Goldie – Goldie.Co.UK – Review March 22, 2002 It’s enjoyable to listen to, and depending on what volume you play it at, it can either excite the brain or act as bubbly background music.
Toys That Kill – The Citizen Abortion – Review March 22, 2002 Toys That Kill are more, uh, “catchy” wary than loadsa their peers without bein’ “not catchy” or excessively “street punk” or whatever.
Dimmu Borgir – Puritanical Euphoric Misanthropia – Interview March 22, 2002 An interview with the guitarist Silenoz
Scott Kelly – Spirit Bound Flesh – Review March 15, 2002 For the majority of this 35-minute disc, it’s just Neurosis’ Scott Kelly and his distinctive, raspy voice singing with his acoustic guitar.
Lycia – Compilation Appearances Vol. 2 – Review March 15, 2002 For more than a decade, Lycia has cranked out quality dark ambient music, but there’s a lot of material fans have never heard – until now.
Scholomance – The Immortality Murder – Review March 15, 2002 Scholomance prove that Americans can gut and reconstitute esoteric black metal in the craggy name of Van Der Graaf prog as handily as Norwegians.
Lupine Howl – The Carnivorous Lunar Activities of – Review March 15, 2002 More chaotic than shoegazer, more psychedelic than straight rock, and a hell of a lot more interesting than anything Blur’s put out lately. Or Spiritualized.
Scene Killer – Review March 15, 2002 Solarized, Core, Monster Magnet, Drag Pack, Burnout King, The Lemmings, and Atomic Bitchwax: An East Coast corollary to the Desert Sessions discs.
The Dragons – Rock N Roll Kamikaze – Review March 15, 2002 The Dragons come off here as older tho’ not necessarily wiser, but it’s like they stepped back and looked around a bit since they did Rock like Fuck.
Slipknot – Iowa – Review March 15, 2002 True to the hype, Slipknot have created a meteor shower of extreme sights and sounds, deftly masking a nü metal premise they and Ross helped create.