Exposé print issues (1993-2011)
Showing items 71 to 80 of 11258
Formed in 1976 in the German town of Fürth, Carol of Harvest was a band that played what might be called acid-folk. Their only LP came out in ‘78 on a local label, Brutkasten Records, in...
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The album Anomaly by McLuhan stands as a remarkable example of truly innovative American music in the early 70s, and it’s a shame that it never reached a wider audience — and...
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Staraya Derevnya, or Старая Деревня as they were on their earliest recordings, is the name of a British and Israeli aggregation of musicians that numbers anywhere between five and...
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Andy Toomey came out of the blue, at least in my musical world. He’s apparently been around a while, but the arrival of Perseus Calling in my inbox was the first I’d heard of...
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We last caught up with Paul Dunmall for his 2024 album Red Hot Ice, as well as his collaboration...
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National Diet’s second album, The King in Yellow, presents as a unified work of thoughtful music, with eight tracks working as parts of a whole. The majority of the music is based...
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Back in the mid-to late 70s, Armstrong was one half of the world music ensemble Do’a along with the late Ken LaRoche, between them playing what at the time seemed like dozens of stringed,...
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Lars Fredrik Frøislie’s first solo album, Fire Fortellinger, was a...
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Xeeland is the solo project of one Jason Stöll, multi-instrumentalist and member of a number of different bands (Bonnacons of Doom, Dømes, JAAW, KLÄMP, Mugstar, Playhouse, Sex...
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On Remove the Ties, Vibravoid presents another solid set of classic space rock, though they start the album with “Computer Dreams,” which owes more to Kraftwerk than Hawkwind,...
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