Arthur

Review:

Criterion Director Billy Wilder painted too dark a picture for
1950?s America with this tale of an unethical reporter (a never
better Kirk Douglas) who manipulates the story of a man trapped
inside a cave into national news. Nowadays, the film should be
required in journalism school.


Rating: 4 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Zodiac









Starring:

Jake Gyllenhaal, Robert Downey Jr.

Review:

David Fincher, who directed Se7en, loves his crazies.
But this film doesn?t just tell the story of the serial killer who
plagued 1970s California. Fincher shows how the lives of cops and
journalists were ruined when they got too obsessed with the case.
Witness Robert Downey Jr. as a reporter turned cokehead.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

You're Gonna Miss Me










Photo

Starring:

Billy Gibbons, Patti Smith

Review:

This documentary traces the life of Roky Erickson, a pioneer of
60s psych-rock whose life becomes ruined by smoke, smack and
schizophrenia. It?s a familiar arc, sure, but the clich�s
are averted when the focus turns to the cause of his madness: his
bat-shit crazy mother.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Hot Fuzz









Starring:

Simon Pegg, Nick Frost

Review:

Who knew? Apparently, there are English hipsters out there who
revere trashy big-budget buddy-cop flicks like Lethal
Weapon and Bad Boys. Hot Fuzz is the latest
from the U.K. geek squad behind the cult comedy Shaun of the
Dead: writer/director Edgar Wright, writer/star Simon Pegg,
and demented plus-size sidekick Nick Frost. Together, they parody
cop movies with the same fanaticism Shaun of the Dead
brought to zombie flicks. For the first half or so, it's bloody
brilliant. Pegg and Frost are...


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

The Host









Starring:

Bong Joon-Ho

Review:

Need proof that South Korea is the epicenter of cool Asian
cinema? Look no further than The Host, where a family
battles a huge, contagion-carrying ? fish monster? The film is
hilarious and the action is out-of-control ? simply one of the
greatest monster flicks ever made.


Rating: 3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Silverchair - Young Modern










Photo


Artist:
Silverchair

Review:
In the mid-nineties, the Australian trio Silverchair was a true boy
band - very young men playing strong, original hard-rock songs on
their own instruments. Drummer Ben Gillies, bassist Chris Joannou
and singer-guitarist-songwriter Daniel Johns are still young (in
their late twenties). They are also aggressively modern in the long
reach of Young Modern, their first studio album in five
years, from the balled-fist fuzz of "Mind Reader" to the sumptuous
glam of "Strange Behaviour" (with strings...


Rating:
4 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Rilo Kiley - Under The Blacklight










Photo


Artist:
Rilo Kiley

Review:
Because Rilo Kiley's More Adventurous was a triumph of the
well-made narrative song, its markedly terser and beatier
follow-up, which is also the band's true major-label debut, will be
accused of sellout. Instead, it's yet more adventurous, a
prosperous band's challenge to its comfortable cult. Always too
cute for serious indie cred, Jenny Lewis slips four songs about
dangerous sex in which she herself might be indulging -- right now,
in her pretty prosperity -- into music that's defined...


Rating:
4 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Architecture in Helsinki - Places Like This










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Artist:
Architecture in Helsinki

Review:
What happens when indie-prog miniaturists decide to go for the long
bomb? "Heart It Races," if they're lucky -- the Australian
twee-dweeb aesthetes devise a real pop song even trippier than the
fake ones they keep snapping into fragments, a spaced-out bit of
calypso crossed with dance hall that keeps getting bigger until it
finally floats away. With its sexed-up beats, cowbell, nonsense
chants and wigged-out Casio-keyboard psychedelia, Places Like
This
turns its sound-effect juxtaposition...


Rating:
3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Talib Kweli - Eardrum










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Artist:
Talib Kweli

Review:
Talib kweli earns the respect he gets. He's got plenty of brains
and enough flow, and though his attempts to make conscious rap
commercial inspire purist sniping, he's balanced the two with
integrity and grace. But four solo albums in, it can't be an
accident that he's done his signature work with collaborators ? Mos
Def (Black Star), Hi-Tek (Reflection Eternal) and many, many cameos
(try the z "My Favorite Mutiny"). The man simply lacks spark.
Kweli's Warner debut features yet more cameos -- ...


Rating:
3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com

Junior Senior - Hey Hey My My Yo Yo










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Artist:
Junior Senior

Review:
Where can we buy the happy pills Junior Senior are taking? Hey
Hey
is the Danish duo's second straight album full of
megabright electro disco, something on the order of KC and the
Sunshine band partying with Abba, only with better keyboards and a
knowing wink. The album's enthusiasm sounds almost cartoonish at
times, and its title tells you all you need to know about their
lyrical approach. But Junior Senior's track-building smarts and way
with a hook add up to non-annoying bliss on a handful of...


Rating:
3 Stars



Source: http://www.rollingstone.com