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The State Of Yes 2011: Their Morals Disappear

This is a story about a lot of things—creativity, ambition, success and conflict—but in the end it really all comes down to one irreducible principal.  It’s a story about friendship, and what can happen when it’s tested. The band Yes has been a lot of things over the years—psychedelic folk rockers, ambitious progressive rock pioneers, determined arena-rock hit-makers, and many shades in between. For those who’ve followed them closely over the years—a particularly stubborn and opinionated tribe of fans, wont to turn on both the band and each other at any moment—they are also something more.  Through their early ’70s…
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2010: Surprise!

Two thousand and ten is the year I didn’t see coming.  In the musical realm, the year seemed to this listener to cruise along uneventfully until around Labor Day, when I was starting to wonder what I’d even have to talk about in this column.  And then... TomPettyJimmyEatWorldChrissieHyndeBigBigTrainArmsOfKismetMarkMcKay and all of a sudden I had so much music I wanted to talk about that I had to make up a slew of new ridiculous award names.  Hope you enjoy the ride as much as I did, in the end… Sometimes The Movie Actually *Is* Better Than The Book Award OK…
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2009: Inspired

It was a strange year out there, with big changes everywhere, in politics, music and even my own little corner of the world.  What cut through the clutter of news about beginnings and endings, of new ideas fighting for space alongside old paradigms in disarray, was some truly amazing new music.  In a year that demanded inspiration, we got it in spades (and hearts and diamonds).  “I still believe you could save me from me,” sang Switchfoot’s Jon Foreman, and like so many of his musical brethren, this was the year he made me believe yet again in the healing…
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Sean McCarthy’s Top 100 Of The 2000s

In November 2009, Sean McCarthy set out to tackle reviewing his personal Top 100 albums of the first decade of the 21st century.  These 100 capsule reviews are broken into sets of 20, with the first set published on November 2, 2009.  Collect 'em all! Top 100 Of The 2000s 11/2/09 -- Numbers 100 through 81 11/9/09 -- Numbers 80 through 61 11/16/09 -- Numbers 60 through 41 11/23/09 -- Numbers 40 through 21 11/30/09 -- Numbers 20 through 1  
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Black Sabbath Retrospective

 Heavy metal had to start somewhere.  And while there are plenty of groups who could claim to have played a role in its birthing, none could claim a bigger chunk of the credit than Black Sabbath.  Droning, ominous, impossibly heavy, frequently aggressive and enshrouded in a sense of foreboding, Black Sabbath cut a starkly original figure when they debuted in 1970, a musical vision which seemed to drag into the light the dark underbelly of everything which came before it. Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward shook the music world with bone-shattering riffs and twisted visions of…
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Mott The Hoople / Ian Hunter Retrospective

Hundreds of bands have tried to cop that Rolling Stones sneer, and hundreds more songwriters have tried to model the earthy poetic flow and hard-won wisdom of Bob Dylan.  Mott The Hoople and its frontman Ian Hunter are perhaps the only ones ever to accomplish both at the same time, making music that explores emotional hills and valleys with penetrating insight, while delivering the whole package with a healthy dose of Mick Jagger swagger. The saga of Mott The Hoople as a band could fill pages (and has); suffice it say, the five-man troupe of British rockers seemed star-crossed from…
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Modern Prog Retrospective

Back in the day – which for someone of my vintage means the 1970s – progressive rock represented the epitome of cool for a certain kind of fan.  (Sounds better than “geeks like me,” doesn’t it?)  Flowering from the more avant garde offerings of bands from Frank Zappa’s Mothers Of Invention to the Beatles (was Sgt. Pepper’s in fact the first progressive rock album?  Discuss…), prog became a musical behemoth as the early seventies wore into the mid-.  Like many a burgeoning movement, though, prog eventually fell victim to its own excesses (Topographic Oceans, anyone?) and came under fire from…
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Heart Retrospective

Once upon a time in Seattle, a pair of siblings grew up idolizing Led Zeppelin, imagining themselves as Robert Plant and Jimmy Page, one minute pounding out blues-rock thunder, the next delving into pastoral harmonies and mandolins.  And then, their dream care true... sort of.  The twist came in the fact that the siblings were sisters, and they had the talent to back up their daydreams.  Heart's path forward would rarely be smooth, as the group would experience quick success, a lawsuit against its own label, personnel shifts, changing industry tastes and not one but two substantial comebacks.  Through it…
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Keeping Up (with Darren Paltrowitz)

Contributing Writer Darren Paltrowitz, whose previous syndicated column Moving In Stereo covered the latest and greatest in live and recorded music happenings, returned in late 2008 with a new vehicle for exploring the wide vistas of modern multimedia.  Keeping Up responded to the reality of information overload with a concise look at the best of all that's new in the worlds of music, books, television and the Internet. As Darren put it,"Newspapers, magazines, TV, radio, YouTube, blogs, RSS feeds, viral marketing campaigns...it's nearly impossible to stay current nowadays. As soon as you think you're caught up on your reading and…
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Michael R. Smith’s History Of Dance Music

Another year, another massive musical history project for Professor Of Pop Michael R. Smith.  This time Michael has elected to take on the history of dance music, a subject he is well-qualified to tackle.  Every Sunday beginning January 4, 2009, and continuing for the following 40 weeks, Michael will review a key album from the genre from the time period 1977-2007.  So put on your dancing shoes and brace yourself for that pounding beat… it’s time to hit the floor. Table Of Contents 1/4/09 -- Donna Summer / Once Upon A Time1/11/09 -- Original Soundtrack / Saturday Night Fever1/18/09 --…
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