Lionsgate Films
The world is a scary place, and we are definitely afraid of dying. In fact the only thing worse is living, because then the immortal souls of the damned which have been cursed to life in an endless purgatory even when their physical bodies have expired can come and bother us, with all their wailing and tapering off to have no legs. Basically ghosts tell us that everything sucks because when you live you get haunted, and when you die you haunt. There’s no way of winning.
Why are we so obsessed with ghosts? Well, it’s probably got something to do with the ubiquity of ghost stories in Western culture. From the Brown Lady of Raynham Hall to the Amityville Horror, there are ghost stories that everybody knows and is rightfully spooked by. We shouldn’t restrict our terror to our own fair isles and states,...
The world is a scary place, and we are definitely afraid of dying. In fact the only thing worse is living, because then the immortal souls of the damned which have been cursed to life in an endless purgatory even when their physical bodies have expired can come and bother us, with all their wailing and tapering off to have no legs. Basically ghosts tell us that everything sucks because when you live you get haunted, and when you die you haunt. There’s no way of winning.
Why are we so obsessed with ghosts? Well, it’s probably got something to do with the ubiquity of ghost stories in Western culture. From the Brown Lady of Raynham Hall to the Amityville Horror, there are ghost stories that everybody knows and is rightfully spooked by. We shouldn’t restrict our terror to our own fair isles and states,...
- 7/1/2014
- by Tom Baker
- Obsessed with Film
Pearl Jam's Mike McCready gave rock fans some major news on Friday. He will be teaming up with Guns N' Roses alum Duff McKagan and former Screaming Trees drummer Barrett Martin for a supergroup of sorts.
"Duff and Barrett and I got together," McCready said in an interview with Billboard. "We wrote some new stuff and we took some of those old Mad Season demos from that [unreleased] second 'Disinformation' record, so we are trying to find something to do with those. We're talking to Jaz [Coleman] from Killing Joke and I've been trying to find some singers to work on some of that stuff."
McCready is one of the founding members of Pearl Jam. The band is still going strong, decades after its formation in Seattle in 1990. Last week Pearl Jam's 1991 album, "Ten" reached 10 million in U.S. sales. The band also recently sold out an upcoming show at...
"Duff and Barrett and I got together," McCready said in an interview with Billboard. "We wrote some new stuff and we took some of those old Mad Season demos from that [unreleased] second 'Disinformation' record, so we are trying to find something to do with those. We're talking to Jaz [Coleman] from Killing Joke and I've been trying to find some singers to work on some of that stuff."
McCready is one of the founding members of Pearl Jam. The band is still going strong, decades after its formation in Seattle in 1990. Last week Pearl Jam's 1991 album, "Ten" reached 10 million in U.S. sales. The band also recently sold out an upcoming show at...
- 3/2/2013
- by The Huffington Post
- Huffington Post
Pearl Jam’s Mike McCready has formed a new group with former Guns N’ Roses bassist Duff McKagan and ex-Screaming Trees drummer Barrett Martin. The unnamed band is working on a set that will incorporate a revolving number of vocalists, among them Killing Joke’s Jaz Coleman. McCready and Martin, who were in the mid-90s’ side-project Mad Season, began writing with McKagan, and “we took some of those old Mad Season demos from that [unreleased] second ‘Disinformation’ record,” McCready tells Billboard. “We’re talking to Jaz...and I’ve been trying to find some singer to work on some of that stuff.” McCready plans to release...
- 3/1/2013
- Hitfix
The ‘90s are back—again. Pearl Jam guitarist Mike McCready, Guns N’ Roses bassist Duff McKagan, and Screaming Trees drummer Barrett Martin have formed an as-yet-unnamed, sort-of-supergroup sure to mildly thrill thirtysomethings everywhere. According to McCready, the group will feature a number of different singers including, potentially, Killing Joke’s Jaz Coleman. Whatever the band ends up recording will come out on McCready’s label, Hockeytalker Records. This isn’t the first time McCready, McKagan, and Martin have worked together, though it’s never been as a trio. Martin and McKagan, are currently involved in a group called Walking Papers ...
- 3/1/2013
- avclub.com
How big a "Singles" fan are you? You may have worn out your CD of the best-selling soundtrack and made a pilgrimage to the landmark apartment house in Seattle. And you probably know all the cameos: Eric Stoltz is the mime that won't shut up, Tim Burton is the dating video director, and that's Jeremy Piven as a hyper supermarket clerk chatting up lead Campbell Scott. But for the film's 20th anniversary (it was released on Sept. 18, 1992) we've unearthed 25 things you might not know about "Singles," including that it was once set in Arizona or that it might have starred Johnny Depp(!). 1. "Singles" was in the works as early as 1984 and was originally going to be set in Phoenix, Arizona. 2. The movie took a different course after the 1990 death of Andrew Wood, the lead singer of Mother Love Bone (whose remaining members would go on to form Pearl Jam.). As...
- 9/19/2012
- by Jessie Heyman
- Moviefone
Perhaps consider this a bit of a spoiler post, at least musically. So if you want to go in blind to John Hillcoat's prohibition drama "Lawless," we suggest you divert your eyes now. For the rest of you still with us, man, the soundtrack to "Lawless" is just one more reason to get excited for the film which lands on August 29th. By now you know it boasts an incredible cast including Tom Hardy, Jessica Chastain, Guy Pearce, Mia Wasikowska, Gary Oldman, Shia Labeouf and Jason Clarke. You also know that the score was written by longtime Hillcoat collaborators Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, who wrote the haunting scores for "The Proposition," "The Road" and "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford" (the multi-hyphenate Cave, an author, also wrote the "Lawless" screenplay).
What we didn't know was that their musical contributions to the film would be...
What we didn't know was that their musical contributions to the film would be...
- 5/24/2012
- by The Playlist
- The Playlist
Careful fans of modern indie rock probably think they know Mark Lanegan fairly well. Better, even, than the Screaming Trees from whence he once came. Latter day Lanegan, the guttural purveyor of dark night of the soul music, the voice of swamp wind on a muddy graveyard, the sin-stoked demon growl that howitzers through the weird holes Isobell Campbell, Greg Dulli or Josh Homme leave for him in their music together.
- 2/8/2012
- Pastemagazine.com
One thing has kept Mark Lanegan from the hitting the stratospheric highs and catastrophic lows of his grunge-era peers: the timelessness of his voice. Even in his best-known outfit, Screaming Trees, his single-barrel baritone conjured feral purrs and psychedelic wails, sounding so huge it swallowed everything in sight—often including the music it accompanied. Age has been kind to Lanegan, due in part to the taste and aptness of his post-Trees collaborations, most notably with folk-pop chanteuse Isobel Campbell and fellow grizzled vet Greg Dulli. But with Blues Funeral, the new album from Mark Lanegan Band, the singer has done ...
- 2/7/2012
- avclub.com
Third Man Records, the record label owned and run by Jack White, launched an ongoing exclusive series for subscribers only called "The Vault" awhile back, its installments encompassing special 7" singles and double LPs of music by The White Stripes and The Dead Weather. The newest Vault package, the tenth in the series, includes the talents of Beck, Josh Homme (Queens of the Stone Age) and Mark Lanegan (Screaming Trees), all of whom get to try their hand at remixing music from White's catalog.
- 10/10/2011
- Pastemagazine.com
While Nirvana's landmark Nevermind album officially turns 20 this week, the celebration of all things Kurt and company has actually been going on in the band's adopted hometown since late April. That's when the "Nirvana: Taking Punk to the Masses" exhibit opened at Seattle's Experience Music Project.
The carefully curated compendium of all things Nirvana is a kind of holy grail for the band's biggest fans, but according to curator Jacob McMurray, it's also been a magnet for typically jaded locals who have grudgingly (or is it, sorry, grunge-ingly?) have dropped in and admitted that, yeah, it's pretty awesome.
"For me, it's been way more than I expected," McMurray said of the thousands who've wandered in to gawk at such iconic objects as the band's first recording contract and late singer Kurt Cobain's first smashed guitar. "Every time I go into the gallery, even if it's a Monday morning, it will be packed.
The carefully curated compendium of all things Nirvana is a kind of holy grail for the band's biggest fans, but according to curator Jacob McMurray, it's also been a magnet for typically jaded locals who have grudgingly (or is it, sorry, grunge-ingly?) have dropped in and admitted that, yeah, it's pretty awesome.
"For me, it's been way more than I expected," McMurray said of the thousands who've wandered in to gawk at such iconic objects as the band's first recording contract and late singer Kurt Cobain's first smashed guitar. "Every time I go into the gallery, even if it's a Monday morning, it will be packed.
- 9/20/2011
- by Gil Kaufman
- MTV Newsroom
The Experience Music Project Museum is celebrating the legacy of Nirvana in the band hometown, and have taken the celebration of the rock act's "Nevermind's" 20th anniversary a step further. The seminal album will be performed live in its entirety on Sept. 20 at Sky Church by a slew of Seattle-based bands, with special guest Krist Novoselic helping the tunes along. For those playing at home, Krist Novoselic is Nirvana's former bassist. The Fastbacks, Vaporland, The Long Winters, Immaculate Noise favorite Visqueen, Campfire Ok, Valis (former Screaming Trees), Ravenna Woods and more acts are also on board. Tickets are up for...
- 8/18/2011
- by Katie Hasty
- Hitfix
The end of the ’90s was a tough time for the bands that kick-started the alt-rock era. Soundgarden had officially broken up, Alice In Chains was falling apart, and Creed and Matchbox Twenty were throwing ice water on the idea that Nirvana’s breakthrough ever meant anything. But Screaming Trees were trying their best to carry on. A Seattle band long before being “a Seattle band” was a thing, Screaming Trees were never able to replicate the breakthrough success of their 1992 hit “Nearly Lost You” or match the popularity of their friends in Soundgarden and Pearl Jam. But Screaming ...
- 8/9/2011
- avclub.com
From stage-door duties for the RSC, to the village famous for Straw Dogs, Observer writers reveal their idea of a perfect summer, past and present
● What are your tips for summer culture? Join the discussion
Kitty Empire
Pop critic
Let's be honest – the notion of summer as an extended golden period of rest and re-stimulation really now only applies to the young, the retired, or those in the teaching professions. The rest of us slog on, hoping to catch the odd festival (or maybe just gig in a park), marking time until camping in Cornwall or fly-drive to France, where finally luxuriating in the latest Alan Hollinghurst will come a distant second to stopping the youngest weeing in the hotel pool.
Once, though, I was artfully feckless too, making the rent by working as an usher for the Royal Shakespeare Company. "Good evening ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the...
● What are your tips for summer culture? Join the discussion
Kitty Empire
Pop critic
Let's be honest – the notion of summer as an extended golden period of rest and re-stimulation really now only applies to the young, the retired, or those in the teaching professions. The rest of us slog on, hoping to catch the odd festival (or maybe just gig in a park), marking time until camping in Cornwall or fly-drive to France, where finally luxuriating in the latest Alan Hollinghurst will come a distant second to stopping the youngest weeing in the hotel pool.
Once, though, I was artfully feckless too, making the rent by working as an usher for the Royal Shakespeare Company. "Good evening ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the...
- 8/1/2011
- by Kitty Empire, Mark Kermode, Rowan Moore, Philip French, Susannah Clapp, Laura Cumming, Luke Jennings, Fiona Maddocks, Rachel Cooke, Robert McCrum
- The Guardian - Film News
Singer Layne Staley died of a drug overdose in 2002.
By Gil Kaufman
Photo: 2011 Getty Images
The death on Tuesday of former Alice in Chains bassist Mike Starr continued the tragic legacy of one of the most beloved bands to emerge out of the early 1990s grunge scene in Seattle.
Largely because of late singer Layne Staley's debilitating drug addiction, in their heyday, Aic were known almost as much for their long periods of inactivity as they were for their gloom-laden, brooding music.
Melding hard-rock guitars and the sludgy grunge aesthetic of the time, Aic stood out from the pack thanks to their adoption of a more classic heavy-metal sound and intense, almost unrelentingly bleak lyrics that touched on everything from drug addiction and isolation to the plight of Vietnam veterans.
The seeds of the group were formed in 1986, when a then-teenage Staley quit his first group, Sleeze, and formed a new band,...
By Gil Kaufman
Photo: 2011 Getty Images
The death on Tuesday of former Alice in Chains bassist Mike Starr continued the tragic legacy of one of the most beloved bands to emerge out of the early 1990s grunge scene in Seattle.
Largely because of late singer Layne Staley's debilitating drug addiction, in their heyday, Aic were known almost as much for their long periods of inactivity as they were for their gloom-laden, brooding music.
Melding hard-rock guitars and the sludgy grunge aesthetic of the time, Aic stood out from the pack thanks to their adoption of a more classic heavy-metal sound and intense, almost unrelentingly bleak lyrics that touched on everything from drug addiction and isolation to the plight of Vietnam veterans.
The seeds of the group were formed in 1986, when a then-teenage Staley quit his first group, Sleeze, and formed a new band,...
- 3/9/2011
- MTV Music News
If you were to ask me who the greatest living songwriters were, I would have no hesitation naming the one I consider to be number one: Greg Dulli, former frontman and mastermind behind Afghan Whigs and current member of both the Gutter Twins (his collaboration with former Screaming Trees frontman Mark Lanegan) and the Twilight Singers (his New Orleans-centric solo project that features a rotating cast of collaborators). There's a new Twilight Singers album coming out early next year, but on Tuesday night (October 19), Dulli brought three band members onto the stage of New York's Bowery Ballroom and delivered an acoustic set of songs from just about every corner of his long career. The set only drove home just how great Dulli has been (and continues to be).
Bathed in almost complete darkness (he asked that the lights be turned down, and two songs later asked they be turned down...
Bathed in almost complete darkness (he asked that the lights be turned down, and two songs later asked they be turned down...
- 10/20/2010
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
Unlikely duo loses its spark Isobel Campbell (she of angelic voice and formerly Belle & Sebastian) and Mark Lanegan (he of rusty growl and formerly Screaming Trees) have made three albums of beautiful country-folk together, their voices co-existing like wine and whiskey. But while their first two collaborative efforts were largely slow, quiet affairs, their new album Hawk is more dynamic, featuring both whispered ballads and dusty, boot-stomping rockers, and not always for the best....
- 8/24/2010
- Pastemagazine.com
Where once it seemed slightly odd that Isobel Campbell (of early Belle And Sebastian) and Mark Lanegan (of Screaming Trees) had decided to sing together, it’s now almost sad to imagine their voices apart. Two more complementary sets of pipes have rarely been paired—and while that’s been the intention all along, the duo’s third full-length, Hawk, still banks on that delicious friction, and does it well. Campbell’s pixie-like chirp and Lanegan’s slow-burn growl entwine to do particular justice to Townes Van Zandt’s “Snake Song,” one of two covers of the late Texas country-folk ...
- 8/24/2010
- avclub.com
The Sex Pistols often get credit for jump-starting the punk revolution in the late 1970s, but by the time Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols dropped in late 1977, the Ramones already had three full-lengths under their collective belt. Formed in Queens, New York around 1974, the Ramones (none of whom were actually related, nor were any of them actually named "Ramone") stormed the growing punk scene in New York City with a mix of jumpy teenage aggression, sweet old-school soul and a penchant for slick singalong hooks. And as far as legacies go, it's hard to compare the Ramones to the Sex Pistols, as Johnny Rotten's collective were broken up only a handful of months after the release of Never Mind the Bollocks, while the Ramones were a popular and functioning band well into the '90s. On this day in 1996, the group performed together for the last time.
- 8/6/2010
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
Today marks the release of the hotly-anticipated new album from Nas and Damian "Junior Gong" Marley. The record, called Distant Relatives, is not just a team-up between two musical giants but is also for a good cause, as the proceeds will go towards some form of support for Africa (possibly the construction of a school in the Congo). The album weds hip-hop and reggae influences beautifully, and even though he's talking about issues in Africa and not tales of the street, Nas' spitting is especially on point.
In fact, Distant Relatives immediately enters in the conversation regarding the best album-length collaborations of all time. What others are in said conversation? Glad you asked.
Method Man and Redman, Blackout! and Blackout! 2
Meth and Red are the gold standard among musical tag teams. They have made countless guest appearances on each others' songs and have also gotten together for at least one...
In fact, Distant Relatives immediately enters in the conversation regarding the best album-length collaborations of all time. What others are in said conversation? Glad you asked.
Method Man and Redman, Blackout! and Blackout! 2
Meth and Red are the gold standard among musical tag teams. They have made countless guest appearances on each others' songs and have also gotten together for at least one...
- 5/18/2010
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
On Monday (May 10), we celebrated the birthday of one of the greatest rock frontmen of all time in U2's Bono. Today, we raise a cyber toast to another amazing frontman and songwriter: Greg Dulli, the man behind Afghan Whigs, the Twilight Singers and the Gutter Twins. Dulli's profile is certainly much smaller than Bono's, but he is no less fascinating or talented.
A native of suburban Ohio, Dulli began his musical career in the late 1980s as the frontman of Afghan Whigs, a band who blended together elements of punk, R&B, '70s rock and noisy underground rock for a unique, forward-thinking stew. They built a bit of buzz with their sweaty, savage live shows and their early albums Up In It and Congregation. But it was their major label debut Gentlemen that really scored big with critics and fans of the underground. Though they had some brushes...
A native of suburban Ohio, Dulli began his musical career in the late 1980s as the frontman of Afghan Whigs, a band who blended together elements of punk, R&B, '70s rock and noisy underground rock for a unique, forward-thinking stew. They built a bit of buzz with their sweaty, savage live shows and their early albums Up In It and Congregation. But it was their major label debut Gentlemen that really scored big with critics and fans of the underground. Though they had some brushes...
- 5/11/2010
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
In honor of Earth Day, I won't give a flying fuck about sapphire felinegtauns, but instead, I shall wax poetic about the botany of asskicking. I think that I shall never see something as lovely as a tree, fucking your ass up hardcore. I have assembled a list of ten of Nature's Miracles that if given the opportunity will seriously go primeval on your asses. Just as vegetarians claim that eating meat is murder, I propose that carrots can feel your pain. Put on an album by the Screaming Trees and tell me that's not abject misery. Only now, they're fighting back.
For the purposes of this list, I did not count any sort of magical or supernatural influence on the creatures. The poppy field that downed Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion was nixed, as was the entirety of The Happening, since nature fought back but nobody seems to care why.
For the purposes of this list, I did not count any sort of magical or supernatural influence on the creatures. The poppy field that downed Dorothy and the Cowardly Lion was nixed, as was the entirety of The Happening, since nature fought back but nobody seems to care why.
- 4/26/2010
- by Brian Prisco
If you see Mark Lanegan today (and considering how tall and imposing he is, you can't really miss him), be sure to give him a slap on the back and wish him a happy birthday. The Seattle icon turns 45 years old today, and he can feel pretty good about the decades he has spent creating music. Best known as the frontman for Screaming Trees (the band lumped in with the grunge movement who were secretly much heavier, more psychedelic monster than anybody gave them credit for), Lanegan has made a career out of lending his distinct voice (a whiskey-soaked croon that can shift into an apocalyptic metal growl) to a variety of projects. He's currently a member of the Gutter Twins, his collaboration with former Afghan Whigs frontman Greg Dulli, but he has also teamed up with Belle and Sebastian member Isobel Campbell and Josh Homme of Queens of the Stone Age.
- 11/25/2009
- by Kyle Anderson
- MTV Newsroom
Putting together a proper motion picture soundtrack is something of a lost art. Often thought of as a final step in packaging a film for it's final release, many films suffer from a lack of care when it comes to a proper sonic counterpart. While original scores can set the mood and tone of a film, working brilliantly for epics that require no "pop" or "rock" enhancement, in some cases the latter works better and that's usually where the problems start to show. When done correctly, a proper soundtrack should conjure images of the film for listeners long after the last flicker of the projector, or the final screen of the DVD.
The first decade of the "new millennium" has been overtly devoid of memorable soundtracks for the horror genre (sans a few exceptions), as if the music supervisor was brought on-board last-minute and given a tiny budget to work with.
The first decade of the "new millennium" has been overtly devoid of memorable soundtracks for the horror genre (sans a few exceptions), as if the music supervisor was brought on-board last-minute and given a tiny budget to work with.
- 8/25/2009
- by no-reply@fangoria.com (James Zahn)
- Fangoria
After being hinted at several times over the past few months, the full song list of "Guitar Hero 5" has been revealed, and features 85 tracks ranging from pop to rock to indie. So it probably makes sense to stick all that rock-laden bulk in one place, which is right here, in this blog post. Here you go, the 85 tracks that'll appear in the final version of "Guitar Hero 5."
· 3 Doors Down - “Kryptonite”
· A Perfect Circle - “Judith”
· AFI - “Medicate”
· Arctic Monkeys - “Brianstorm”
· Attack! Attack! UK - “You And Me”
· Band Of Horses - “Cigarettes, Wedding Bands”
· Beastie Boys - “Gratitude”
· Beck - “Gamma Ray”
· Billy Idol - “Dancing With Myself”
· Billy Squier - “Lonely Is The Night”
· Blink-182 - “The Rock Show”
· Blur - “Song 2”
· Bob Dylan - “All Along The Watchtower”
· Bon Jovi - “You Give Love A Bad Name”
· Brand New - “Sowing Season (Yeah)”
· The Bronx...
· 3 Doors Down - “Kryptonite”
· A Perfect Circle - “Judith”
· AFI - “Medicate”
· Arctic Monkeys - “Brianstorm”
· Attack! Attack! UK - “You And Me”
· Band Of Horses - “Cigarettes, Wedding Bands”
· Beastie Boys - “Gratitude”
· Beck - “Gamma Ray”
· Billy Idol - “Dancing With Myself”
· Billy Squier - “Lonely Is The Night”
· Blink-182 - “The Rock Show”
· Blur - “Song 2”
· Bob Dylan - “All Along The Watchtower”
· Bon Jovi - “You Give Love A Bad Name”
· Brand New - “Sowing Season (Yeah)”
· The Bronx...
- 7/30/2009
- by Russ Frushtick
- MTV Multiplayer
The latest collaboration from Isobel Campbell and Mark Lanegan—late of Belle And Sebastian and Screaming Trees, respectively—offers a combination that's instantly striking, though not exactly new: the gnarled male vocal and its glassy female foil. Perhaps familiarity makes that blend so resonant (the opener's title, "Seafaring Song," nods to tradition), or maybe it's just an aural parlor trick, but accompanied by lonesome plucked guitar, a smattering of strings, and upright bass as it is here, the mix is undeniable. The question: Can these two sustain interest over an entire album (their second together), or, like so many of their predecessors' contributions, will Sunday At Devil Dirt become mere ambience for the two things most commonly done in bed? As the second song, "The Raven," comes in, featuring Lanegan atop Campbell's wordless backdrop, it's clear that their chemistry not only extends beyond the niceties of their voices intertwining, but.
- 11/18/2008
- by Chris Martins
- avclub.com
Former Screaming Tree and Sebastian’s Belle encore—call them the “Butter Twins.”
Although he’s become a terrific solo artist, former Screaming Trees frontman Mark Lanegan still has a taste for collaboration. Whether as half of the Gutter Twins (with ex-Afghan Whig Greg Dulli), part of Josh Homme’s Queens of the Stone Age, or as an occasional member of Dulli’s Twilight Singers, Lanegan has often done his most compelling work in partnership with others whose strengths offset the raw power of his nicotine-and-bourbon-stained rasp. In 2006, this took the shape of Ballad of the Broken Seas, a duet with former Belle & Sebastian member Isobel Campbell, whose sweetness-and-light persona is as removed from Lanegan’s barroom brio as Scotland is from Seattle. The album worked precisely because of the starkness of the contrast, going down like a tumbler of aged scotch. Sunday at Devil Dirt finds the pair reprising...
Although he’s become a terrific solo artist, former Screaming Trees frontman Mark Lanegan still has a taste for collaboration. Whether as half of the Gutter Twins (with ex-Afghan Whig Greg Dulli), part of Josh Homme’s Queens of the Stone Age, or as an occasional member of Dulli’s Twilight Singers, Lanegan has often done his most compelling work in partnership with others whose strengths offset the raw power of his nicotine-and-bourbon-stained rasp. In 2006, this took the shape of Ballad of the Broken Seas, a duet with former Belle & Sebastian member Isobel Campbell, whose sweetness-and-light persona is as removed from Lanegan’s barroom brio as Scotland is from Seattle. The album worked precisely because of the starkness of the contrast, going down like a tumbler of aged scotch. Sunday at Devil Dirt finds the pair reprising...
- 11/17/2008
- Pastemagazine.com
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