
Lemonheads Tour, Dando Opens for JAMC
Lemonheads: first, a delicious citrusy candy. Then, a scuzzy pre-grunge punk act turned scene casualty. After that, a candy again. But now, the Lemonheads are back... in band form! Evan Dando and a couple of Descendents who played on last year's self-titled Lemonheads LP will tour around later this fall, following a month's rest and Mr. Dando's short stint opening up for the Jesus and Mary Chain next week. One question remains, though: will they play their "Mrs. Robinson" cover? Remember, kids, if you yell hard enough, anything is possible. [MORE...]
My Morning Jacket, Pajo Cover Misfits on Comp
Even though they both tend to involve candy, it's hard to think of a more different pair of holidays than Halloween and Valentine's Day. And yet, Louisville, KY-centric sorta label Louisville Is for Lovers has created a common thread between them by expanding its catalogue from V-Day comps to include an H-day Misfits cover compilation called Louisville Babylon 2007.The "2007" in the compilation's name comes from the fact that LIFL has actually done this before, an unlucky 13 years ago to be exact. Louisville Babylon 1994 included Misfits covers by Rodan, Falling Forward, Crain (featuring Matmos half/Pitchfork contributor Drew Daniel on vocals), Hula Hoop (Rachel Grimes' pre-Rachel's band), and Slo-pok (featuring Silver Jew Cassie Marrett on bass).
Louisville Babylon 2007, on the other hand, features contributions from My Morning Jacket, Dave Pajo, Wax Fang, and the Slow Break, among plenty of others. Naturally, it comes in a number edition of 666, and it is available for purchase right here, right now.
LIFL has also reissued the 1994 edition of the comp, which is available either by itself or packaged in a limited edition with 2007. [MORE...]
Photos by William Kirk; Above: Kid Sister
You know those sweatshirts you see at truck stops with dreamcatchers and wolves on them? (Like THIS.) Well, that's Yeasayer. They're new age mixed with yacht rock mixed with un-ironic cheese mixed with some intangible quality that somehow makes them cool. And they probably come across best performing at a camp-out under the stars for an audience smoking peace pipes.
Yeasayer [Music Hall of Williamsburg; 9 p.m.]
The Brooklyn band's debut album All Hour Cymbals (out next week on the Baltimore label We*Are*Free) is a bit too hippy-dippy for me on the whole, though "Sunrise" and "2080", the two singles, are killer. But on stage, Yeasayer were less annoying and more likeable-- quite a feat, considering the amount of hair these guys have, and singer/keyboardist Chris Keating looking like "he took too many Brandon Flowers pills today" (as my friend Caryn put it).


Everything sounded brighter and less mushy, and the low end was stronger and grooved a bit harder than on record. But I was most impressed by their vocals. These guys have strong voices, and they seem to have worked hard on their four-part harmonies, which is quite unusual for an indie band. It all came together into something endearing.
In the same way that when you see someone wearing one of those dreamcatcher sweatshirts and you think, "Wow, I could never wear that without looking like a fool," Yeasayer are pulling off something that most bands would never be able to get away with.
The Cool Kids [Hiro Ballroom; 11:30 p.m.]
As much as I admire the big tent approach, there's something satisfying about a unifying aesthetic when it comes to record labels. Think about early Sub Pop's grimy realism or early Factory's minimalism: sonic and visual aspects all wrapped up into one easily identifiable package.
DJ/entrepreneurs A-Trak (aka Kanye's DJ) and Nick Catchdubs, head honchos of upstart label Fool's Gold, understand the value of the total package. The music they release and the artwork they use to promote it is bright, colorful, energetic, fun-loving, and childish (in a good way). And, most importantly, charmingly nerdy.
Take Fool's Gold signees the Cool Kids, the Chicago duo of Mikey Rocks and Chuck Inglish. They rap about bikes and radios and how much they rock over big, broad beats and slicing guitar riffs. Their track "88" boasts of bringing (19)88 back, and it sure sounded like it did. For another song, they encouraged the packed crowd to take their house keys out of their pockets and jiggle them to form a beat. The result was a kind of twee version of hyphy's chain-rattling sound effect.



While the Cool Kids performed, a screen above the stage showed footage of the Chicago skyline, BMX bikers, and Michael Jordan. The duo's logo was omnipresent as well, in big, puffy yellow letters. And for a few seconds, I swear I caught some Muppet Babies clips up there.
Kid Sister [Hiro Ballroom; 11:30 p.m.]

Kid Sister, another hot Chicago rapper, might be a star in the making, but she, too, isn't afraid of risking looking uncool in the name of having fun. Wearing a constant smile, she delivered her rapid-fire rhymes like the sassiest prom queen ever. She even introduced her set-closing "Pro Nails" (which appeared on Kanye West's Can't Tell Me Nothing mixtape and features Kanye in its forthcoming video) by talking about what it's like to get ready for the prom: visiting David's Bridal, throwing a wrap over your shoulders, and, of course, getting your motherfucking nails did.

She did the wax-on, wax-off dance and skipped around the stage like it was a hopscotch course. And the whole time, the screen displayed her logo: "Kid Sister" in girlie script, as if doodled on a Lisa Frank binder.
Vampire Weekend to Open for the Shins
Make UK live debut
Columbia University grads Vampire Weekend will gives fans the chance to study them abroad this fall when they play their first live shows in the UK. Also featured on three of these dates (and another one in France) are life-changing profs the Shins. Then it's back to the States for these Vampires for a bunch of late November and December shows.We'll have to wait until January for the full-length VW curriculum, though we already know their class will be in the XL building. For a peek at the syllabus, check out the "Mansard Roof" single, out in the U.S. on October 23 and in the UK via XL/Abeano on November 12. [MORE...]
Radiohead 2008 Tour Tidbits Emerge
When Jonny Greenwood spoke to a couple press outlets on the day of In Rainbows' digital release, he sent the world's hearts racing with but a sentence, one which disclosed that Radiohead plan to tour in 2008. Radiohead's publicist has confirmed that this is indeed the plan, and, adding more fuel to the fires of anticipation, Billboard.com today spoke with Radiohead's management, who offered a few more details on the travel plans in progress.
"We plan to tour next year, starting in May through to probably the end of the year. With lots of holidays in that period," Courtyard Management rep Bryce Edge told Billboard.com. Um, save the, er, dates!
"At the moment we are talking with our agents in North America and for the rest of the world, trying to get a schedule which works for the band and works financially."
Expect larger venues than those Radiohead played back in 2006. Also don't be surprised if you detect a trace or two of reluctance in Thom Yorke's visage onstage. "He likes to do shows, but the whole business of schlepping around the world is not top of his list of favorite things to do. He really enjoys playing to the fans-- it's just the process of how to do that which is the pain in the neck.
Added Edge: "They're not road dogs. They never have been."
Edge also claimed rumors that Radiohead had moved 1.2 million digital copies of In Rainbows were "exaggerated" (the data has not yet been analyzed), but suggested folks may have paid an average of £4 (roughly $8.18) per copy. Radiohead may not be road dogs, but they are cash cows.
Photo by Ashley WilliamsonWhile those of us who live in U.S. cities that aren't L.A. or Vegas quench our thirst for live Björk with the promise of her "Live Session Album," the songstress has added some flesh-and-blood live shows to her already respectable fall and winter itinerary-- or, should we say, spring and summer itinerary, as most of these gigs go down south of the equator.
Alas, the only North American shows are in the aforementioned pair of cities, where her openers will be Ratatat, and in Mexico. But South Americans, New Zealanders, and Australians, rejoice! The pixie carnival is headed your way.
Björk will begin her South American shows on October 26 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. [MORE...]
Deerhunter and Dan Deacon photos by Jason Bergman; Xiu Xiu and Mary Timony Band photos by Kathryn Yu; Above: Dan Deacon
Marnie Stern was originally supposed to be performing in this time slot. I'm still not sure exactly what happened, but whatever. Washington, D.C.-born Mary Timony, formerly of Boston noise-pop outfit Helium, is an artist I've long respected more than listened to, and if her set lacked the fret-tapping pyrotechnics of Stern, the muso in me could still geek out over her jarring tunings and sudden rhythm changes.
The Mary Timony Band [Blender Theatre at Gramercy; 9 p.m]



Backed by Medications members Devin Ocampo on drums and Chad Molter on
bass, Timony worked through a couple of older songs as well as a few
from her latest album, The Shapes We Make. The high point was
the Kim Gordon-like "Killed by the Telephone", which shifted between
ringing guitar arpeggios and double-time aggression.
Xiu Xiu [Blender Theatre at Gramercy; 10 p.m.]

The cellphone-texting, camera-toting biz aspect of CMJ can put an unpleasant distance between audience and performer-- every show is a press conference, right? Jamie Stewart of San Francisco experimental trio Xiu Xiu cuts through some of that divide with his impassioned mien and flitting, dolorous, almost Antony-like vibrato.


Performing songs like the minimal, eerie "Sad Pony Guerrilla Girl", from 2003's A Promise, Stewart would close his eyes and gaze upward, accompanied by multi-instrumentalist cousin Caralee McElroy and the moody beats of drummer Ches Smith. Unfortunately, I had to leave after only a few songs to make sure I could see Dan Deacon at the Bowery. I guess I'm part of the problem.
Dan Deacon [Bowery Ballroom; 11 p.m.]
Seeing Dan Deacon doesn't necessarily entail actually seeing him at any point. Huddled at the foot of the stage behind his lo-fi electronic setup-- "All my equipment is total bullshit" he said in a less absurdist moment-- the Baltimore party gonzo was visible to most of the audience only as a succession of blinding camera flashes.
Accordingly, though the first few songs of Deacon's set, including Spiderman of the Rings favorites like "Rattlesnake
Gun", sounded great, the crowd's enthusiasm dwindled visibly as you
moved out further and further from Deacon ground zero. Not so up in
front: "This level of shoving is just ridiculous," Deacon announced
mid-set, calling for the house lights. Like an expert school-assembly
leader, he then reorganized us throughout the room and started sending
audience members running up and down the Bowery stairs.
Even in the incandescent glow, it was still tough to spot Deacon through the bodies, but getting a good look at ourselves-- narcissistically, performers too (New York is weird)-- seemed to restore a communal energy that subsided little when the lights went back out. Spiderman highlight "Crystal Cat" prompted frenzied dancing, and finale "Wham City" became an epic sing-along, as glowing and trippy as that flickering green skull perched above Deacon's bullshit equipment.
Deerhunter [Bowery Ballroom; 12 a.m.]

A show by arty Atlanta psych-rockers Deerhunter has become an unpredictable thing in every way but the music. Will beanpole frontman Bradford Cox don a dress? (No.) Will guitarist Colin Mee, who recently hinted that he was leaving the group only to apparently rejoin, show up onstage? (Yes.) Will Cox subject whatever rubberneckers stick around for the encore to a rambling, intoxicated therapy session, repeatedly intoning, "I miss my family" and berating anybody who leaves even if it's just to take a piss? (Um, yup.)

Cox expressed reservations throughout the show about being able to top spazz extraordinaire Dan Deacon's just-finished set. In terms of showmanship, the band didn't even try, wisely leaving aside the drag and horror-show sleepwalking of their early-2007 gigs for a performance underscoring their strengths as a deceptively accomplished live band-- from the "Texas Never Whispers" rush-rattling of "Hazel St." to the gauzy Spacemen 3 fantasia of "Spring Hall Convert", plus the clanging drones of "Cryptograms" and "Wash Off".


Cox certainly isn't the first young punk to light up onstage here in smoke-free New York, but his encore cigarette was a well-deserved indulgence. No matter what ridiculous shit he was saying by that point. Wait, did he just thank Jesus? (Yes.)
Rivers Cuomo Dishes on New Weezer LP, Alone Demos
You've already run your red Sharpie outta ink drawing hearts around December 11 on your "Faces of Brian Bell '07" calendar; for that, of course, is the day Alone, Rivers Cuomo's collection of solo demos, hits shelves thanks to Geffen. But one gets the feeling that, sometime in 2008, you're gonna wail on another writing implement anew, as the next album from the 100% not broken up Weezer is apparently nearing completion.
RollingStone.com recently spoke with the band's most esteemed dweeb, who claims the band is "done recording" their follow-up to 2005's Make Believe, and "just waiting to find a mixer" for their "very fresh and experimental" forthcoming LP. There's still no release date set for the disc, but Rick Rubin has been attached as producer.
While they were at it, RS.com squeezed a bit more out of Rivers regarding Alone. Apart from a demo of "Buddy Holly" and a cover of Ice Cube's "The Bomb" (sample lyric: "still dropping more shit than a pigeon"), the disc is comprised of several tracks from the unfinished space rock concept album/musical Songs From a Black Hole, which Cuomo planned as a follow-up to the band's blue-hued debut.
The rest of the disc's roughly 18 tracks will be made up of demos from the last decade and a half from the Cuomo backlog. I hope the catchy, lovelorn one makes the cut!
Mika Miko, Marnie Stern, and Mary Timony photos by Kathryn Yu; No Age and White Williams photos by Jason Bergman; Above: No Age
Marnie Stern is a 31-year-old New Yorker with a fondness for exclamation points ("Put All Your Eggs in One Basket and Then Watch That Basket!!!") and finger-tapping guitar technique, the latter of which she reportedly learned from 1990s math-rockers Don Caballero. Early on Wednesday-- CMJ's unofficial start date, after Tuesday's official one-- she had the toughest spot: in a Gramercy Theatre more full of colored spotlights and idle waitresses than actual people. She took the stage with her new backing band (two guys from the Brooklyn-based Pterodactyl) like the entire festival depended on her starting things out right.
Marnie Stern [Blender Theatre at Gramercy; 7 p.m.]



A bad sound mix actually worked to her benefit, downplaying the
shred-heavy, technical aspects of her chirping sound in favor of a more
ecstatic, beatific roar; she'd incite the crowd with a head nod during
a tough guitar run, or cut the instruments out, Deerhoof-style, to
light up her microphone. Part spoken-word session, part confessional--
part mood music, dream therapy, guitar lesson, leadership seminar, and
basement show-- Stern was all chorus.
Mika Miko [Blender Theatre at Gramercy; 8 p.m.]

Following her were the L.A. five-piece and all-female act Mika Miko,
worth mentioning since this one-two punch-- with songstress Mary Timony
waiting in the wings for round three-- was the rarest of occasions in
the midst CMJ's reputed wealth-of-riches: three frontwomen in as many
acts. Kill Rock Stars, who put together the evening's lineup, deserve
credit here, and they own the precedent, too-- see last year's Erase
Errata, Timony, and Deerhoof string at Hiro Ballroom.


"We need more guitar and more phone" is the way MM soundchecked,
bumping the levels on their dual microphones, one of which was in fact
a bright red plastic telephone receiver. Vocalist Jet Blanca showed off
a trick, running from side-to-side until her Rushmore-like red beret
slipped off the back of her head yet hung in the air miraculously,
attached by rope to her pixie outfit. The LPs, 7"s, and CD-Rs that have
leaked out of their camp since 2003 have contained various blasts of
energy and chaos, but live it was all eyes on their virtuoso bass
player, who channeled Erase Errata's Ellie Erickson in churning out
sped-up Gang of Four rhythms and quick, unlikely turnarounds (Blanca's
sax playing didn't hurt either comparison). Michelle Suarez's
skittering, uptight Monorchid guitar parts anxiously played
counterpoint-- there was a lot more going on than all the noise might
suggest.

I was just out the door-- this is CMJ, you know-- when I heard familiar
strains: Blanca shouting "Attitude, you got some fucking attitude," the
band covering Misfits in what's become an unofficial marathon
tradition-- the third year straight I've seen a band take that
particular Danzig song on.
White Williams [Bowery Ballroom; 9 p.m.]

23-year-old local Joe Williams, who performs as White Williams, has
already charmed New York some; as the icy, restrained heir to
traditions in this city as diverse as Blondie and the Talking Heads,
Williams is our city's antidote to the hyper, sweaty, out-of-town
antics of Dan Deacon and Girl Talk-- not coincidentally, the two guys
with whom he just went on the road.



An early show at the Mercury Lounge, the first with his three-piece backing band (though at the time, only two of them made it), saw Williams onstage but frozen, distant, specific-- perfect qualities for his laptop syncopation and cool-guy vocals. At Bowery Ballroom, after weeks on the road with his veteran buddies, the band was loose -- more of a wall-of-sound, bass-thump, stretch-it-out kind of a thing, less restrained-- and some in the crowd looked confused. Perfect, though, was the addition of a neon video narrative projected at the back of the stage: pulsing airplanes, palm trees (fitting for Williams' faux-reggae bounce), and dancing dollar signs; in just a month, this guy went from completely distant to full-on immersive, and his record's still not out yet.
No Age [Bowery Ballroom; 10 p.m.]

Next were the night's undisputed guests of honor, No Age, and they knew
it: "How fucking stoked are you guys?!!!" Like sister band Mika Miko,
the two-piece No Age are Los Angeles natives who came up in a creative
scene that has roots in the art and punk worlds going back as far as
Raymond Pettibon and SST. Weirdo Rippers,
their first full-length, merges the various strains of creative Los
Angeles-- noise bands, aging hardcore guys, skaters, visual artists,
designers-- into raw charisma.


At Bowery, they dispensed some with the pretty shoegaze that pads out Rippers in favor of feedback, screaming, and frenetic drumming-- their builds were shorter, and the choruses bigger. Before long Randy Randall was teetering on top of an amplifier, the stage was stormed by an adoring crowd, and guitar duties were relegated to a particularly sweet and young-looking kid who sheepishly took the axe when Randall handed it to him; Randall then hoisted the kid up on his shoulders, like a father with his son, to finish the band's night.
Neko Case Reissues Debut
Pitchforks News fully endorses the taste of own foot
"(What, no love for Neko's 1997 debut The Virginian? It's good!)" Alas, we spoke too soon in our earlier story about Neko Case reissues, because Mint Records will complete the set of reissued Case studio records with the re-release of the aforementioned album on October 23. (Anti- delivers the others on November 6.)The Virginian, credited to Neko Case and Her Boyfriends, was originally released on Bloodshot Records. This 10th anniversary, worldwide reissue comes free of extras, but it is packaged in one of those soft little digipaks.
The Case-friendly New Pornographers are on tour now; their next show is tonight, October 18, in Chicago. [MORE...]
School of Seven Bells Hop on Prefuse Tour
NOT Voice of the Seven Woods! Or the seven dwarfs! Or the cast of "7th Heaven"!
Photo by Amanda MertenIt appears Guillermo Scott Herren, aka Prefuse 73, is a little suspicious when it comes to numbers. Contrary to a previous report, Voice of the Seven Woods will not open up for Mr. Herren on his upcoming fall tour.
Instead, ex-Secret Machine Benjamin Curtis' School of Seven Bells will fill the role of "Prefuse 73 openers with the number seven in their name."
Just for clarity's sake:
Voice of the Seven Woods: not opening for Prefuse 73.
School of Seven Bells: opening for Prefuse 73.
"Class of 73 Bells": a Prefuse 73 track featuring School of Seven Bells.
Prefuse 73: Prefuse 73.
The School have a couple shows of their own before the tour begins. Their next date is in Brooklyn at CMJ tomorrow night (October 19). [MORE...]
Mike Patton to Voice Bionic Commando in Video Game
Get the heck out of here, you nerd!
Bionic Commando is a digitized game of war from the late 1980s. It is very good. Like many quality things in a world ever-devoid of new ideas, some nice folks are remaking the game for your modern leisure consoles. We imagine it will be not unlike the Halo franchise in virtually every way.
Well, every which way but this: according to kotaku.com, vocal acrobat/mental cosmonaut Mike Patton will provide the voice of Nathan "Bionic Commando" Spencer. The game's still in the planning stages, but knowing Mike, it'll be done in a week, with Rahzel and Kid Koala in prominent guest roles.
This isn't Mike's first foray into the pixilated world, of course: he provided the pipes for an all-knowing force in this year's The Darkness. And, though pointing out strange places Mike Patton has popped up is as mindlessly easy as writing the end of a phrase like this one, we'd be remiss if we didn't mention this thing again. I bet that lady's gonna buy two copies of BC: one for her, and one for her mama.
Will you help Mike Patton and the rest of the Federation battle the Badds and free Super Joe?
BONUS: Check this out. Dude is everywhere!
Do you have a news tip for us? Anything crazy happen at a show you attended recently? Do you have inside info on the bands we cover? Is one of your favorite artists (that's not somebody you know personally) releasing a new record you'd like to see covered? You will remain completely anonymous, unless we are given your express permission to reveal your identity. (Please note that publicists, managers, booking agents, and other artist representatives are generally exempt from this rule, but will also be granted anonymity if requested.)
Fri: 05-16-08: 04:15 PM CDT
Pitchfork Music Festival Three-Day Passes Sold Out!
Fri: 05-16-08: 03:10 PM CDT
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- Iron & Wine, Bill Callahan Open for the Swell Season
- Matt & Kim, Death Set, Black Ghosts Do Colt 45 Tours
- Modest Mouse Add Dates to Tour
- Brendan Canning's BSS Presents LP Details Revealed
- Sybris Link With Absolutely Kosher for New LP, Tour
- Cluster, Copeland, Higgs, Whitman Play Full House Fest
- Photos: Britt Daniel [Solana Beach, CA; 05/03/08]
- Tom Waits Reveals "Glitter and Doom" Tour
- Yet Another Surprise New Nine Inch Nails Album
- The Cool Kids' Bake Sale EP, Here at Last
- Holopaw, Boyracer, Brittle Stars Play Pop Mayhem!
- A Hawk & A Hacksaw Tour With Hun Hangar Ensemble
- Everybody and Their Mom Added to Glastonbury Lineup
- Four Tet Announces Summer Tour
- Mark "BBQ" Sultan Tours, Plays Dates With Clinic
- Spoon Add Dates, Britt Daniel Plays Solo
- Gregor Samsa Issue Rest, Tour Tirelessly
- Deerhunter Gain Member for Forthcoming Tour
- Grizzly Bear Add Shows Between Radiohead Gigs
- Yo La Tengo, Sparklehorse Folks Tour With Johnston
- Grand Archives, Helio Sequence Do Air Race, Tours
- Fleet Foxes Add New Member, More Tour Dates
- M.I.A., Franz, Interpol, Death Cab for Cutie Do Latitude
- Midlake Guitarist Starts Fair Trade Coffee Company
- The Cure Herald New Album With Series of Singles
- Photos: Arcade Fire / Superchunk Rally for Obama [Greensboro, NC; 05/01/08]
- High Places Sign to Thrill Jockey, Prep Debut Album
- Cloudland Canyon Tour With Singer
- Annie LP Details: Title, Songs, Killer Guest Stars
- The Ocean, Kylesa Join Forces for U.S. Tour
- Spiritualized's A&E: Bumped, Expanded, Deluxe-ified
- Wolf Parade Join the 2008 Cover Art Hall of Fame
- Justice, TVOTR, Vampire Weekend Do Monolith
- Times New Viking Tour Through the Summer
- Norwegian Black Metal Stars Showcased in Photo Book
- Shearwater Tour With Frog Eyes, Evangelicals
- Phil Elverum, Bret Lunsford, Karl Blau Prep D+ Comp
- Black Kids Sign to Columbia for U.S., Reveal LP Details
- The Mary Onettes Line Up First U.S. Tour Ever
- Polvo Offshoot Black Taj Go Beyonder on New Album
- Hold Steady Reveal Stay Positive Tracklist, Release Date
- Feist, Spoon, Deerhoof, Philip Glass Celebrate Brooklyn
- Clipse, Deerhunter, Shellac Play Villette Sonique
- RZA Unveils Snacks Tracks, Ridonculous Cover Art
- Deerhunter, Crystal Castles, APTBS Opening for NIN
- Pitchfork.tv Seeks Summer Interns in New York City
- Albert Hammond, Jr.'s ¿Cómo Te Llama? Due in July
- Cat Power, Jim James, She & Him Head Newport Lineup
- Bjork/Antony/Oldham Arranger Nico Muhly Preps LP
- Spank Rock Hospitalized, Dates Cancelled
- Dr. Dog Embrace Fate on New Album, Tour
- Mojave 3's Halstead Joins Jack Johnson's Label, Tour
- New Order Revisit History on Live DVD Set
- Photos: Goldfrapp [New York, NY; 04/29/08]
- Bloc Party Line Up Summer Tour, Work on New Album
- The War on Drugs Reveal Debut Details, Tour
- Bon Iver Extends Tour, Remixes the Rosebuds
- Photos: The Mae Shi / Pre / Panther [Portland, OR; 04/26/08]
- Photos: Menomena's Record Store Day Foosball Challenge [Portland, OR; 04/19/08]
- Yes! This IS the Cover for Lil Wayne's Tha Carter III!
- Justice, Hot Chip, Vampire Weekend Play Radio 1 Fest
- Radiohead "All I Need" Clip Raises Slavery Awareness
- Fiery Furnaces Announce Mammoth Live Album
- Photos: Cut Copy / Black Kids [Portland, OR; 04/28/08]
- Liquid Liquid's Classic EPs Compiled, Expanded
- CSS Reveal Donkey Tracklist
- Stephen O'Malley's KTL Tours With Radian's Nemeth
- Dosh Tours, Snags Andrew Bird for Record Release Gig
- RZA, Wire, Junior Boys Play Futuresonic Fest
- Label Shuffle: 4AD Absorbs Too Pure, Beggars Banquet
- Bikini Kill's Tobi Vail Hits the Road With the Old Haunts
- Radiohead In-Studio Performance Headed to VH1
- Robyn Kicks Off North American Tour Tonight
- Twilight Sad Rework Autumns Tracks on New EP
- Photos: Wulapalooza: Blitzen Trapper / The Blow / Panther [Salem, OR; 04/26/08]
- David Bowie Reissues 1972 Live Set
- Photos: Les Savy Fav / The Dodos [San Francisco, CA; 04/27/08]
- MBV, Aphex Twin, Breeders, Lidell, CSS Do Bestival
- Nick Cave & Bad Seeds Announce North American Dates

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