Music Review: Effingham
Effingham Monster Study 3 stars Folk rock
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Effingham Monster Study 3 stars Folk rock
Grown Up Avenger Stuff Sparkleton 4 stars Rock
Youth Lagoon Wondrous Bughouse 2 stars Electronic pop
Parenthetical Girls embraces its pop instincts while keeping the edges sharp with the newly released Privilege (Abridged). This cohesive album is by far the band’s best to date, boldly asserting Parenthetical Girls as one of the best indie-pop outfits today.
Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds keep to the “water’s edge” in its 15th album __Push the Sky Awa_y_, continuing with the band’s signature sound.
Four years ago, house music in Chapel Hill was an endangered species on the brink of extinction.
Maybe it’s because he grew up in the mountains. But the Triangle’s own Ryan Gustafson makes music that mimics the pleasantly light feel of morning dew on the face — only in the ears. His parents think so too.
Tegan and Sara Heartthrob 2.5 stars Pop
The Dead Tongues Desert 4.5 stars
Radar Brothers Eight 2.5 stars Pop rock
Ducktails The Flower Lane 3 stars Pop/Rock
Frightened Rabbit Pedestrian Verse 3 stars Indie rock
Airstrip Willing 3 stars Rock
Foxygen is here to deliver us the values and culture of the ‘60s, bringing a frustrated and confused young generation the music and ideas of their disgruntled predecessors from 50 years before. It’s a difficult cause, but with its new album, the band shows it’s possible.
Virgins Family Band’s members are young, many still students at UNC.
Chaz Bundick has had a busy past few years. He’s the name behind electro-pop outfit Toro Y Moi, and Anything In Return is impressively his third full-length in three years. But what was named as a key part of 2009’s “chillwave” movement is now a distinct project that has appropriately matured in its own vein.
When Taylor Gerkin came to college, he liked playing music — but he had never tried his hand at disc jockeying.
With her violin in hand, musician Alicia Best brought the rich, haunting tones of Appalachian folk ballads to Franklin Street for the first time on Saturday night.
Christmas isn’t here quite yet, but the feeling is certainly in the room.
Flesh Wounds gets down and gritty in Abrasions, Abcesses, and Amputations with hard rocking rhythm chords, pounding drums and distinctive blues riffs to add character to every song.