Jonathan Sexton emerges with "Big Love"
Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2009
A couple of years ago, right after his former band Whiskey Scars broke up, Jonathan Sexton took a break from music—a long break. He moved into a lonely, isolated spot in South Knoxville and went back to graduate school. Full story »
More Music Stories
- The Rumblytums Show is Probably Going to Be Really Good
- The Hackensaw Boys Hack and Saw
- Todd Steed: Unstuck in Time
Donald Brown compiles a lively, loving collection
Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2009
"Fast Forward to the Past:" The title pretty much says it all. These 10 new compositions and well-chosen covers play like a scrapbook of pianist/composer Brown’s favorite sounds. Full story »
More Records
Literary Art
Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2008
Yee-Haw Industries' Julie Belcher illustrates a Big Star song. Full story »
More Eye on the Scene
Kamuy Talks Music
Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2008
Knoxville trio Kamuy (named after an Ainu word for the divine spirit or god in every living being) no doubt sounds more dissonant than its namesake, with influences like The Pixies, Slint, and Rodin. Consisting of Sonya Easterday (bass, guitar, lead vocals), Brandt Womack (guitar, vocals) and Tony Johnson (drums, guitar, vocals), the band will be opening for Quartjar Jan. 3 at Barley’s. Here’s what they’ve been listening to. Full story »
More Boombox
- Steve Miller of The Young
- Joshua Tipton of Hotshot Freight Train
- Shara Worden of My Brightest Diamond
Designs of Life
Wednesday, Dec. 3, 2008
UT graduate students Hilary Williams and Jacob Stanley aren’t leaving much up to chance. In an ambitious and highly collaborative exhibition aptly titled Lighting Shadows: Designed Objects in Space, the two artists have transformed the 1010 Gallery on Gay Street into a modernist haven in which the worlds of art and design converge delectably. Full story »
More Art
KSO Brings Holiday Peace
Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2008
Expectations aren’t always necessarily high for holiday music concerts. Most concertgoers attend wanting little more than to have a pleasant, entertaining evening with family and friends, and come away with warm, cozy feelings of seasonal good cheer. However, sometimes a concert of holiday music is able to rise above the expected level of traditional entertainment and into the realm of enchanting sophistication. Full story »
More Classical
Dancing About Architecture
Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2008
One of the lessons to be learned from the example of Pilobolus, the esteemed Connecticut-based dance company, might be to think long and hard about the possible consequences of your youthful larks and distractions. Four decades later you might find yourself addressing the board of directors that has assembled to help you manage what has become an international force, within a discipline you’d never thought much about as a young man. Full story »
More Theater
The Black Isle-Bethesda Connection
Wednesday, Dec. 31, 2008
It’s impossible to know what greater impetus drives a feral ghoul. I stumbled across a pack them a few nights ago, and the immediacy of their frenzy left me with little time for diplomacy. Their maddened eyes reflecting none of the fear of death inherent to sentient life, they quickly went to work with tooth and claw, seeing no difference between me and their last meal. Full story »
More Video Games
Osamu Tezuka
Wednesday, Dec. 10, 2008
Osamu Tezuka is generally regarded as the father of manga, the Japanese comic form that has only recently burst into the mainstream American consciousness. His signature works are the kid-friendly Astro Boy and Kimba the Lion and the epic 12-volume sci-fi/fantasy saga Phoenix, which spans from prehistory to thousands of years into the future. But none of those series have the pulpy psychological punch of Black Jack, Tezuka’s tale of a rogue super-doctor who performs unlicensed surgeries for cash. Full story »
More Books
The Best DVDs of 2008
Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2008
On the list: "Chop Shop" and "30 Days of Night" Full story »
More DVD/TV
Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?
Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2008
From Danny Boyle, one of the liveliest and most worthwhile directors of recent years, comes this modern-day Balzac-ian rags-to-riches tale, a bright and shiny thing of almost no value whatsoever. In Slumdog Millionaire the slums of Paris are now the toxic entrails of a re-industrialized Mumbai, and the deus ex machina of the winning Parisian lottery ticket is an anti-statistical streak through Who Wants to Be a Rupee Millionaire? Full story »
More Movies
Oontz Oontz Oontz
Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2008
Based upon 1978’s MS-10 analog synth (get the name yet?), XSEED Games’ software adaptation of the classic entry-level KORG hardware marks a significant push forward in console gaming’s largely-ignored side quest to be taken seriously in non-gaming arenas. Full story »









