Gabba, Gabba Hey! Joey Ramone's solo release
Use the fields below to perform an advanced search of The Daily Cardinal's archives. This will return articles, images, and multimedia relevant to your query. You can also try a Basic search
29 items found for your search. If no results were found please broaden your search.
Too much \concept"" can be the kiss of death for any rock album. Any project that is excessively mired in its own self importance seriously runs the risk of being dismissed as indulgent and not worth anyone's time.
I was lucky enough to get in touch with my good friend Wesley Willis before a performance on Monday at the Replay Lounge in Lawrence, Kansas. Not wanting to take up too much of his preshow time, I kept the interview brief.
Music, observed Ralph Waldo Emerson, and wine are one. True enough, and I'll make a concerted effort right off the bat here to suppress my English-major instincts and let it go at that.
Teenage Fanclub hit it big in 1991, beating out Nirvana's Nevermind and R.E.M.'s Out of Time with Bandwagonesque, Spin Magazine's Album of the Year. Over the next decade, the songwriting trio of Norman Blake, Gerard Love and Raymond McGinley produced four albums, which brought them critical acclaim and thousands of Big Star comparisons, if little in the way of notoriety. After being released two years ago in the United Kingdom, Teenage Fanclub's latest, Howdy!, came out stateside this month on Thirsty Ear records. The Daily Cardinal caught up with lead singer Norman Blake at his home in Scotland in the midst of some domestic duties.
To paraphrase Christian Krautkramer, the Cardinal's food critic emeritus, people don't always have time for breakfast, but when they do, they should make the most of it.
'34,' an installation by Bob Plankers and Theo Streibel, hangs in the 7th floor gallery of the Humanities building.
Wisconsin weather is fickle to say the least, but if history is any indicator, then we have at least a few more weeks of good grilling weather before unexpected cold days pop up and spoil evening get-togethers. Even if you grilled all summer, neglect not these final precious moments; if you do, you'll be kicking yourself all throughout the long cold winter.