From their breakthrough album (2001's Southern Rock Opera) onward, the Drive-By Truckers have never shied
away from dealing with the political and philosophical divides that come with life in the American South. But as issues of race, violence, and the ...
The Allman Brothers Band's fifth live release in 25 years, cut during 1994 in Raleigh,
NC, and at the Garden State Arts Center in New Jersey, is a high-water mark in their Epic Records catalog. If anything, they're even better ...
A tribute to the dearly departed Duane, Eat a Peach rambles through two albums, running
through a side of new songs, recorded post-Duane, spending a full album on live cuts from the Fillmore East sessions, then offering a round of ...
For years, Mike Cooley has been the George Harrison of the Drive-By Truckers, the guy
who contributed two or three fine songs to each DBTs album while frontman Patterson Hood penned the bulk of the band's repertoire. That changes with ...
Warren Zevon's self-titled 1976 album announced he was one of the most striking talents to
emerge from the Los Angeles soft rock singer/songwriter community, and Linda Ronstadt (a shrewd judge of talent if a sometimes questionable interpreter) recorded three of ...
This is one of the best conceived box sets to come around since the format
made its bow with the Eric Clapton and Allman Brothers packages from Polygram at the end of the 1980s. The problem with most boxes is ...
After being slagged off for the electronic ambience of its predecessor releases such as 1985's
Power Windows and 1984's Grace Under Pressure, Rush bounced back with their 13th release, Presto. Yet again the prog-rock trio proved that their tight guitar ...