Thurston Moore Magazine - News, Reviews, Albums and Videos
Magazine about Thurston Moore, with all the latest news, reviews, albums, videos and free mp3 playlist.
Thurston Moore: Demolished Thoughts -
Thurston Moore’s Demolished Thoughts soundsâ€"maybe unsurprisinglyâ€"a lot like acoustic Sonic Youth. But that’s no small feat, given Moore’s band’s love of noise, re-tuned guitars and left-turn song structures. In fact, Demolished Thoughts is stunning. Moore’s sexy/jagged guitar melodies find a rich, new life amid violins, harp and subtle arrangement maneuvers...
Thurston Moore - Demolished Thoughts (2011) -
There can be little doubt of the impact Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore has had on the direction of modern rock. Team him up with another icon of alternative, Beck, and you have lofty expectations to live up to on the new album Demolished Thoughts (out May 24th).This is definitely not...
Thurston Moore - Demolished Thoughts -
Given Sonic Youth’s epic 30-year catalogue and his own splurges of mostly improv- and/or noise-based collaborations, you wouldn’t expect Mr Kim Gordon to pick up an acoustic guitar and go all third Velvet Underground album on us. But Moore’s preceding solo album, 2007’s Trees Outside the Academy,...
Thurston Moore - Benediction (2011) -
 Thurston Moore keeps thing relatively simple and direct on this much-anticipated, Beck-produced third solo record. "Benediction" features mostly acoustic, East Asian-tinged instrumentals, with hints of Eugene Chadbourne's picking style. The result is effectively hypnotic, if not varied. Majestic has always been a word-one of the many-used to describe Moore...
Sonic Youth - Simon Werner A Disparu (2011) -
The mere mention of the band Sonic Youth conjures images of the ultimate alt.rock pioneers; among the most respected bands in all of rock, the noise-rock veterans are critics’ darlings on one side and the ultimate indie-cool band for at least two generations of music fans on the other. But...
Angil + Hiddntracks Ouliposaliva -
Oulipo, or “Ouvroir de literature potentielle” (Workshop of Potential Literature) was a French movement of the 1960s whose members used constrained writing techniques. Mickaël Mottet uses the same techniques on his album, avoiding the letter E or the use of the E chord (his collaborators, Hiddentracks, have had to alter...

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