JIM SULLIVAN
|
|
The Distillers, "Coral Fang" (Sire) Brody Dalle has shed her famous Rancid husbands last name and she and her raggedy boys shred any sense of propriety on this full-out attack on whatever system you care to present. |
|
|
The White Stripes, "Elephant" (V2) Stripped down and dense, clamorous, blues-based, and rocking. Already theyve had a tune covered by Audioslave. No stumbling at all after last years breakthrough. |
|
|
Belle & Sebastian, "Dear Catastrophe Waitress" (Rough Trade) Stuart Murdoch, who fronts Scotlands best band, finds life to not be such a dour affair after all, pumping these songs with an uncanny effervescence and joie de vivre. |
|
|
Spiritualized, "Amazing Grace" (Sanctuary) Jason Pierce, Spiritualizeds leader, prowls around in some dark, dangerous alleyways, climbs out, and finds a bit of space and grace. |
|
The Dresden Dolls, "The Dresden Dolls" (8 Foot Records) Bostons dark and sexy little cabaret punk band presents an eclectic roster of subtly vicious pop songs. |
|
OutKast, "Speakerboxxx/The Love Below" (Arista) Hip-hops smartest and funkiest duo split up the chores for separate CD releases as part of one package and its all just audacious and provocative. |
|
Warren Zevon, "The Wind" (Artemis) Sentimental favorite? Oh sure, maybe a bit. But were not sure weve seen anyone close a career or a life with such quality work. |
|
The Buzzcocks, "Buzzcocks" (Merge) Finally, an album that puts our angst-ridden, punk-charged English boys at the level of their early, seminal singles. Speed + melody = bliss. |
|
Firewater, "The Man on the Burning Tightrope" (Jetset) Led by bassist-singer Tod A., Firewater does for klezmer what the Pogues did for Celtic music. |
|
The Ticks, "So Young, So Bad" (Subversive Green) I fell in love with their punky garage rock, their incessant hooks, and their feminist and funny smarts. |
