Tulips – Night of the Hunter – Review May 1, 1995 The crunching tone of the guitar dominates the album, while the percussion and vocals add a complementing sound that rounds out each song.
Ednaswap – Review May 1, 1995 Man, I’m a sucker for intense female vocalists. Annie Preven sings her ass off on Ednaswap’s self-titled CD. The girl’s got rhythm.
Tugboat Annie – Superfriends – Review May 1, 1995 f Tugboat Annie were one of the four elements they’d be air, specifically the smog-free, thin, cold air high above our everyday lives.
Truck Stop Love – How I Spent My Summer Vacation – Review May 1, 1995 The solid rock songs ought to get radio play and the hillbilly transitions ought to keep people on their toes.
Ecolyn – As The World – Review May 1, 1995 Think Kansas-Dream Theatre-Yes. Sporting amazing, choral vocals, heavy organs, hot bass, and drumming with complex, quasi-jazz musical structures.
Duran Duran – Thank You – Review May 1, 1995 Thank You pays homage to Elvis Costello, Public Enemy, Sly and the Family Stone, and the Temptations, plus hidden classics by Led Zeppelin and Lou Reed.
Thurston Moore – Psychic Hearts – Review May 1, 1995 Thurston Moore put out a solo album and it sounds like… the guitarist from Sonic Youth. Predictable, but I like it.
Thorn – Bitter Portion – Review May 1, 1995 Thorn has elements of punk, grind, and doom, all subtly compacted into a well-crafted, eerie, electronic/organic tribal mix.
Deceased – The Blueprints for Madness – Review May 1, 1995 Deceased play good, simple death. No real insanity or bizarre tricks, just 11 heavy and powerful tunes that will please the grindcore ear.
Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments – Bait and Switch – Review May 1, 1995 Loud, abrasive, sneery and noisy punk like the Germs and the Sonics. Great guitar work and vocals like the American punk scene of the late ’70s.