Punk energy.(Green Day- music group)(Brief article)

The News Review:

- Punk energy.(Green Day- music group)(Brief article)
- Dead Kennedys Hit Back at Biafra
- Watch for some very hip and hot sounds in town
- Who made you God?

Punk energy.(Green Day- music group)(Brief article)
Free with registration – nEarth – AccessMyLibrary.com – Mar 22, 2007
(Green Day- music group)(Brief article) Green Day the rock trio that emerged from the California punk scene in the mid-1990s quickly rose to superstardom among rebellious teenage fans and is widely credited with popularizing American punk music. The group has since solidified its place in American music history with three Grammies most recently the… (Green Day- music group)(Brief article) Green Day the rock trio that emerged from the California punk scene in the mid-1990s quickly rose to superstardom among rebellious teenage fans and is widely credited with popularizing American punk music. The group has since solidified its place in American music history with three Grammies most recently the.

Dead Kennedys Hit Back at Biafra
San Francisco Chronicle – Mar 22, 2007
more like the geeky ironic mainstream kind sort of like dish itself. Bunch of nazi punks. Posted By: JimmyHoffaBush | March 22 2007 at 03:08 PMhehehehehehehehehehehehehehehehehehehehehe. Posted By: IrReverend | March 22 2007 at 03:16 PMWhat’s going on? All of a sudden brilliant pieces of music from this particular era are being hi-jacked by the likes of the loathsome provacateur Quentin Tarantino (“Too Drunk to F—” by the DKs) and the multinational that reaps enormous profits from making people fat and rotting their teeth )(“This is the Day” by The The used in a new advert for M&Ms). It saddens me that popular culture now seemingly consists exclusively of mining the past since most young artists are too stupid to come up with anything even remotely original their minds rotted by their endless consumption of crap. I used to have a tremendous amount of respect for Jello but if his bandmates’ accusations are true it appears he’s yet another sell-out.

Watch for some very hip and hot sounds in town
Seattle Post Intelligencer – Mar 22, 2007
Singer-songwriter Mat Kearney who headlines VH1′s “You ughta Know” tour with The Feeling and Rocco Deluca & the Burden Sunday night at The Showbox says today’s listening habits may be fueling a boom in live music. “It’s interesting that as downloading has increased there’s been a leveling of the playing field in a business that’s really thriving” Kearney said in a phone call from Los Angeles. “Business is maybe the wrong word but the side of music that’s thriving is the live music. More than ever I think people are going out to see shows. There’s such a high awareness of music right now. Kearney who called from the lobby of the West Hollywood Hyatt a hotel once dubbed “the Riot Hyatt” because of the rowdy rock bands that stayed there in the 1970s and ’80s was waiting for a ride to a taping of “The Ellen DeGeneres Show. ” Kearney jumped “into the (music industry) pool” last year with the release of his debut album “Nothing Left to Lose” on Columbia Records… Sunday Moore Theatre $22-$25. Brooklyn’s TV on the Radio features core members Tunde Adebimpe (vocals) and producer David Andrew Sitek (various instruments). The sound blends atmospheric post-punk and electronica. The MP3 “Dry Drunk Emperor” is a rebuke of President George W. Last summer’s release “Return to Cookie Mountain” features backing vocals by David Bowie. The art-rockers extraordinaire were among the buzz bands of 2006 landing on many critics’ year-end lists of favorites.

Who made you God?
San Diego Union Tribune – Mar 22, 2007
Rather than recoil and retreat or compromise and sell out The Locust reacts by making music that – as band member Gabe Serbian told Night&Day seven years ago – “sounds like a car accident with keyboards. ” He was kind of kidding I think. Either way few bands anywhere have created such extreme music or have been as misunderstood. Depending on the source The Locust performs hardcore punk grindcore math-rock neo-prog death-metal or some hellish combination thereof. To amuse myself I might add to this: “The Locust's work suggests a confluence of neo-noise music and post-classical minimalism mixed with exploding chain saws at a wake in the tomb of GG Allin co-led by Diamanda Galas and Japanese prog-core noise band The Ruins. But the issue isn't how to describe this 12-year-old band's dense challenging and sometimes very funny music (Captain Beefheart would surely smile approvingly at such Locust songs as “The Half-Eaten Sausage Would Like to See You in His ffice” and “Gluing Carpet to Your Genitals Does Not Make You a Cantaloupe”).

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