Concert Review: Lovehoney Drips Off The Stage At Arlene’s Grocery

    Alright, I begin my review of Lovehoney by stating I am a feminist. This is a weird word to throw out because people…

Song Review: Eugene Twist Aims To A “Stuntman”

With a lyrical arena that boasts whistleblowers, extraterrestrials, and self-consuming psychonauts, Scotland’s Eugene Twist is not your everyday songwriter. After two years in the musical…

Album Review: Communions Will Show That Love Is “Blue”

When you think of punk or post-punk, you may not think “sensitivity”. Yet, what is more the result of sensitivity than rage or confusion, which…

Album Review: Alex Lahey Has Millennial Problems In “B-Grade University”

                    There are many routes to a successful album. Some are good beats. Some are great…

Concert Review: The Chain Gang Of 1974 Give Gratitude At Rough Trade NYC

“Still Feeling Good?….. Beautiful”, are the words that the lead singer  of The Chain Gang of 1974, Kamtin Mohager, said to the crowd, which oddly…

Concert Review: Marco Benevento Transfroms Brooklyn Bowl Into A 1950’s Hop

Marco Benevento is, definitely, one of the funnest concerts to attend. Blending imagination with good music may seem like a given for a concert, but…

Concert Review: White Lies Makes Brooklyn Happy At Music Hall Of Williamsburg

You ever go to a concert and realize how big an artist is? It is not that you thought they were less, did not like…

Song Review: Jesse Hale Moore Empowers Communication In “Calling You Out”

“Calling You Out” is a thematically intriguing song. Often, when we see a loved one not being or doing their best, we want to call…

Artist Close-Up: Lauren Hoffman & The Secret Storm Write Music For Those “Sick With Love”

I am always commenting on how music seems to be made for discovering love. From heartbreak to the unity of two hearts, music aims to…

Album Review: Andy Suzuki & The Method Reveal “The Glass Hour”

Andy Suzuki & The Method (AM) just dropped The Glass Hour. The Brooklyn duo are known for their experimental sounds, and their fearlessness at being…

Movie Review: Chapter & Verse Shows The Casualness Of Tragedy

**Official Selection of the 2015 Urbanworld Film Festival** **Official Selection of the 2016 Human Rights Watch Film Festival** **Official Selection of the 2016 Pan African…

Concert Review: Bear’s Den Make You Feel Hope At Bowery Ballroom

“You’ll always be the love of my life”. That lyric had me publicly teary-eyed, but when you hear Andrew Davie sing it in repetition for…

Album Review: Porcelain Raft’s “Microclimate” Is Like A Massage For Your Soul

Whenever you get a massage there is a weirdly glorious moment, when the person massaging you finds your “stress point” or rather the tissue cluster…

Album Review: Ten Fé “Hit The Light ” Of Music

So often, music is described as bright and sunny in reflection to the “feel good” vibes of its sonics. Certain songs know how to make…

Album Review: Sampha Reveals How To “Process” Pain Into Creativity

There is no denying that Sampha is rightfully hailed for his pioneering skills. His mashing of soul with electro is not new to the music…