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The Setonian
Arts

The drum's alive on this album, and that ain't no lie

In comparison to their 2001 debut "They Threw Us All in a Trench and Stuck a Monument on Top," Liars' new record, "Drum's Not Dead," sounds as if it were made by a totally different band. The stark contrast makes sense, though, as over the course of five years the quartet has lost two members and gained one, and has changed its headquarters from NYC to Berlin.


The Setonian
Arts

New album explores Harper's 'Sides'

Remember the days when the artistic expression of a musician was more than a couple of singles? When an entire album was focused around a central theme that wasn't the opposite gender? For those of you who believed the idea of the "concept album" to be a thing of the past, do yourself a favor and pick up Ben Harper's new release, "Both Sides of the Gun."


The Setonian
Arts

An unlikely, but beautiful, indie duet

Opposites attract. This fact is often a governing principle in relationships, as well as the magnetic properties of certain minerals. But is it true for musicians as well? Can two seemingly dissimilar artists successfully unite to create compelling and melodious music? When the combination consists of former Screaming Trees and Queens of the Stone Age vocalist Mark Lanegan and former Belle and Sebastian cellist/vocalist Isobel Campbell, the answer is an easy yes. Their latest release "Ballad of the Broken Seas" is proof enough.


The Setonian
Arts

Stella's Harvard show a worthwhile trip

The year 1958 was a significant one for contemporary artist Frank Stella. Born in the suburban town of Malden, and a graduate of Phillips Andover Academy and Princeton, Stella moved to Manhattan in 1958 to begin his life as a painter.


The Setonian
Arts

Stereolab pumps out new releases with diminishing returns

There is an old adage that says "if it ain't broke, don't fix it." If something gets the job done, messing with it will probably foul everything up, right? Sure, in our rapidly advancing technological world of today, devices and methods are reconstructed pretty often, but the main principles of the design or practice are always upheld in the final product.


The Setonian
Arts

Tufts' theMark hits the bullseye

Over the past few years, the music scene of the Tufts community has had a shadow cast upon it by theMark. With a current incarnation made up of seniors Paul Farris, Alec Eiffel, and Jordan DeLiso, recent grad Jason Autore, and non-Tufts newcomer Jay Lovell, theMark has opened Spring Fling and has played everywhere from Hotung to local clubs (including The Paradise and Avalon).



The Setonian
Arts

New album a gushing success

As of late, New Pornographers fans have had much to rejoice about and much new material to relish. The Canadian indie rock outfit recently released 2005's critically acclaimed "Twin Cinema" and treated audiences across the country to a joint tour with Belle and Sebastian.


The Setonian
Arts

Clap your hands if you believe in better music

You know those generic-sounding pop/rock tracks that car companies use as background music in commercials? I had always assumed they were produced by advertising executives, pressed for time and money and lacking any sort of musical talent or experience.


The Setonian
Arts

Not much 'Missing' for Maximo Park new release

There's a big difference between something that's extraneous and something that's missing. For example, DVDs are loaded with inconsequential deleted scenes, unfunny blooper reels and unrated "Collector's Editions" that give you the impression that you missed out on something when you saw the movie in theaters. When you get home and actually watch the extras - if you even watch them at all - you find 90 percent of them are garbage. No one wants to see Adam Sandler's misunderstood masterpiece "Little Nicky" restored to the former glory of its star's original vision. Nobody should want to get the unrated version of "Old School," because all you see is more of Will Ferrell than is good for you. These scenes aren't missing from the movie, they just weren't good enough to make the cut.


The Setonian
Arts

There are faces Hockney remembers, all his life, and some he paints

"The face must not be caught in a bearing that is too suggestive of a short period of time." While David Hockney, the best-known British artist of his generation, is referring here to his so-called composite Polaroid pieces, specifically "Billy Wilder Lighting his Cigar," all of his portraits transcend time. He paints a history behind each face.



The Setonian
Arts

Davies can't work out kinks in solo debut

In the '60s, the Kinks were a seminal rock band that made their point with blistering riffs and catchy melodies. Even in the '70s and '80s, the band kept on touring and producing new material, although to an increasingly small audience.


The Setonian
Arts

Hawthorne Heights reach a new low

It's not every day that you find a record so bad it drives you into a brief period of acute, introverted sorrow. When you do, it serves not only to remind us of the many detestable qualities of pop music and the music industry, but even to further sully and mar its once good name. "If Only You Were Lonely," the second record from suburban tattoo-and-all-black-clad Ohio emo quintet Hawthorne Heights, is such a record.


The Setonian
Arts

You wouldn't want to 'Destroy' these 'Rubies;' Bejar impresses

Very infrequently can a single record combine superiorly-crafted lyrics, outstanding vocals and cohesive instrumental elements. In the span of a sparse ten songs and fifty-three minutes, Destroyer's new release, "Destroyer's Rubies," does just that.


The Setonian
Arts

Doherty's latest album is all a-(Baby)shambles

Between various court appearances stemming from a steady stream of drug charges, ex-Libertines frontman Pete Doherty found the time in 2005 to put out an album in the UK with his new band, Babyshambles.


The Setonian
Arts

No Elbow room

There is nothing special about Elbow. Perhaps this is why they have been dropped by both Island and EMI as they were just starting out, likely due to their lack of an identity within the wave of late '90s British melodic soft rock. Overshadowed by such groups as Coldplay and Travis, Elbow managed to survive on the independent circuit until their more recent and lasting contract with V2 Records.


The Setonian
Arts

From this album to 'eternity,' Subways medicore

When The Who sang about their generation back in the '60s, it marked a dividing line between the cool young Mods and the old, crusty Establishment. Listening to the song today, you have to think they knew what they were talking about.


The Setonian
Arts

With debut album, Arctic Monkeys find some pals

Just like clockwork, a new year has brought with it a new British pop sensation, one that will supposedly save rock and roll from its current, sorry state and lead it into a golden age. The 2006 installment of this phenomenon is Sheffield, England's Arctic Monkeys, a fiery teenage four-piece led by nineteen-year-old singer/guitarist Alex Turner.


The Setonian
Arts

Clogs make mood music for the intellectual person

Around Valentine's Day, music has the tendency to degenerate into trite love songs and Kenny G Hallmark-inspired drivel so wimpy that even the guys responsible for elevator music cover their ears. When Clogs (a project of Padma Newsome and Bryce Dessner that predates their indie rock band The National) actively advertises itself as influenced by a 16th century lute player, you can be forgiven for expecting their music to join the Valentine's Day quagmire of New Age feel-goodery.


The Setonian
Arts

Don't wait for the next ice age to buy 'Mastodon'

Technically, this isn't a new album. In fact, it's the oldest Mastodon material you can get commercially. Five of the 29 tracks on "Call of the Mastodon" are remastered from the band's first release, 2001's "Lifesblood," and the other four are previously unreleased tracks recorded at the same session the "Lifesblood" tracks were laid down.