Atlas Sound brings quality music
This Sunday, Atlas Sound will play a show at Cholmondeley's sponsored by Punk, Rock 'n Roll Club.
This Sunday, Atlas Sound will play a show at Cholmondeley's sponsored by Punk, Rock 'n Roll Club.
It seems like every decade for the last 50 years has ended with an outpouring of excellent popular music.
In 21 years of attending concerts, I cannot recall ever seeing an opening act that grabbed my attention to such a degree that I actually considered that it might overshadow the headliner.
As they enter their second quarter-century of existence as a band, the Flaming Lips stand astride a trail of highly influential material that, for all its weak spots, assures them a place in the pantheon of great musicians.
Many Brandeis students know Dan Levine as the guy who tables in the Usdan Student Center for a free trip to Israel.
Playing for a multitude of ultra-hip college-age young adults at the celebrated Orpheum Theater in Boston Thursday night, Grizzly Bear delivered a fantastic performance.
Jim James, Conor Oberst, M. Ward and Mike Mogis: last Friday, these four stars (of a sort), now playing together under the mockingly self-important name Monsters of Folk, released their eponymous debut album.
Over many years, the veteran indie rockers of Yo La Tengo have earned a collective reputation as a must-see live act.
The new album by Phish, simply named Joy, is the band's 14th studio release in its 25-year recording history and its first since reuniting after a five-year hiatus.
This Friday, The Pains of Being Pure at Heart will play at Cholmondeley's and launch a three-month, worldwide tour that officially begins on Saturday at the Middle East in Cambridge.
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