Skip to content
  • MUSIC
    • Local Reviews SLUG Magazine’s collection of reviews covering the latest and greatest of Utah-based music, covering all varieties of genre, style and type.
    • National Reviews
    • Localized Features SLUG Mag’s Localized is the monthly, local music showcase founded in 2001 as a way for local musicians to receive recognition for their work. The monthly showcase provides bands playing with free posters to promote the show, a write-up in SLUG Magazine for the two headliners, payouts and digital promotion.
    • Music Interviews
    • Concerts & Festivals
    • Year-End Top 5
    • SLUG Soundwaves
  • ARTS
    • Film Reviews
    • Film Interviews
    • Interviews & Features
    • Performance & Theatre
    • SLUG Style
    • Bold & Beautiful
    • Fashion
  • EVENTS
    • Daily Calendar
    • Local Events
    • Localized SLUG Mag’s Localized is the monthly, local music showcase founded in 2001 as a way for local musicians to receive recognition for their work. The monthly showcase provides bands playing with free posters to promote the show, a write-up in SLUG Magazine for the two headliners, payouts and digital promotion.
    • Brewstillery SLUG Mag’s Brewstillery celebrates Utah’s breweries and distilleries by offering tastings of local beer and spirits. Featuring local food trucks, local artisans and crafters and local music—this all ages event has something for everyone to enjoy. It’s a family-friendly event with kids 12 and under free.
    • Anniversary Party SLUG Magazine celebrates its year anniversary in February with a party featuring talented musicians from across Salt Lake’s strong musical culture and other events like fashion shows, tarot readings and more.
    • SLUG Cat Every year SLUG Mag hosts the SLUG Cat bike race to celebrate SLC’s vibrant bike community. Inspired by the scavenger hunt-style bicycle races made popular by bike messengers in places like New York and San Francisco, SLUG Cat has become an unparalleled event in the community and is a must for all local riders, whether you’ve been cycling for years or are still on training wheels.
  • COMMUNITY
    • LGBTQ+
    • Education & Activism
    • Local Businesses
    • Food Features
    • Food Reviews
    • Beer & Spirits
    • Action Sports
  • ABOUT
    • Advertise
    • About Us / Contact Us
    • SLUG Merchandise
    • SLUG Archives
    • Opportunities
    • Kilby Block Party x Enter to Win!
    • Contributor Limelight
    • Soundwaves
  • ☰
      • MUSIC
      • Local Reviews
      • National Reviews
      • Localized Features
      • Music Interviews
      • Concerts & Festivals
      • Year-End Top 5
      • SLUG Soundwaves
      • ARTS
      • Film Reviews
      • Film Interviews
      • Art
      • Performance & Theatre
      • SLUG Style
      • Bold & Beautiful
      • Fashion
      • EVENTS
      • Daily Calendar
      • Local Events
      • Localized
      • Brewstillery
      • Anniversary Party
      • SLUG Cat
      • COMMUNITY
      • LGBTQ+
      • Education & Activism
      • Local Businesses
      • Food Features
      • Food Reviews
      • Beer & Spirits
      • Action Sports
      • SLUG
      • Advertise
      • About Us / Contact Us
      • SLUG Merchandise
      • Death by Salt
      • SLUG Archives
      • Contributor Limelight
      • WORK WITH US
      • Opportunities
      • Kilby Block Party x Enter to Win!
      • DONATE
  • DONATE

Review: Pillars and Tongues – End-dances

Posted on October 2, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

While “Knifelike” starts out with pop-infused rock similar to The National, End-dances mixes those elements with strange, seductive drumming and chanting that gives off a creepy, satanic folk type of energy.  … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Pop. 1280 – Imps of Perversion

Posted on October 2, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

The deceptive opening guitar chord of Imps of Perversion hints at another surf album, with its thin echo lingering as a tribal beat backs the chord’s decay. The crunchy bass, synchronized with simple double-time picking on the guitar, cuts in and knocks the surf sound off its board within seconds. … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: PORCHES. – Slow Dance in the Cosmos

Posted on October 2, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

PORCHES. have a sound that includes a little folk, a little rock, ample keys and a touch of soul.  … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Pink Frost – Sundowning

Posted on October 30, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

Most often compared to 90s-era Smashing Pumpkins, except without Billy Corgan’s godawful nasally whine, Pink Frost are thick and noisy and energetic and also noisy. … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Piñata Protest – El Valiente

Posted on October 30, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

Opening with a 45-second intro declaring Piñata Protest “los mas chingones de la musica norteña punk,” El Valiente certainly delivers on that description.  … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Plankton Wat – Drifter’s Temple

Posted on October 30, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

If an all-instrumental band uses the adjective legendary in cahoots with its description shortly before touting Grateful Dead as an influence, it’s almost guaranteed to sandbag any actual listening experience. Fortunately, Plankton Wat wined and dined my initial shallowness away before the third track. … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Polvo – Siveria

Posted on October 30, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

Polvo was math-y before there was math rock, but the angular equations of their guitar riffs and drum rhythms seemed like some secret calculus, more subtle and organic then their successors. … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Poor Lily – Vuxola

Posted on October 30, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

Musicianship this tight is rarely used to make street punk music, but alas, here we are. Poor Lily aren’t exactly a street punk band, but the general snottiness of the record certainly follows that lead, and mixes this vibe with equal doses of ’80s hardcore and ’90s post-rock. … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Possession – His Best Deceit

Posted on October 30, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

Leave it to Iron Bonehead productions to put the K in kvlt giving these black thrashers from Austria a wider release on what formally is a “demo tape.” That’s all in the eyes of the beholder in regards to the actual status of a release. … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Propagandhi – How To Clean Everything (20th Anniversary Edition)

Posted on October 30, 2013 (August 12, 2022) by Asha Pruitt
Propagandhi - How To Clean Everything album artwork

Oh the ’90s! This was a time when punk rock got really funny, and nowhere is this more prevalent than on Propagandhi’s heavily political, satirical and hilarious debut. For the album’s 20th anniversary, Fat Wreck Chords decided to re-release this album with seven unreleased tracks. … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Piano Interrupted – The Unified Field

Posted on December 4, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

The mix feels like a series of hymns performed in a discotheque, transforming a club-like atmosphere into an experience both spiritual and mind-expanding.  … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews

Review: Poor Remy – Bitters

Posted on December 4, 2013 (January 24, 2022) by Asha Pruitt

Folk transforms into alt-country at the end of “Cave Eyes,” concluding the album pleasantly. Try this one out for a hiking trip or a day in nature. … read more

Posted in: National Music Reviews
  • «Previous page
  • 404
  • 405
  • 406
  • 407
  • 408
  • »Next page
  • 1459

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

SLUG Mag is one of Utah’s longest-running and most experienced independent magazines. Since 1989, SLUG has given a voice to Utah’s community and continues to expand its coverage in both print and digital media.


Sitemap Privacy Policy Terms & Conditions
® 2025 SLUG Magazine | All Rights Reserved