Filter’s comeback album gets political

Richard Patrick is back with a new incarnation of his hit-making industrial rock band, Filter - and his new album will keep both old and new fans happy.

It’s been nearly six years since Filter’s last album was released, and Patrick is the only returning member of the band. The new album, Anthems for the Damned, was released May 13 with help from some of the biggest names in rock. The album features Wes Borland of Limp Bizkit, John 5 of Marilyn Manson and Rob Zombie, and Josh Freese of Nine Inch Nails and Guns N’ Roses.

Anthems maintains the industrial... 

 

Federal Hill to kick off summer with jazz festival

 

By Mary Helen Sprecher

With the Memorial Day weekend fading fast in their rear-view mirrors, it’s time for South Baltimoreans to turn their attention to summer. And one of the first official heralds is the Federal Hill Main Streets Jazz and Blues Festival.

The festival is scheduled for Sunday, June 8, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. on S. Charles Street, between West and Henrietta streets. That area will be closed, as will the unit block of Cross Street.

According to Jane ...

 

Sheryl Crow will Croon about Life, Love and War

By Alan Sculley

Like scores of rock and pop artists, Sheryl Crow knows the days when she’ll see her albums routinely sell several million copies have passed. With downloading and file sharing, record sales are down significantly in every genre.

So how will Crow keep her career on track in this environment? The best strategy, Crow said, is simply to stay true to her earthy brand of pop music and the heartfelt lyrics that populate her songs.

“The best I can do is make records that matter to me, that I think have integrity and just... 

 

Get Cultured (in a Comfortable Seat) at An die Musik

By Chris Yarrison

Without much of a window display, most people probably walk by An die Musik Live and think it’s closed, if they notice it at all.

“We’re working on that,” says George Manning, who’s worked there since before the CD store cum concert venue moved to Baltimore.

“There are plenty of places in Baltimore to see rock, pop, hip-hop,” says owner Henry Wong, “but nowhere really to find some culture.”

He means it’s hard to find a place in town to see an affordable and accessible ...

 

Relive the ’90s with Gin Blossoms

By Michael Wiles, Lead Music Writer

You know the Gin Blossoms, even if you’re not aware of it, guitarist Scott Johnson says.

“I think it’s because we had so many [radio] singles,” Johnson said. “A lot of our buddies had one, maybe a second minor single, but we had six Top 40 singles. There’s so much material that’s familiar to people who don’t even know who we are. They’ll go ‘I came with my girlfriend, I didn’t even know who or what you guys are, but then I realized I knew four or five of your songs.’”

...
 

The Wayfarers Share Heartfelt Alt-Country

By Michael Wiles, Lead Music Writer

Every once in a while a band gets it just right. It’s a hard moment to capture, because so much goes into striking the right balance. Be too narrowly focused and you’re easily pigeon holed, be unfocused and you’ll be ignored. But, if you understand your art, your audience, and yourself from the inside out, you’ve got something truly unique and refreshing: You’ve got local alt-country band The Wayfarers.

Poised to release Sorrow & Snakes, their third album in eight years, on May 30th with a p...

 

36 Years Later, Bertha’s is Still a Bastion of Jazz & Blues

It’s been 36 years since music lovers (and successful classical musicians) Tony and Laura Norris bought a bar on the corner of Lancaster and Broadway in Fells Point.

Since then, Bertha’s has maintained its stake as not only a Baltimore landmark, but also a haven for local music lovers. Today, the bar and restaurant has a steady rotation of eight stellar house acts, which range from jazz to blues to dixieland to rock.

“We have some of the best jazz and blues in the city,” said Bernard Lyons, who works as a bartender and handles Bertha’s music.

<... 
 

Josh Ritter Crafts Inspired Folk Ballads

By Leah Scarpelli

Josh Ritter’s music speaks. His words and music are his — honestly, undeniably his, but all the while offering something for the every man, and creating endless capacity for individual interpretation. “The Temptation of Adam,” for example, one of his most beautiful songs, reads as a metaphor of man’s war-driven psyche even under the throes of an endearing romance, or the un-reality of love itself – how it lives underground, inside, with something (the always-near silo missile) threatening to destroy the euphoria.

He...

 

Dark Meat will unleash the mayhem

Dark Meat is a 17-piece band from Georgia that is set to play the Talking Head this Friday. Leah Scarpelli went to their show in DC last weekend, to give you a sneak peek of what kind of mayhem is to come in Baltimore.

By Leah Scarpelli

Self-described “free-wheelin” group Dark Meat arrived in mass, later than expected, in a bright green 1972 GMC coach taking up nearly half of H Street. It was difficult not to notice the giant vintage bus parked in front of The Red and the Black; it demanded attention, much like the umpteen band member... 

 

Warped Humor: Habersaat’s Punk Comedy Tour Hits the Sidebar

By Chris Yarrison

Comedian, publisher, and old schooler J.T. Habersaat sets out this month on Altercation Records’ Punk Standup Tour. He kicks off in Austin, Texas, on April 3 for the release of his new DVD, and will join up with the Vans Warped Tour midsummer, passing through the Sidebar April 14.

Habersaat runs modest indie/punk holdings Altercation Magazine and its recent spin-off Altercation Records. Starting out in New York City, he and his wife moved to Austin because they were “tired of all the snow.”