Name: Bryan Price
Dateline: San Francisco, California
Weblog: goodnight-gracie.blogspot.com
Articles: 15
First Published: Tuesday, January 9, 2007
Last Published: Saturday, April 7, 2007
Currently listing articles 15-1:
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Music Review: Guided By Voices - Alien Lanes— A belated postmortem of the last of the rock thoroughbreds.
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No Guitars in '77— The Beach Boys Dreamy Love You, The Yin to the Yang of Suicide’s Nightmarish Debut
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Notes From Underground— Looking back at Skeeter Davis, Left Banke, The Nerves, The Feelies, and Spaceman 3
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Thoughts on Rock and Roll in the Seventies (Part II)— The Flamin' Groovies, Big Star, and The Raspberries-The Rise of Power Pop.
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Notes From Underground— Five songs I hope people have not yet forgotten by Bob Dylan, Yo La Tengo, Elvis Costello, Robert Wyatt, and Any Trouble.
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This Week in Music - Ten Songs From This Week— A shorthand version of what I have been listening to over the last week or so.
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Thoughts on Rock and Roll in the Seventies-Punk and Power Pop (Part I)— Trying to suss out Rock and Roll's last stand in the seventies.
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Music Review: The Jacobites - The Ragged School— Delicate underground folk-rock from British leather and lace troubadours.
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Music Review: The Gories - I Know You Fine But How You Doin'— The Gories attain primal garage-punk nirvana in Memphis, Tennessee with the help of Alex Chilton.
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Is "Born to Run" the Best Song Ever Written?— “I wanna die with you Wendy on the streets tonight in an everlasting kiss.”
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Music Review: Daniel Johnston - Yip/Jump Music— Daniel Johnston, Master of the Chord Organ Creates a Basement Masterpiece in 1983
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Music Review: The Byrds - Sweetheart of the Rodeo— Gram Parsons hijacks The Byrds and helps to create a country classic in 1968
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Music Review: Chris Bell - I Am the Cosmos— A “lost” masterpiece from the man who often played Abel to Alex Chilton’s Cain in the myth of Big Star
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Music Review: Alex Chilton - Like Flies on Sherbert— Alex Chilton tears rock and roll down to its foundation in 1979.
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Music Review: Jackson C. Frank - Blues Run the Game— A look at a lost classic.


