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(11/09/06 5:00am)
It has almost become a music cliché to talk of how conflict within a band leads to exemplary music. If this is the case, fans of Deftones should rejoice. Saturday Night Wrist has finally arrived after a year of delays and numerous rumors of the band's near demise at the hands of recording pressures.
(04/20/06 4:00am)
The thing that underground hip-hop prides itself on -- above all else -- is its dissimilarity with itsmainstream counterpart. And what could be more different than an entire hip-hop album with no guest spots and only one producer?
(07/25/05 4:00am)
System of a Down's Mezmerize does little to move past the style of the band's previous efforts, System of a Down, Toxicity and Steal This Album, but manages to put forth a strong effort that is both radio-friendly and pleasing to longtime fans.
(03/31/05 5:00am)
It would be nearly impossible for Queens of the Stone Age to better or even match its 2002 breakout hit, Songs for the Deaf. But the task is more daunting when frontman/guitarist Joshua Homme tries to recreate the magic of Songs without input from three of its chief architects. Lullabies to Paralyze is Homme's abortive attempt to prove that he can create an album on par with Songs.
(02/17/05 5:00am)
Sage Francis' new album A Healthy Distrust is, simply put, the future of underground rap. A Healthy Distrust is the finest political rap album to come out since Dead Prez's Let's Get Free, and could possibly revive rap the way Company Flow's Funcrusher Plus or Black Star's self-titled debut did in the late '90s.