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Dinosaur Jr. @ First Avenue
November 20, 2009 – 10:59 am | No Comment

The Amherst trio had towers of amps stacked up all over the stage, including one that was pointed directly towards front man J Mascis, in case his monitors weren’t providing him enough of his own guitar sound. And not having enough sound has never really been a problem for the group, and it certainly wasn’t on this evening as the band tore through a fiery 90 minute set that spanned the band’s entire career.

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Home » Album Reviews

Sharp Teeth “Lines and Stars” Review

Submitted by Josh Keller on October 26, 2009 – 1:30 pmNo Comment

sharp teeth lines stars

Minneapolis-based group Sharp Teeth are not a band that finds solace in adding bells and whistles to their music. The three-piece group practices short, buzzing and frenzied garage-influenced rock and roll on their latest album Lines and Stars. With the fat trimmed from the songs, the group deliver a short, concise, borderline grungy pop songs that sound like a lean version of Sleater-Kinney. The album is jam packed with short, tense songs, many of which run shorter than two and a half minutes. The album starts out with its longest song, “The Light,” which features the band’s trademark growling guitars and shows lead vocalist Erica Krumm’s ability to create a strong juxtaposition within the songs. Her bright vocals are contrasted with her dark lyrical content, “If we die today, it would be OK.” The rhythm section behind Krumm, featuring Mayonate Baka on drums and Adri Mehra, holds their own and provides a roaring backdrop for Krumm’s fuzzy anthems over the disc’s short 22 minute lifespan. The songs on Lines and Stars go to show that bigger isn’t always better. The album ultimately succeeds because the band writes great, scuzzy rock and roll songs and plays the hell out of them. When you got that down, you don’t need any of the extra stuff.

Sharp Teeth “The Light” (mp3)

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