She cataloged former hurts with current relish, practically licking the juice of past grievances from her fingertips.
Jason Bracelin
Jason Bracelin once went on tour with Kid Rock so you don’t have to. Prior to first being named the R-J’s music writer in 2006, Bracelin was the music editor for the Cleveland Scene alt-weekly. He is a graduate of the University of Illinois. A Decatur, Ill. native, Bracelin has lived in Las Vegas since 2006.
How Vegas’ longest tenured hip-hop producer stays on the cutting edge three decades in.
“Rock and roll ain’t dead!” John Gist says, his voice rising like booster rockets at blastoff, propelling his words to the rafters of the Hard Rock Hotel’s Center Bar.
One man’s words are another man’s tears. Dan Reynolds chokes up as he reads an email from a fan named Tom. The Imagine Dragons frontman has scads of such messages in his inbox, sent from the band’s LGBTQ following, a number of whom are Mormon, like Reynolds.
Post Malone’s life has become a lot like his teeth: golden.
It’s her life, and should you forget, Gwen Stefani is here to remind you.
The human metronome answers his own question.
It’s a father-daughter moment embedded in a song of the times, one intended to be as resonant as the tornado-siren-powerful voice that delivers it.
Vegas’ first punk rock residency, which launched at the end of May at The Pearl at the Palms, has shows continuing this month and in October and November.
With their new album due later this month, Nine Inch Nails will probably air new material livefor the first time here in what will be their only U.S. shows of the summer.
Telling jokes for a living is hard.
They used to practice in the tail end of a trailer home, the two Jims: McLaughlin on guitar, Osterberg on drums.