avclub-00ac3d1c613168d1a5d25e33d18981cc--disqus
Bert Harbinson
avclub-00ac3d1c613168d1a5d25e33d18981cc--disqus

Tame Impala - Mind Mischief

Handsome Family - Far From Any Road

Lucinda Williams - Jailhouse Tears

Kenny Rogers & The First Edition - Just Dropped In

Talking Heads - This Must Be The Place

Cutting Crew - Died In Your Arms Tonight

Nick Cave - Love Letter

Tom Waits - Martha

No, they came out dressed somewhat as the Rolling Stones and opened with "Honky Tonk Women." And then proceeded to rock for a couple hours.

The Vic isn't bad - certainly beats some other venues in town, and the Truckers' gig at the Vic last Halloween was something to behold.

That was just his programming.

Very nice - would have been even better if it lasted a few extra seconds and faded out with Toonces behind the wheel of the Taurus from motor pool.

Peanut M&M's are great, but only if you have never tried Almond M&M's, which reach another level of awesome usually reserved solely for Junior Mints.

Virtually all of us are answering with names that began to mean the most to us in our formative years - mostly artists we discovered when art began to really mean something to us and helped us flesh out our identities and interests. And I'm no different - Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen, Tom Waits, and most of all Paul

Is that the junior or the full-size?

Elbow is one of those bands I found through one track ("Grounds For Divorce") and subsequently went out and bought all of their albums, to which I listened exclusively for a week or two. Love it all.

Perhaps a compilation of 1-second clips of playing Grand Theft Auto every day would be better.

AllMusic.com recommends "Through The Trees" above all their others, so that's where I've begun.

Only thing that bothered me - and just for 20 seconds or so - was Lucinda Williams' "Are You Alright?" seemingly playing on a radio in Rust's place, as that wouldn't be released until 2007. Weaving it right into the next scene of Rust doing the cocaine swap in the evidence room cleaned it up though.

It was indeed. I guess it was his attempt at fitting in with the biker culture, but what biker gang have you ever heard of that listens to Pink Floyd? Let alone the David Gilmour-lead ball-less version that put out "Division Bell?"