Recent Blog Posts
Fri Nov 21, 11:44 PM
Fri Nov 21, 9:09 PM
Fri Nov 21, 2:49 PM
Thu Nov 20, 11:51 AM
Fri Nov 21, 5:34 PM
Fri Nov 21, 3:33 PM
Fri Nov 21, 4:54 PM
Fri Nov 21, 8:00 AM
Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Chris Parker
No related articles found
National Features >
SF Weekly
You won't believe the California wine industry's latest new-age craze.
By Joe Eskenazi
Westword
They lived for excitement, but the FBI got the final thrill.
By Joel Warner
Seattle Weekly
Chuck Bundrant built an unlikely seafood empire--with a little help from Alaska Senator Ted Stevens.
By Laura Onstot
Village Voice
How a benevolent billionaire mayor ended up owning us all.
By Wayne Barrett
Marah
Angels of Destruction!
(Yep Roc)
Published on February 05, 2008 at 5:50pm
Fans of this Philadelphia six-piece will undoubtedly hail Angels of Destruction! as its best album; it's certainly Marah's most accessible and expansive record to date. There's always been an honest theatricality and a colorful, imaginative flair running through Marah's musical stories, but Angels takes them to a new level entirely. The group's sixth album is forged on the back of frontman David Bielanko's newfound sobriety, which he addresses on terrific tracks like the shambling, jazz-blues opener "Coughing Up Blood," the barroom brawler "Old Time Tickin' Away," and the bluegrass rag "Can't Take It With You," which sounds like an Appalachian brass band covering Kurt Weill. New members Kirk Henderson and Christine Smith add other dimensions to Marah's rootsy rock and soul, steering Springsteenian undertones toward The Band's dusty Americana territory. When it works, like on "Wild West Love Song" or the ambling gospel-folk of "Jesus in the Temple," the results are downright revelatory.