Spin Cycle
Alice In Chains, The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here: Album Review

Alice In Chains, The Devil Put Dinosaurs Here: Album Review

Still standing 20 years later-Alice in Chains are back with a new one.

All Hail the Return of Goodie Mob!

All Hail the Return of Goodie Mob!

Who needs an OutKast reunion anyway?

30 Seconds To Mars, LOVE, LUST, FAITH + DREAMS: Album Review

30 Seconds To Mars, LOVE, LUST, FAITH + DREAMS: Album Review

30 Seconds to Mars…lost in space?

Daft Punk, Random Access Memories: Album Review

Daft Punk, Random Access Memories: Album Review

From their 1997 debut Homework and even moreso with 2001’s Discovery, Daft Punk arguably became the foremost ambassadors of electronic music, at once pleasing the discerning tastes of college radio and mainstream audiences. They’ve simultaneously managed to maintain a sort of indie credibility while shilling commercial products for The Gap, Sony,  Victoria’s Secret, Coca-Cola, and Adidas. Today’s release of Random Access Memories is one of 2013’s most anticipated releases, the culmination of a months-long publicity campaign waged primarily through television […]

Vampire Weekend, Modern Vampires of the City: Album Review

Vampire Weekend, Modern Vampires of the City: Album Review

There was a time that Vampire Weekend perched, perilously, on the precipice of being one of the great one-album wonders of the ’00s. Like Cannibal Ox or At the Drive-In or Bloc Party before them, the Ivy League pop-rockers seemed poised to turn heads with one masterstroke of a record, and then retreat into either obscurity, oddity, or simple irrelevance. That album was 2008’s Vampire Weekend — the one with “Oxford Comma” and “A-Punk” and basically all the Vampire Weekend […]

The National, Trouble Will Find Me: Album Review

The National, Trouble Will Find Me: Album Review

Drama and Discovery – these are two essential tenets to my history as an audiophile.  I admitted to my facebook friends and colleagues here at Popblerd that I’d missed the boat for the past 13 years on The National.  My bad.  I’m making up for lost time and have immersed myself in their discography over the past couple of weeks. My listening and journey can be summed up in this arc — U2’s The Joshua Tree (1987), The Cure’s Disintegration (1989), Depeche […]

k-os, BLack on BLonde: Album Review

k-os, BLack on BLonde: Album Review

A Dylan reference in a hip-hop album title? That should be your first sign that something’s a little different…

Huey Lewis & The News, Sports: 30th Anniversary Edition: Album Review

Huey Lewis & The News, Sports: 30th Anniversary Edition: Album Review

Who wants a new drug?

Mindless Self indulgence, How I Learned To Stop Giving A Shit And Love Mindless Self Indulgence: Album Review

Mindless Self indulgence, How I Learned To Stop Giving A Shit And Love Mindless Self Indulgence: Album Review

Mindless Self Indulgence is definitely an acquired taste. If it’s a taste you’ve acquired, though, then their latest magnificent masterpiece How I Learned To Stop Giving A Shit And Love Mindless Self Indulgence is going to suit you just fine. On the Kickstarter funded fifth album (Although holding an album hostage until they get funds might not be why KS was started…) MSI is back to their old tricks once again with even sleeker production and even nastier content. How […]

Mikal Cronin, MCII: Album Review

Mikal Cronin, MCII: Album Review

Mikal Cronin is making music to get addicted to. The Ty Segall sideman and solo artist is far from a household name. Google searches and Rateyourmusic keywords seem to suggest that the singer-songwriter exists in the realm of “garage rock”, although that hardly seems like a fair shake for a guy responsible for some of the most addictive, giddy pop music of 2013 yet. Mind you, the multi-instrumental’s sophomore set, MCII, does occupy the same headspace as, say, Guided By […]

She & Him, Volume 3: Album Review

She & Him, Volume 3: Album Review

She & Him’s charm used to seem a little… Starbucks-y at times. You know what I mean: it’s fine for what you need, but both the band and the big-box coffee chain seem a bit like mainstream, inoffensive versions of their respective wares masquerading as hip versions of the same. (Also, She & Him sound like they probably get played at Starbucks a lot.) And yet, with three proper albums and a toe-tappin’ Christmas record under their belts, the Zooey […]

Natalie Maines, Mother: Album Review

Natalie Maines, Mother: Album Review

A Dixie Chick goes solo…check out our review of Natalie Maines’ “Mother.”