To most people, a nice pat on the back is preferable to verbal attacks and vicious insults. Here at Exclaim! though, we don’t care what you have to say as long as you say it. We encourage our new and faithful readers to let us know what kind of a job we’re doing — whether it’s praise for discovering a new artist or disgust for slogging an overexposed one. You can’t please everyone, so if you do have something to say, positive or negative, or have a question for someone at Exclaim! send an email to letters@exclaim.ca, where we’ll be more than happy to respond to your question/comment. Heck, we may even print what you have to say in an issue of Exclaim!, and if we do, we’ll send you an official Exclaim! T-shirt free of charge as a “thank you” for your effort.
Swollen Members
In the ten years since the release of their first album together, Mad Child and Prevail have elicited a lot of emotions. There's the devotion of their oldest fans, who rode for the duo since "Lady Venom" and "Fuel Injected," and the scorn of those who insist they've never put out a good record.... Read More
Aside from deliberately misspelling their entire lyric book, there's nothing I dislike about Capade's Dno't Say It Mihgt Maen Somehitng. This record is everything a sophomore album should be; it's a much more developed effort stylistically and construction-wise than their debut, Wake Me Up... Full Review
Though recently implying that he's tapped out musically, Sufjan Stevens has never created something as pointedly ambitious as The BQE. Originally commissioned by the Brooklyn Academy of Music for a 2007 performance, as a take-home release The BQE consists of an uncompromising essay ostensibly all about the Brooklyn Queens Expressway, a visually stunning film, a stirring orchestral soundtrack, a stereoscopic View-Master reel, and, in limited edition, a 40-page comic book about characters known as the Hooper Heroes.... Read More
Montreal’s no-wave, Moog-rock four-piece Duchess Says are brilliant at working with language. That is so to say, they are francophone, and yet front-woman AC sings more in rhythmic sounds than in anything linguistically discernible. Her male band-mates keep their distance, because her trance-like th... Full Review
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