Here's how you become one of those people who screams at his kid's coach.
Transgender hookers with rap sheets are successfully fighting deportation--by asking for asylum.
First, Houston's DNA lab became a laughingstock. Then its controversial director was murdered.
"You're Welcome" moves along on a stutter-step beat as a flurry of electronic blips and beeps build in the song's periphery. It's one of the few places where the band (and producer Matt Hyde) tinkers with the dual-vocal emo formula. The next track, "Close Range," sneaks in a fuzzy, descending stoner-rock riff amid all the high-neck guitar riffage. Things get heavy with the closing track "Nuclear Sunrise," a raga-tinged rocker with a regrettable bongo-filled coda that finds singer Joseph Hamilton exhorting the listener to "get off your ass and start a revolution." Really? Are people still singing about that, especially at the end of some vague, post-apocalyptic love song? So They Say would do well to remember that revolutions start on the inside and that it's OK to take a chance on revolutionizing what has become a staid genre.
Want your CD to be considered for a review in this space? Send music c/o The Riverfront Times, Attn: Homespun, 6358 Delmar Boulevard, Suite 200, St. Louis, MO 63130. Email music@ riverfronttimes.com for more information.