Tag Archives: music

Album Reviews

1—->3—->5
Terrible—->Fantastic

5
Duke Quartet, The, Andrew Russo, and Marc Mellits – Reich Different Trains
King Oliver and His Dixie Syncopators – King Oliver “Papa Joe” (1926-1928)

4
a bunch of Tamil music
a bunch of pre-1930 jazz singles
Agnes Buen Garnas – Rosenfole Medieval Songs from Norway
V/A – Goodbye, Babylon

3
Hedburg, Mitch – Strategic Grill Locations
Brad Mehldau Trio – Day is Done
Brad Mehldau Trio – Highway Rider
V/A – Ibiza Closing Party
Krieger, Ulrich – Early American Minimalism Wall of Sound II
Phillips, Washington – Key to the Kingdom, The
Terzis, Pashalis – 2002 Tragoudia Mias Zois
LL Cool J – Todd Smith
McManus, Tony – Ceol More
Oliveros, Pualine, Stuart Dempster, and Panaiotis – Deep Listening
V/A – Unknown Hed Kandi Mix

2
Bill Cosby – Revenge
Hedburg, Mitch – Ferris Wheel for Chickens
Dead Weather – Horehound
Dead Weather – Sea of Cowards
V/A – Motown Remixed
V/A – Mercedes Benz Mix Tape 07
V/A – Paris Lounge 1
V/A – Paris Lounge 2
V/A — Paris Lounge 3

Galaxy Hut Sucks (at Informing People)

Galaxy Hut has been unable to properly market itself for a long time. The biggest annoyance, though, is that you can’t see the music venue’s calendar unless you are a fan (or whatever they are calling it these days) on Facebook. Sure, this is easy/lazy for the booker, but it screws people looking to quickly check or for people who don’t participate in Facebook (dudes, the ‘net is about being open, not about giving away your private data).

Galaxy Hut isn’t the only music venue with silly calendar practices. For example, Rock ‘n’ Roll‘s calendar page used to note that its calendar is not a reliable source of upcoming shows.

And the problems don’t stop there. Other music venues fail basic spelling tests (Red and Black) or mobile technology (HR57), just to name a few current quibbles. None of these issues are much of a problem given the “quality” bands/groups these venues book, with the exception of HR57 (although it does feature a rather stale rotation). Plus, the vast majority of sites use a splash screen for some reason.

Just to prove I’m not a total hater, Black Cat is always a reliable and informative site, as is Velvet Lounge, which I consider to be the best basic DC-area music-venue site.

And to demonstrate I can criticize the things I still–because I’ve moved on from these scenes–I consider the Kennedy Center‘s page to be nearly unusable.