Donuts NYE Party with Glass Candy

The News Review:

- Donuts NYE Party with Glass Candy
- LAKERS THRWN BACK NBA: MATCHUP F FRMER RIVALS IS CMPLETELY NE…
- Monday ‘” December 31
- Music evolution: Now I know nano

Donuts NYE Party with Glass Candy
SFStation.com – Dec 31, 2007
From the opening of "Crystal Migraine" to the last sentence in "Empty V" she expresses herself through a wide spectrum of raw emotion and communication. Effectively refusing to be pigeonholed. She simultaneously hovers above the dark disco beat of "Brittle Women" while crashing into mangled metal music in songs like "Love n A Plate" and "Love Love Love". The entire album is just over 25 minutes long. With four songs on each side; including their revised version of the SCREAMERS classic: "I Wanna Hurt" and a loose interpretation of THE RLLING STNES’ "Last Time". Throughout the LP the instrumentation ranges from synthesized growls to lacerated guitar. GLASS CANDY manages to retain an extremely minimal edge rhythmically.

LAKERS THRWN BACK NBA: MATCHUP F FRMER RIVALS IS CMPLETELY NE…
highbeam.com – Dec 31, 2007
find Daily News (Los Angeles CA) articles. Byline: Rich Hammond Staff Writer The ambiance? All 1980s down to the short-shorts Laker Girls in.

Monday ‘” December 31
NEWS.com.au – Dec 31, 2007
11 The Angry Hour (punk). Midnight The Power Team (metal). 7 – 1am Adelaide’s Best Music.

Music evolution: Now I know nano
Rockford Register Star – Dec 31, 2007
This was my iPod Christmas in which I joined the MP3 generation. In one day I was hooked. Now I’m figuring out how to buy and download songs onto a tiny piece of metal and plastic called a “nano” a word that reminds me of Robin Williams’ character in “Mork and Mindy. ”As I was nanoing it gave me a sense of deja vu all over again: I’ve been transferring music to new formats all my life making record companies and gadget makers rich. The year I was born 1948 the recording industry introduced the long-playing record a revolution in sound quality and recording length. In one giant leap for mankind we could play a record that lasted more than three minutes. The record companies made a ton of money repackaging their 78s into long-playing “high fidelity” records… The next recording revolution was stereophonic sound which showed up on my friend’s “stereo” record player in the early 1960s. (We didn’t get a true stereo until later in the decade. ) The music didn’t actually sound better but some instruments came out of one speaker some out of another. So people had to buy two speakers. They spent the next decade replacing their “mono” records with stereo versions. About this time the reel-to-reel tape was introduced as the next big thing. Thankfully it wasn’t.

Written by admin on December 31st, 2007 with no comments.
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