Music
In Conversation
Remember Yourself?
By B-SquadLauren Flax is the kind of person that people crowd around because shes a shining lighttheres no other way to describe her. Shell tell you shes just a person, shell talk like she has no idea how talented she is, but secretly shes some kind of Brooklyn Seraphim.
A Mash Note Written in a Foreign Language
By Alex LittlefieldFrom the very beginning, Here We Go Magic has had a life of its own. Founder and frontman Luke Temple was in the middle of a robust solo career when he came up with the evocative phrase as a catch-all for a certain kind of arresting, unpolished musical aestheticspecifically the one on his early four-track demos.
Remembering Early American Electronic Music
By Richard KostelanetzTwo of the most innovative American periodicals of the later 1960s were Aspen (19651971) and Source (19661974). Departing emphatically from the norm not only in content but also in design, both publications presented new writing and art in extremely creative packaging.
Sounds in the Dark: Two New Late-Night Talk Shows Embody Old-Time Radio in the Digital Age
By Jed LipinskiOn a recent Monday afternoon, Dave Perlis and Andy Theodorou were interviewing a 106-year-old Polish parapsychologist named Dr. Alexander Imich in his apartment on the Upper West Side. A soft-spoken man with a wizardly streak of white running through his gray hair, Imich was sitting amidst stacks of New Age magazines (Life Extension, The Fortean Times) and a small pile of cutlery, bentallegedlyby the gaze of Uri Geller, the famous psychic.
The Thrill of Confinement: Bonnie "Prince" Billy
By Katy HenriksenWill Oldham was in Oahu when I called him from my home in Fayetteville, Arkansas. I brought my mother here for the harshest month of February, he explained. I heard the coo of exotic-sounding birds in the background, which made for an awkward juxtaposition against the buzzing chorus of chainsaws outside my window.
Dont Shoot the Player Piano: Céleste Boursier-Mougenot Taps into Unplayed Musical Realms
By Alan LockwoodWithout a pianist at the bench, pianos can foray into wildly perplexing terrain.
A Good Bad Trip: Meshuggah, Cynic, and the Faceless at the Fillmore
By Joseph SchaferOn February 19, a storm that had been brewing in the popular music underground struck New York City, in the form of an uproarious concert at the Fillmore by three forward-thinking bands: Meshuggah, Cynic, and the Faceless.
Telepathes Plea for You to Dance, Mother
By Paula CrossfieldThe Brooklyn-based band Telepathe (pronounced telepathy) is trying to get you to get down. With all the hype the duo has received, they still deliver sonically, using airy vocals, choppy, mesmerizing rhythms, and a touch of feminine wiles.