SUNDAY MARCH 11ERUPTION
Imagine asking this question last year: "Is it more likely that the Rapture will eviscerate all the Earth's sinners come May 21, or that David Lee Roth will reunite with VAN HALEN?" It's likely that a creepily vast majority would've answered the former. And yet, here we are. Diamond Dave is back with the boys, and all will be right with the non-combusted world at the TD Garden, 100 Legends Way, Boston | 7:30 pm | $49.50-$149.50 | ticketmaster.com.
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Related:
Review: The Artist, Review: Joyful Noise, For Coyote Kolb, the roots come together, More
- Review: The Artist
The advent of talking pictures sends a screen idol into both a career nosedive and an identity crisis in Michel Hazanavicius's flashback to Hollywood's transitional period of the late '20s.
- Review: Joyful Noise
There's not much joy but there's plenty of noise of the rafter-rocking gospel singing variety in Tony Graff's musical dramedy.
- For Coyote Kolb, the roots come together
Johnny Cash's baleful self-portrait "Ain't No Grave" oozes into my skull through a Sailor Jerry haze.
- Moving on with Stephie Coplan & the Pedestrians
When Stephie Coplan was 14 years old, the empty pages in her first songwriting book were as much an escape as they were a creative outlet.
- The tight post-punk structure of Autochrome
Sitting around the kitchen table listening to music with Autochrome bassist/singer Jeff Bartell and guitarist Richard Murillo, I realize that before we even started talking, we certainly agreed on this: when the guitar kicks in on "Senses" from their forthcoming self-released album, Separation Realms, it sends chills down the spine.
- Sand Reckoner provide sensory overload
Since the 1960s, bands classified as "psychedelic" have been caught in the endless pursuit of trying to expand the senses beyond pure aural stimulation.
- Mellow Bravo | Mellow Bravo
Some of us with a limited scope of vision figured Mellow Bravo — who strive for the crown of America's ultimate bar band — only had three possible strategies for following up 2010's Strut.
- Out: Richard Davies reconnects his Cardinal roots
Last Thursday was full of surprises at Cambridge's Plough and Stars, as Australian singer/songwriter Richard Davies and one very lucky pick-up band were set to perform the music of Cardinal — the legendary duo whose 1994 homonymous LP was perhaps the most influential baroque-pop revival record of the 1990s.
- Review: For Greater Glory
Bring coffee, because director Dean Wright's dramatization of the 3-year-long Cristero War (1926-9) seems to last longer than the Mexican conflict itself.
- Out: From the MFA to the Pavilion, Passion Pit return to Boston
When Passion Pit were conceived five years ago out of an Emerson College dorm, the result of a Valentine's Day gift of love songs Michael Angelakos crafted for his then-girlfriend, electro-pop really hadn't yet taken hold of popular alternative music.
- Codeine’s careful rock returns to Boston
Bands named after drugs have a spotty history of making music that fits their substances.
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