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Latest Articles
Talking ’bout a revolution
It takes a theatrical genius like Tom Stoppard to come up with Rock ’n’ Roll, which merges the pulsing spirit of both until they feel like one. And it takes a theater of the caliber of the Gamm to make history feel like a Stones concert that becomes a po
The Gamm’s life-affirming Rock ’n’ Roll
By
BILL RODRIGUEZ
| May 07, 2010
Let's get Russian
The quick back-story on Kino Proby: Three Mainers take a liking to the Russian band Kino, and its legendary lead singer Viktor Tsoi, who died in a car wreck in 1990 after becoming maybe the single most famous Russian rock star.
A live album for a dead rock singer from Kino Proby
By
SAM PFEIFLE
| January 08, 2010
The music man
Forty years after a half-million hippies descended on a sprawling dairy farm in upstate New York, Woodstock has become shorthand for an entire epoch.
George Wein, the father of American music festivals, reflects on bringing world-class folk and jazz (and more) to Newport
By
DAVID SCHARFENBERG
| August 07, 2009
Something for everyone
In the last three years Hands and Knees have been signed to the Beatings' Midriff Records and racked up ample gold stars from critics; late last month they also dropped their splendid sophomore record, Et tu, Fluffy?
Hands and Knees' vintage-to-Fraggle rock
By
BARRY THOMPSON
| May 15, 2009
Interview: Greil Marcus
Greil Marcus on rock-and-roll photography
Rock's critic-in-chief talks rock and roll photography
By
CHRISTOPHER GRAY
| January 21, 2009
Cadillac Records
Cadillac Records writer/director Darnell Martin lets the music speak for itself
Music speaks volumes
By
CHRIS WANGLER
| December 11, 2008
Unplugged
Four friends, two bands, and nine years laer, Arcadia Landing is closed for business, according to a statement posted on their MySpace page on July 25.
Arcadia Landing call it quits
By
CHRIS CONTI
| August 27, 2008
Guitar solos?
“It actually feels really liberating, like a moment where you’re like, ‘Boy, am I glad to be an adult!’"
Obits go back to basics
By
DANIEL BROCKMAN
| August 19, 2008
Rough power
Watching Bill Gage perform with his band, BILL, is an eye-opening experience.
Bill Gage has Down syndrome. And his band rocks
By
IAN SANDS
| March 27, 2008
Going on sale: March 21, 2008
Colbia Caillat, Eddie Izzard, Laura Viers, and more.
Breaking news from the concert ticket trade
By
GOING ON SALE
| March 18, 2008
Twang and burn
When Sarah Borges performs in roots-music hot spots like Nashville and Austin, they don’t ask about her country credentials or her alt-rock background.
Sarah Borges lights a roots-rock fire
By
BRETT MILANO
| January 14, 2008
Cooking with Joe
Some rock stars travel with personal chefs. Joe Perry brings a grill — a Weber.
Aerosmith’s lead guitarist has grill, will travel
By
MATT ASHARE
| September 04, 2007
Fabulous fakes
If “The Basement Tapes” had been conceived for the Top 40, it might have sounded much like the Traveling Wilburys.
Charmed by the Traveling Wilburys
By
CHARLES TAYLOR
| August 10, 2007
Other music meccas
By
TED DROZDOWSKI
| June 29, 2007
Power-surge pop
I was expecting a restrained, polite set from the super-hyped Swedish band Peter Bjorn and John.
Peter Bjorn and John, Paradise Rock Club, May 4, 2007
By
WILL SPITZ
| May 07, 2007
Dead, or immortal?
When Chuck D challenges the status quo, a bunch of fortysomethings nod their heads, but Nas can put the young rappers on the defensive.
Nas’s album title challenges a generation
By
MATTHEW GASTEIER
| January 24, 2007
Nashville underground
Solomon Burke’s no stranger to Nashville. Music city dos: Where to go in Nashville. By Ted Drozdowski
There’s more to the Music City than Alan Jackson and Toby Keith
By
TED DROZDOWSKI
| January 24, 2007
Chamber music revival
Classical and rock ‘n roll music suffer the same identity crisis.
Portland should rock out with its Bach out
By
BEN MEIKLEJOHN
| January 03, 2007
Motley crews
The history of Boston rock and roll begins with these immortal words: “Ding! Dong! Ding ding dong! Ka-ding dong, ding dong ding!”
A short history of Boston rock
By
BRETT MILANO
| November 15, 2006
Nevermind the Bollocks
This article originally appeared in the January 17, 1978 issue of the Boston Phoenix.
The Sex Pistols arrive
By
KIT RACHLIS
| November 14, 2006
Men of mettle
Like three trolls in a speedboat, the men of Motörhead have hitched their age-old warty grievance against humanity to a roaring musical accelerant, and yet again they are writing heavy-metal history.
Another smackdown from Motörhead
By
JAMES PARKER
| October 03, 2006
Flashbacks: August 11, 2006
These selections, culled from our back files, were compiled by Doug Fleischer, Sam MacLaughlin, and Hannah Van Susteren.
The Boston Phoenix has been covering the trends and events that shape our times since 1966.
By
EDITORIAL
| August 08, 2006
Peter Gammons
What, you thought this would be just another dilettante vanity project, an excuse for the unofficial commish to clown around in the studio with some of his favorite Red Sox and bash out a few classic-rock chestnuts? Peter Gammons, "She Fell From Heaven
Never Slow Down, Never Grow Old | Rounder
By
MIKE MILIARD
| July 27, 2006
Folk re-revival
The laugh that opens Bruce Springsteen’s We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions is the first clue that what’s about to follow might actually be fun.
Springsteen rediscovers faith and fun in Seeger
By
CHARLES TAYLOR
| May 24, 2006
He's the Boss
If good rock and roll is about escape, great rock and roll is about taking ordinary life and making something extraordinary out of it.
Why Bruce Springsteen makes great rock and roll
By
| May 23, 2006
Loose Ends
It’s four in the morning and raining. I’m 27 today, feeling old, listening to my records, and remembering that things were different a decade ago.
Growing young with rock and roll
By
JON LANDAU
| May 19, 2006
High-voltage humans
No musical movement, not even CBGB’s-era first-wave punk, captured the push-and-pull of love/hate about modern city living like No Wave did.
No Wave is new all over again
By
ANDREA FELDMAN
| April 05, 2006
Hip-hop history interview and podcast
Authors Jeff Chang and Brian Coleman talk about the latest wave of hip-hop criticism.
Hip-hop journalism comes of age
By
CARLY CARIOLI
| March 09, 2006
The Rolling Stones, again
A bemused Keith mumbled something about “déjà vu,” but this was no rehash of the Fenway Park gig.
Nothing negative
By
MATT ASHARE
| January 23, 2006
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Anarchistic and self-trained, are street medics the future of first aid?
Medic alert
The Overdub Tampering Committee
How a group of Boston musicians exacted their weird price from the world of online music sharing — without actually doing a thing
May you and Portlandia be very happy together!
O! Lucky you!
Out: Preparing for one H.E.L.L. of a weekend in Cambridge
Protecting your interests
Moving on with Stephie Coplan & the Pedestrians
Turning the page
Boston Ballet's 'Simply Sublime'
Road to the city
On the Cheap: Maximo's Takeout
Another worthy addition to Watertown's culinary arsenal
Activists rail at the T
Bumpy Ride Dept.
At home with Sharon Van Etten
Lady and her Tramp
Valentine's Day for the Frugal and Savvy Diner
Avoiding the V-Day fine-dining shit-show
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