Blogs
Mon Oct 6, 5:47 PM
Mon Oct 6, 4:37 PM
Mon Oct 6, 12:53 PM
Fri Oct 3, 1:31 PM
Mon Oct 6, 9:09 PM
Mon Oct 6, 5:13 PM
Mon Oct 6, 10:44 AM
Mon Oct 6, 10:10 AM
Recent Articles
Recent Articles by D.X. Ferris
No Rest For the Wizard
(Shifty)
Absinthe makes the heathens grow fonder
Putting away the 40
American Doll Posse
(Sony)
New York state of mind-blowing
No related articles found
National Features >
Miami New Times
Big girls, little guys, lots of fun.
By Natalie O'Neill
SF Weekly
Gay porn star Michael Brandon goes from meth addict to anti-drug crusader--and back.
By Ashley Harrell
Dallas Observer
Andrew and Freddy Velez are the first brothers to die in America's War on Terror.
By Megan Feldman
Westword
Llewellyn Werner thinks a few half-pipes could get Baghdad's economy rolling.
By Jared Jacang Maher
Necrodamus
No Rest For the Wizard
(Shifty)
Published on January 17, 2008
Guitarist Scott Stearns is an astronaut of musical violence. He explores dark, ugly places that reek of sulfur, rotgut, and boiling sweat. His Necrodamus project is a reshuffling of a recent Fistula lineup. But where that band lurks in a sludgy punk-metal midground, Necrodamus alternately stalks both sides of the crossover divide. Stearns riffs his way to Armageddon on battle-ax tunes like "Two Ton Hammers of Metal" and "Stoned Apocalypse (Judgment Day)." A cover of the Misfits' "Skulls" is more metal and less melodic, but it captures the original's morbid exhilaration. "Life On My Own" sounds like the Cro-Mags shot up with HGH and spiked with caveman DNA. And nothing as heavy as "Death Rides a Pale Horse" should be nearly this catchy. But when Stearns sinks an iron hook in your head, you can bet it'll stay there.