Basslines and Protest Signs Part 19: No Thanks Boris
Basslines and Protest Signs is Brett Callwood’s column looking at the intersection of music and politics. This week talks about the new UK prime minister Boris Johnson.
Basslines and Protest Signs is Brett Callwood’s column looking at the intersection of music and politics. This week talks about the new UK prime minister Boris Johnson.
After nearly a year, actress Sloane Avery stops by the show to chat with Nick & Allison.
At the Grammy Museum on Monday May 6, members from The Bangles, The Dream Syndicate, The 3 O’Clock, and Rain Parade gathered, first for a collective Q&A session and then for a wonderful performance/jam.
Y’all should do as the Parabellum title suggests and “prepare for war”.
The Met Gala took over media yesterday as celebrities displayed their most outrageous takes on this year’s theme, “Camp: Notes on Fashion”. “Camp” in this use is about exaggeration, about artifice. My favorite explanation: “Camp sees everything in quotation marks. It’s not a lamp, but a ‘lamp’; not a woman, but a ‘woman.’” ALL THE FASHION, ALL THE JEWELRY, ALL THE … heads? Yup. Jared Leto, frontman of 30 Seconds to Mars (aka Jordan Catalano from My So-Called Life), came decked out in a red ensemble covered in jewels carrying a replica of his own head. While not everyone got… Read more »
Glover and friends make their own type of Purple Rain film.
This is the apocalypse we’ve been waiting for!
The world wouldn’t be complete if there weren’t conspiracy theories running amok.
Colin Dickey joins us to talk about his most recent book ‘’Ghostland: An American History In Haunted Places.” Colin Dickey is an American author, curator, and critic whose work deals with ghosts, death, and haunting, and explores how these symbols function as metaphors. He was the Managing Director of the Morbid Anatomy Museum and is a member of The Order of the Good Death. He currently teaches at National University in California. http://www.colindickey.com/
Due to an incredible outpouring of support from fans, the Museum of Pop Culture’s statue unveiling of the late Chris Cornell has been moved to Sunday, October 7th.