Larry Sakin is a former music executive and non-profit medical organization administrator. He advocates for literacy issues and provides advocacy training for grassroots and non-profit groups around the country.
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Tim Barry has captured the spirit of the troubadours of the early twentieth century.
Miller offers the rehabilitation of Iraq as a main reason for the Iraq War in the first place.
Listening to Coming Clean gives one the sense of attending a meditative session at a ritualistic sweat lodge.
Weinstein writes from deep within himself, committing blood, grit, and sensitivity to paper, creating a highly original masterwork.
Imagine No Superstition examines the ersatz nature of all religions, rooted as they are in anachronistic customs.
To the pantheon of classic art we can now add Bad Astronaut’s Twelve Small Steps, One Giant Disappointment.
The soul influence on Fosbury is derivative and the album an unjust example of this amazing musical style.
Fisk's observations of American influence over the Middle East are a fascinating, lurid journey into so-called democracy building.
Any record this good is worth losing your hearing over.
Copeland stands among the pantheon of emo rockers, including the UK’s Keane and Death Cab for Cutie.
BC Writer of the Week