crookedbill--disqus
crookedbill
crookedbill--disqus

Hey jerks, how about not posting spoiler pics on your main webpage?

"Price and Bush performed as part of the Boot Camp Clik, a Brooklyn-based
group that released its debut album in 1992, shortly before The Wu-Tang
Clan would become synonymous with the idea of a hip-hop collective."

In what world is Zinc's "138 Trek" jungle? It's breakbeat, of the style Stanton Warriors and Pump DJs were hocking at the turn of the millennium.

HoF do sound kinda "same-y" from album to album (they really are Motorhead's spiritual successors), but give each album time and the subtleties do eventually shine through. I became a fan pretty late (with "Snakes for the Divine") and I'm still digesting HoF's older stuff. I think "Luminiferous" is, by far, their

I've always had a pretty overactive imagination and just watching this trailer really f'd up my ability to fall asleep and stay asleep the other night.

This Bemis guy does sound like an inarticulate idiot at best, however, I get what he's trying to say, and he's not entirely wrong. I was 16 when "In Utero" came out and though I was extremely excited about the album when I bought it on release day, I always hated "Rape Me" and its meaning was never ambiguous to me.

I gave "The Hunter" a spin the other day and remembered just how well produced it was. Very clean and punchy - equally nice played at low volume or loud (to be expected from Mike Elizondo, a producer who mostly does hip-hop and top-40 stuff). "Once More," on the other hand, seems rougher and more lo-fi somehow.

There is no way Ian Svenonius DOESN'T believe this shit - even if it is delivered as a joke. If you know anything about DC's "punk rock" scene (or its leftovers) going back three decades, you know this sort of sanctimonious political douchebaggery is the lifeblood of the "scene." Bad Brains were the only truly great