black lightning

Search for black lightning performed on Saturday, 25th May 2013.

black lightning

We found the term black lightning in 18 articles.

Article Search Results

Band Profile: Lightning Bolt
Lightning Bolt emerged from Providence, Rhode Island, United States in 1995 as a three-piece art school project.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/5353/ | 289 hits
CD Review: Modey Lemon - Thunder + Lightning
Garage rock duo/trio Modey Lemon burst out of Pittsburgh to not only kick out the jams but to actually boot those jams firmly in their jammy balls.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/2706/ | 367 hits
Live Review: The Xenith Sound + Ten Seconds Of Chaos + The Black Helicopters
With Leeds festival just around the corner it's that time again for the Futuresound competition. Tonight was the turn of The Black Helicopters, Ten Seconds Of Chaos and The Xenith Sound to win over the crowd and more importantly the judges with their interpretations of what passes for good music these days.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/2821/ | 1,317 hits
Band Profile: Aces & Eights
Finger blistering double bass! Apocalyptic fire n brimstone a-preacher-hollerin! Screaming geetar like black-lightning!
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/8914/ | 1,463 hits
Band Profile: Modey Lemon
Modey Lemon are a punk-blues band from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The group formed in 1999 as an informal side project of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion-fixated Dean Swagger.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/4668/ | 167 hits
Band Profile: Kenneth Ishak
Kenneth Ishak was born May 26th 1978, he is half Norwegian and half Malay. His interest in music started when he was three years old and went to music school, and when he was sixteen he started the powerpop-band Beezewax together with some friends.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/5270/ | 120 hits
Band Profile: Silver Mt. Zion
Silver Mt. Zion (Thee Silver Mt. Zion, A Silver Mt. Zion or simply SMZ) use a number of different variations of the name on different releases.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/4644/ | 166 hits
Live Review: Gold Blade + The Longshots + Buzzkill
It isn't every gig that ends with your correspondant being grabbed up onstage along with 20 or so other grinning loons to do backing vocals during the encore.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/4001/ | 551 hits
Live Review: Yellow Stripe Nine
Going into battle dressed in his dad's golfing outfit and some vintage aviators, Yellow Stripe Nine's ringleader Pete Bott has taken on the guardian of jerky pop/disco choruses and won hands down with catchy bastards like 'I Want More', 'Hotel X' and (the deceptively uncatchily titled) 'The Boy who Desperately Wanted to be Struck by Lightning'.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/3051/ | 464 hits
CD Review: Various Artists - Classic Rock Presents: New Wave Of British Heavy Metal
Galloping into view with more nostalgia than a thousand reminiscing grandparents, 'Classic Rock Presents: New Wave Of British Heavy Metal' does exactly what it says on the tin, and wastes no time in bringing things right back to the 70s, tearing straight into Diamond Head's 'Am I Evil?', a stone cold classic by anyone's standards, which has seen something of a deserved revival in recent times thanks to The Big Four's performance of it when they play together, such as when they dazzled the Sonisphere crowd with it this summer.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/15075/ | 538 hits
Band Profile: Diamond Head
Diamond Head are a British heavy metal band formed in 1976 in Stourbridge, England. They were one of the leading members of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal (NWOBHM) and are acknowledged by later bands like Metallica and Megadeth as an important early influence.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/15059/ | 80 hits
Live Review: Editors + ¡Forward, Russia! + Pioneers Of Industry
As Ian Curtis is my witness, Editors are good. They may not be the four most effervescent of chaps or the most endearing of performers but if nothing else, Editors prove substance over style should be the way to go any day.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/4129/ | 1,790 hits
Live Review: The Fall + Piskie Sits
A last-minute change of plan means that I'm reviewing this gig rather than your usual correspondent. And the fact that bus timetables are a rough guide rather than an actual indication of when your bus might arrive mean that by the time I'm inside a packed venue with de-misted spectacles and thawed ears (my, it was cold at that bus stop), Piskie Sits are well into their stride.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/8175/ | 700 hits
Live Review: 2manydjs + Hot Chip + Klaxons + Hope of the States + ¡Forward, Russia! + The Hair
I think I'm getting old, or something, because it's taking me longer to recover from these festival things than it used to.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/7247/ | 498 hits
Band Profile: Cypress Hill
Cypress Hill is an American hip hop group from South Gate, California. Cypress Hill was the first latino group to have platinum and multi-platinum albums and one of the first rap groups to gain a following with fans of alternative and hard rock music.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/5316/ | 191 hits
Live Review: Nero + White Lies + Maverick Sabre + Hard-Fi + Katzenjammer + Tom Savage & The Hash Mafia + King Charles + The Pigeon Detectives + Jake Bugg + The Jim Jones Revue + Martha Reeves + Skinny Lister + Kids In Glass Houses
Bingley Music Live descends into Bingley town the first weekend in September and has been doing so since 2007, but before that Myrtle Park has played host to a musical events for the past 21 years.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/16987/ | 422 hits
Band Profile: Chops
CHOPS (1): US hip hop solo artist and producer from Philly (???? -) CHOPS (2): UK avant-wonk-pop group from Leeds (2007 -) (1) CHOPS, from the Philly-based group the Mountain Brothers, has become a successful solo artist and producer.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/11048/ | 194 hits
Live Review: The Sunshine Underground + The Playmates + Kubichek! + O Fracas + Harrisons + Gentleman's Pistols + Envelopes + Ironhorse
Maybe it was the prospect of seven hundred ("Seven hundred??!") people squishing like marinaded sardines into the Faversham with such proximity that all sorts of potentially frisky things could happen; maybe it was the atmospheric buzz zipping about visibly like an electric-blue bolt of lightning over an array of extravagantly-varied haircuts; or maybe it was the range of world beers on offer but, whichever way, The Fourth Festival Of Nasty proved to be one stonking, stamping, stage-invading beast of an event with antlers Pan himself would have been proud of pronged firmly up its derrière.
www.leedsmusicscene.net/article/5981/ | 2,165 hits

Site Search

© 1998-2013 Dave Sugden | Credits | Privacy | Mobile Site