Local Reviews: Citizen Fate

Local Reviews: Citizen Fate
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Local CDs are always a mixed bag.  95 percent of the time they suck, and once in a while they 100 percent suck.  Unfortunately for my ears, Citizen Fate fell immediately into the latter category.  … read more

Local Reviews: The Fully Blown

Local Reviews: The Fully Blown
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How do I relate to you the greatness found on this record? In complicated words I could say, The Fully Blown is a heavy hard rock band with post-punk influences and lightly dusted with hardcore inflections, with touches of psychedelic guitar work. Simply put, they fucking rock. … read more

Local Reviews: Joseph (The Voluptuary) Smith

Local Reviews: Joseph (The Voluptuary) Smith
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The most striking thing about this record, straight off the bat, is that the all-black plastic CD case has a small castle (temple?) adorned with a sparkly mushroom placed on the middle of the cover—that’s three-dimensionally, sticking out about three inches!  … read more

Local Reviews: Various Artists

Local Reviews: Various Artists
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The first release from Utah Heavy Guitar Rock Records is a free compilation with Volume 2 already at its heels. The aptly-titled comp of 10 artists is a stark eye-opener, showcasing some serious guitar chops as well as strong songwriting abilities. … read more

Local Reviews: The Lionelle

Local Reviews: The Lionelle
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Musically, The Lionelle could easily exist as a simple vehicle for Tate Law’s strange but drop-dead affecting voice. Law’s vocals, if you haven’t heard them, sound like a mix between a collapsed-lung Tim Kasher and an emotionally attached Johnny Whitney. … read more

Local Reviews: Fox Van Cleef

Local Reviews: Fox Van Cleef
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These Ogden boys sound like the kind of blues you might have found in a smokey tavern 30 years ago where the drinks were cheap and the waitresses underdressed.  The first vocal line by Dustin Bessire on “Somethin’ ‘bout the Way and Groovy Tuesdays” is a dead ringer for Dr. John, with a low, throaty growl behind the wail.  … read more

Local Reviews: La Farsa

Local Reviews: La Farsa
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La Farsa’s visual packaging, replete with feather boas, top hats, elbow-length gloves and evening gowns, when paired with their survey sample of twentieth-century musical styles that includes soul, blues, doo-wop and a strange type of Balkan-gypsy minstrel-show thing going on, speaks for a band born in the wrong century. … read more

Local Reviews: Location Location

Local Reviews: Location Location
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This is some contrived, pop-ass, middle-aged rock.  Yet despite its lame genre and lame intentions, it is actually pretty good for what it is.  The songwriting is well-crafted and incorporates interesting background percussion and effects.  … read more