disqusldf6i4ej6a--disqus
Rich
disqusldf6i4ej6a--disqus

KC & The Sunshine Band
Kenna (Anyone remember him??)
Killers
Kimora
Carole King
King Crimson
King's X (I'm sure I'm the only one with multiple CDs by them and that makes me sad)
Kinks
KISS
The KLF
Mark Kozelek
Lenny Kravitz
The La's
Ray Lamontagne
K.D. Lang
Cyndi Lauper
Lazy Dog (deep house from the guy in EBTG… Surprisingly solid)
LCD

I've somehow managed to see Kid Koala open for both Arcade Fire AND Radiohead.

It's probably best not to read too much into the tastes of a guy who purges nearly the entire LCD Soundsystem catalog but hangs onto an entire box set of prank phone calls.

You're confusing Bruce Springsteen with John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown Band again.

Interesting that Stevie Nicks had far and away the most successful solo career outside Fleetwood Mac, since her hit singles don't sound remotely close to the Mac at all. "Stop Draggin' My Heart Around" resembles a Tom Petty song (because it was)… "Edge Of Seventeen" is driving rock of the kind FM never attempted… And

Keeping the only Jam album that kinda sucks, hmmm? Interesting choice.

I was standing in for the "young" version of the Reverend in this episode…. If you frame-by-frame it you can spot me in one of the videotaped bits (the woman with the crazy hair climbing up the wall). We actually shot three different "exorcisms" but the other two got cut for time.
Glad to see the finished product is

I think this is a more straight-ahead but ultimately better show than Preacher, which has a lot more bells and whistles disguising a pretty muddled plot.

Nah. Sonic Youth not Go Team.

Between "On Our Own" and Prince's "Batdance," 1989 was a watershed year for movie theme songs that literally summarize the entire movie.

Anyone who watches Outcast… Atticus Ross does the score for that one, and it's predictably awesome.

Book Of Love was on Scratch My Back, Garbiel's all covers album.

Ah, so you skipped the only two great ones! (Lost Souls and Last Broadcast)

I laugh at your puny "collections"…
Daft Punk
D'Angelo
The Darkness
Dashboard Confessional
Dead-icated (Grateful Dead tribute)
Dead Man Walking soundtrack
Dead Presidents soundtrack
Dead Milkmen
Death Cab For Cutie (lots… I approve…)
Death Proof soundtrack
Deep Purple
Def Leppard
Miles Davis (lots)
Deftones
Del Amitri
De La Soul
John

I enjoy the running in-joke that Culkin is constantly stalking him in the world of The Jim Gaffigan Show.

All subsequent Cars albums have plenty of filler, but the self-titled debut is new-wave pop at its best. Verlaine was right (and Television's debut is one of the 10 greatest debut albums ever, FTR).
The Roughly Accepted List of Classic Debut Albums That Were (Mostly) Never Bettered By The Artist: The Doors, Boston,

Johnny Cash is just one of those artists where you NEED his music in your collection, regardless of whether you're a country fan or not. Live at Folsom, San Quentin, any collection with the original Sun singles, a good greatest hits, and a couple of the American recordings (my personal favorite is IV: The Man Comes

There's something very wrong when you own four times as many Casino Versus Japan CDs as Johnny Cash.

Anyone else appreciate the random Macaulay Culkin cameos? Good to see that kid getting work.

Seven minutes in a closet with Sansa, if he's lucky.