John Richards explains why spending half the year in NYC will be good for Seattle listeners.
Benaroyas annual night of romance
Because the kids in Seattle have the biggest bass
Should you feel your feelings or just bang your head?
Charlane Tucker, the protagonist of Joanna Horowitzs one-woman musical, plays like a female version of Walk Hards Dewey Cox, relentlessly…
Romantic Euro-pop from a couple and a chanteuse
Among the five live-action shorts in this 137-minute compendium, Hollywood will find two films that hew perfectly to the…
Michael Jackson – Thriller 25th Anniversary EditionIt’s hard to believe that Thriller, the world’s biggest selling record of all time,…
A comickind oftake on marriage
From André Téchiné (Wild Reeds), The Witnesses dramatizes the early AIDS crisis in France. Being set in the ’80s…
He’s back–unflagging, indestructible, super-colossal. Through this epoch-defining figure one may refract American history. John Updike has his Rabbit Angstrom and…
But they’ve been doing it right for years.
A beat they can dance to
OK, I need a profession, a location, and a style of music. . .
They’ve become much more than a wall of petrol-fueled guitars and knowing, good-old-boy grins.
The city hasn’t always been kind to its musicians, but things are looking pretty damn good at the moment.
Get the free Short List Podcast sent directly to your computer featuring the night’s live music recommendations, audio clips, show…
John Richards, photo by Bootsy Holler.To shed a little more light on what KEXP’s partnership with Radio New York will…
Listeners in the Big Apple will no longer have to rely on their broadband connection to get their fix of…
Major nepotism alert, but today’s Guardian has a piece focusing on what they dub Seattle’s new sound, touching on a…
