Most Popular
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Swingtown
Local swingers think life is a bowl of cherries, but Duncanville wants to spit out the Pit
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Deep Ellum LIVES!
Scott Beck's about to buy 14 acres in the"heart" of Deep Ellum. What then?
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Un-Super Size Me: One Week of Eating Local
One mans attempt at slow food living in the Dallas metroplex
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Toll You So
The Trinity River Project should be floating right along. Instead it's sinking under the weight of its own folly.
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Six Pac
The Cowboys are counting on NFL outlaw Pacman Jones to pop the top on their sixth Super Bowl.
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Seeing a Ghost
Yeah, Grandmaster Flash graced the ones and twos at Ghostbar this weekend. But who cares? The people there didn't seem to.
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Behind the Curtains
A weird weekend in Deep Ellum: names were changed, CDs were released, and two bands supposedly called it quits
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Another Matter Entirely
The members of The Theater Fire are as different as Lightness and Darkness
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Dirty Talk
Twenty years later, the godfathers of grunge in Mudhoney still remember their roots
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Pet Peeves
The Beach Boys are popping up everywhere this year in music but don't seem to be getting their due
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Village Voice
Subjected to the light of day, Sarah Palin doesn't look like a maverick at all.
By Wayne Barrett
SF Weekly
Exposing a construction-site scam only a San Francisco cop could love.
By Joe Eskenazi
Houston Press
Ronald Taylor is one of perhaps hundreds of innocent people Harris County has put in prison.
By Randall Patterson
Westword
Sloppy U.S. government paperwork is putting the lives of asylum seekers at risk.
By Lisa Rab
Roger Clyne and the Peacemakers
November 8
Published on November 07, 2002
Long-haired Arizona troubador Roger Clyne kicks off the title track of his latest album, Sonoran Hope and Madness, with a volley of fireworks--and a typical show from the Peacemakers, his sharp band of compadres, promises equally high spirits, with a sometimes irritatingly generous approach inherent in their life-affirming brio. The elements that make up Southwestern rock are ephemeral--the sun-baked lull and mesquite are figurative; the references to tequila and Mexico are real and plentiful--but Clyne's eloquent guitar twang and tales of striving, hangdog losers seem illustrative of the type. An elegy to a deceased friend, the Peacemakers' latest recording is imbued with a seriousness and longing missing from Clyne's former band, the Refreshments, whose Cracker-like humor and snide delivery (remember the King of the Hill theme song's manic, celebratory shuffle?) lurk beneath Clyne's mature new voice. Like the Gin Blossoms (guitarist Scott Johnson has recorded with both bands), the Peacemakers sometimes sound mellowed out from ennui or heat, sometimes emboldened by heartbreak. Warning: Those of us with bitter hearts may find ourselves unaccountably pissed off at this band's happy audience of ass-shaking señoritas and their blue-jeaned, whiskey-toasting paramours.