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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Eryc Eyl
Conor Oberst
Merge Records
Tuesday, July 29, Ogden Theatre, 303-832-1874.
Weaned on Metallica, this duo makes acoustic guitars sound heavy.
Mugiboogie
Ipecac Recordings
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Village Voice
Looking back on his first term.
By Roy Edroso
SF Weekly
A studio apartment in San Francisco now costs $1,700 per month. Hence the madness.
By Ashley Harrell
The Pitch
How a woman in a leopard-print mini-skirt brought down the Kansas attorney general.
By Justin Kendall
Dosh
Saturday, June 7, hi-dive, 720-570-4500.
Published on June 05, 2008
What do you get when your dad leaves the priesthood and your mom gives up on the nunnery? If you're Martin Dosh, the answer is: piano lessons. And thank God for that. On his fourth proper album, Wolves and Wishes, the Minneapolis native gracefully transforms his love for ambient electronica, improvisational jazz and hip-hop into an instrumental tour de force equally suited to the local coffeehouse, your next dinner party or the chill-out room at your favorite dance club. If you only know Dosh as Andrew Bird's touring drummer, you owe it to yourself to check out the artist's one-man live show. While swiveling among electric piano, drum kit and various other instruments, the multi-instrumentalist and experimental composer creates, captures and layers loops, deftly and soulfully turning skeletal grooves into fully fleshed-out compositions that would make Squarepusher scratch his head in awe and Frank Zappa roll over in his grave in reverence. When in doubt, dance.