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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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Mikael Wood
A Little Bit Longer (Hollywood)
Moonswept (429 Records)
Monday, May 14, at the Granada Theater
Friday, February 2, at the Palladium Ballroom
The Hidden Cameras play Polyphonic Spree-esque church rock, with a naughty twist
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Kill Hannah, The Pink Spiders
Friday, February 2, at the Palladium Ballroom
Published on February 01, 2007
In eyelinered Chicago goth-pop wannabes Kill Hannah's sort-of hit "Kennedy," singer Mat Devine brags that he wants to be a Kennedy and, after living fast and breaking hearts and kissing the girls of centerfolds on the tongue, die young. We don't really believe Devine, because two songs later on that album (2003's For Never & Ever) he's talking about riding the Ferris wheel at Chicago's tourist trap Navy Pier. But he's still the star in this dope show, working a sexed-up androgynous wail that's way more effective than that Placebo guy's sugar-pill act. By dipping drumsticks into pogo-punk from the early '80s and splashing around in surf-rock guitars, the members of opening band Pink Spiders have avoided overdosing on pop-punk. The three boys behind the Bubblicious-meets-liquid-latex outfit serve up edgy yet playful music on their latest album, Teenage Graffiti, a disc in which they get their kicks shooting pure blues and classic rock 'n' roll into their veins.