Word: labelers
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...remains to be seen whether nouvelle manga will amount to a real movement. It would help if two or more masterworks appeared under such a label. Neither Jiro Taniguchi's "The Walking Man" nor Kazuichi Hanawa's "Doing Time" have quiet enough depth to justify calling them "masterworks." Even so, these Franco-Japanese creations are some of the most unusual, fascinating comix published this year...
...even what people are saying in a specific language about the company's product, WebFountain can help give the answer. In one pilot program, WebFountain found that the buzz on college campuses preceded music sales of new CDs by two weeks (good to know if you're a record label). London-based Semagix licenses WebFountain to help its large banking customers track suspicious money flows. "Instead of looking at 5,000 documents, we're only looking at 20," explains Larry Levy, Semagix's president and CEO. Factiva, owned by Dow Jones and Reuters, has licensed WebFountain to help its customers...
...that is consistently appealing, if difficult to place, but Ned Oldham’s determination to break apart from his brother’s Catskills vestiges in the indie world is admirable. As to which audience the album best suits, it remains tough to say, but despite the independent label and pedigree, my money, though, is still on my once-Deadhead father...
...Temporary Residence, Lazarus and label-mates Explosions in the Sky (EITS) performed an exhaustive tour of North America in the fall of 2003, and it was on this tour that EITS became permanently affiliated with William Montgomery. While Lazarus accredits his influences to Elvis Costello, Pink Floyd, Nirvana and others, much of the material behind the music is inspired by his road experiences while on tour...
That this debut album from L.A.-based solo artist Ariel Pink is being released on the Animal Collective’s Paw Tracks label gives some clue to the intention of The Doldrums. It shares with that troupe an affinity for presenting catchy melodies in bizarre ways, but the idea here is more fractured easy listening than campfire sing-along. The album is profoundly lo-fi, sometimes endearingly, sometimes gratingly; it comes across like something eavesdropped and only half-understood, with vocals, keyboards and feedback funneled through such a swampy mix that they often become indistinguishable. It?...