Most Popular
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How Progressive insurance lost what made it progressive
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An ancient Apollo statue landed in Cleveland and touched off an international outcry
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Joe Cimperman hopes to tear down his former hero, Dennis Kucinich
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At Indie-Rock Singles Night in Cleveland, an event for hipsters lacks one key ingredient: Hipsters
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Justice Maureen OConnor says campaign money doesnt affect her
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How Progressive insurance lost what made it progressive (31)
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At Indie-Rock Singles Night in Cleveland, an event for hipsters lacks one key ingredient: Hipsters (22)
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$100 Bounty on That Kid (19)
Copley-Fairlawn finds a way to keep the impostors out.
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Dennis Kucinichs brave talk about working and fighting from the safety of the officers tent (10)
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Beat Down (4)
Cleveland teachers swap stories of school violence.
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Years after he gave up on rock music, Bob Mould plugs back in
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Boozing through St. Patricks Day with Bono, Van, and the Pogues
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Beer, BBQ, industry schmoozing: Rounding up SXSW 2008s local delegates
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Summery pop bands brave Clevelands harsh weather and reputation
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It took them 10 years, but the Sadies finally craft a country-rock classic
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For March Madness lovers, the Boss Button is a gift from on high
02:22PM 03/21/08 -
'4 Minutes' in Heaven with Madonna
01:14PM 03/21/08 -
Picks of the Weekend: Bold-colored belts and blue paint are all the rage this weekend
11:52AM 03/21/08 -
Mic Check: The Cribs at the Grog Shop on Sunday
11:43AM 03/21/08 -
Ripper Watch: Tim "Ripper" Owens rocks the world
09:45AM 03/21/08
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Recent Articles By Michael Gallucci
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Lynyrd Skynyrds ill-fated Street Survivors tops this weeks pop-culture picks
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The Cribs
With Ra Ra Riot and Jeffrey Lewis. Sunday, March 23, at the Grog Shop, Cleveland Heights.
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British Sea Power
With the 1900s. Wednesday, March 25, at the Grog Shop, Cleveland Heights.
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Jack Peñate
Matinée (XL)
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Sons & Daughters
This Gift (Domino)
National Features
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Village Voice
A Long Way Wrong?
Another celebrated memoir threatens to blow into a million little pieces.
By Graham Rayman -
LA Weekly
Hoop Dawg
Billionaire Donald T. Sterling owns the L.A. Clippers and loves the ladies. And those are just two of his problems.
By Patrick Range McDonald -
The Pitch
Children of the Porn
Elvin Boone's sex-shop empire crumbles as his offspring feud.
By Justin Kendall -
Westword
The Good Soldier
When the Army tried to take down Andrew Pogany, they messed with the wrong coward.
By Joel Warner
From R.E.M. to Kimya Dawson, South by Southwest 2008 celebrated indie legends past and future
By Michael Gallucci
Published: March 19, 2008
Nowadays, there's really no place for music fans at South by Southwest. If you were at the four-day music fest in Austin last week, it seemed that you were either in a band, working for a band, promoting a band, or writing about a band. Thousands of artists played; I had time to see only a fraction of them. Here's a rundown of what rocked my SXSW 2008:
Best Headliner: It's fitting that R.E.M. played the fest's first big show Wednesday night. The group pretty much invented indie-rock in the early '80s, back when it was called college rock. Never mind that the band hasn't released a decent record in more than a decade — R.E.M. is an indie-rock institution, and a packed Stubb's was there to pay tribute to guys who more or less helped define what SXSW is all about. Their 90-minute show was heavy on songs from the new Accelerate. But the night's biggest hits were oldies like "Fall on Me" and "Man on the Moon."
Best Local Showings: The last time Bay Village singer-songwriter Kate Voegele played SXSW, she wasn't old enough to drink. But this time, she told her audience at Thursday night's Thirsty Nickel showcase, the 21-year-old was taking in everything Austin had to offer. Oddly, she was talking about music, not all of the gutter-dwelling drinking that was going on. But that's Voegele: a genuinely sweet girl, the type who says "You guys are awesome!" repeatedly onstage and talks exactly like one of the characters on One Tree Hill, the tween drama in which she plays a singer-songwriter. In other words, she talks like her fans. Her set was filled with a bunch of cuts from her debut album, Don't Look Away, including "Chicago" and "It's Only Life."
The Black Keys couldn't have picked a better place to play their Friday-afternoon concert than La Zona Rosa. The Akron duo's bluesy garage rock filled the cavernous, garage-like club. The show, which was part of a party Scene helped throw, mixed old material and songs from the new Danger Mouse-produced Attack & Release. The best tracks — "Strange Times," "Oceans and Streams" — already sound warmly familiar in the set. There's a bit more complexity to the music, but nudged against fan faves like "Have Love Will Travel," it's about as soulful as rock 'n' stomp music gets.
Best Label Showcase: Merge Records is home to some of the planet's hippest indie-rockers, including hipster faves Arcade Fire and Spoon. Friday night's label showcase at the Parish was a six-hour marathon of a half-dozen artists, and it was one of SXSW's most solid programs. The first three bands were hit (Portastatic, actually a solo acoustic project from Superchunk's Mac McCaughan) and miss (the Radar Bros.). But once Sweden's Shout Out Louds came onstage, there probably wasn't a more consistent lineup of music anywhere in Austin on Friday night. She & Him featured super-cute indie actress Zooey Deschanel and indie-rock hipster M. Ward, who played a bunch of songs from Volume One. This was one of their first gigs, so they were a little creaky, but Deschanel's charming voice and Ward's plaintive guitar strums brought a calming hush over the audience. Highlights: the spare "Sentimental Heart" and the bouncy "This Is Not a Test." Destroyer, the Canadian band led by the New Pornographers' Dan Bejar, got a later-than-usual start — after 1 a.m. Bejar was in full freak-out mode, stretching and pulling apart syllables and entire words that seemed randomly chosen at times (yes, he's the weird one in the Pornographers). Although it's been making records for a dozen years, much of Destroyer's set was culled from 2006's Destroyer's Rubies and the new Trouble in Dreams.
Best Day Parties: There was a curious dearth of bearded rockers on the streets of Austin on Thursday afternoon. Turns out all the facial hair was at one of SXSW's best parties, hosted by New West Records, home to alt-country acts like the Drive-By Truckers. There may be hipper parties, but none embodies the spirit of SXSW's Americana roots more than this annual bash. Akron native Tim Easton played a set during the four-hour party at Club De Ville, as did veteran singer-songwriter Buddy Miller, who was joined by '60s pop star Johnny Rivers for several songs. But most whoops and hollers (to use a pair of alt-country words) were reserved for the Old 97's, who played a bunch of songs from their blah new CD, Blame It on Gravity. And because this was an alt-country showcase populated by guys sporting ironic bowling shirts and Grizzly Adams beards, the occasionally poppy Old 97's played a strictly twang-filled set.








