Home | Under the Radar | Music Blog for the Indie Music Magazine
Wednesday, April 30th, 2025  

Album Reviews

A Study of Losses

Beirut
A Study of Losses

Apr 30, 2025 Web Exclusive

If 2023’s Hadsel was Zach Condon of Beirut emerging from a trough of depression, divorce, and vocal distress, with clear-eyed focus and a perverse sense of pleasure from the endless night and snow of the Norwegian surrounds he’d retreated to,

Cotton Crown

The Tubs
Cotton Crown

Apr 29, 2025 Web Exclusive

“Have you heard The Tubs yet? They’re from Cardiff. They’re your new favorite band.” So went the message I woke up to from a trusted friend one hazy morning last August.

Heartbreak Designer

Phoneboy
Heartbreak Designer

Apr 27, 2025 Web Exclusive

Upon hearing Phoneboy’s irresistible single “Ferrari” back in 2023, the listener might have been forgiven for assuming the New Jersey-founded indie rock outfit to have been some long-lost college band that rose and fell in relative obscurity during the mid- to late-2000s.

Classic Interviews

Margaret Brown

Margaret Brown
Director of Be Here to Love Me: A Film About Townes Van Zandt

Dec 02, 2005 Margaret Brown

In a scene during Margaret Brown’s ghostly, touching documentary Be Here to Love Me: A Film About Townes Van Zandt, former Townes manager John Lomax III talks about a small classified ad in a 1976 issue of Rolling Stone that gave an address for the singer-songwriter’s fan club. Although Townes never enjoyed strong album sales, Lomax recalls how several hundred responses to the ad arrived within a month, many of them containing emotionally wrought accounts from fans who had been healed by Townes’ music—some were saved from suicide, others were comforted by his songs after the loss of a loved one. “I just thought, my Lord, the whole world needs to hear this,” Lomax says of Townes’ music.

Comic Book Reviews

Land of Mirrors

Land of Mirrors
Drawn & Quarterly

Mar 22, 2025 Web Exclusive

Land of Mirrors is full of music and poetry. It’s a psychedelic journey through endless ombre landscapes that explores difficult topics like loneliness, isolation, and sadness. All the while, it’s a sweet (and often humorous) meditation on friendship and growth.

Book Reviews

London Calling New York New York: Two Songs, Two Cities

Peter Silverton
London Calling New York New York: Two Songs, Two Cities

Apr 21, 2025

In noting that The Clash’s song “London Calling” was recorded during the same summer as Frank Sinatra’s “Theme from New York, New York,” author Peter Silverton laces autobiographical threads through a look at the similarities and differences of the two cultures referenced in those recordings.

Interviews

Digital Cover Story: Beirut on “A Study of Losses”

Digital Cover Story: Beirut on “A Study of Losses”

Apr 24, 2025 Web Exclusive

The arc of history is punctuated by losses and discoveries. Entire languages are lost, solely to be remembered in texts or hardened tablets. Animals die out, their existence demarcated by the bones they leave behind. Works of art are lost too, often without a trace. What then is history but a temporary preservation of things that will eventually be lost? And if all will inevitably be swept away by the tides of time, what, then, is the whole point of it all?

Samia on “Bloodless”

Samia on “Bloodless”

Apr 28, 2025 Web Exclusive

Acclaimed indie artist Samia Finnerty (who releases music simply under her first name) found an unusual creative guiding light in the quiet spaces between presence and absence. Her latest album, the spellbinding Bloodless, explores how what’s missing can take on an outsized presence in our minds.

Pleased to meet you

Montreal’s DVTR on “Live Aux Foufs”

Apr 16, 2025 Web Exclusive

Montreal duo DVTR release a live album this month (April 2025) entitled “Live Aux Foufs”, so Under the Radar caught up with the two main protagonists Demi Lune and Jean Divorce

Lists

Seven Music Documentary Films and Series From the Second Half of 2024 to Watch (and Three To Skip)

Jan 08, 2025

Halfway through 2024, we published a list of “Seven Music Documentary Films and Series From 2024 to Watch (and Three to Skip).” Another glut of music documentaries and series have been released since then including the superstar projects Megan Thee Stallion: In Her Words (Prime Video), Luther: Never Too Much (CNN), Melissa Etheridge: I’m Not Broken (Paramount+), Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band (Hulu), Olivia Rodrigo: Guts World Tour (Netflix), Elton John: Never Too Late (Disney+) and Yoshiki: Under the Sky (On Demand). If there is one takeaway from the overabundance of the biographical documentaries, it is that it’s best if the subject is not involved. The micromanaging of their story leaves viewers with a manicured and surface-level experience of the artist.

Although, the artist’s complete removal from the process can make a documentary spin into tabloid territory. There’s a lot of scandal on tap. Fallen Idols: Nick and Aaron Carter (Max) is the traumatic story of mental illness and sexual assault. While the latter is horrifying, the litigation is still underway. Why are the survivors on film talking about their experiences? Speaking of survivors, IMPACT x Nightline: Diddy’s Downfall (Hulu) is equally horrific and a far more disgusting explanation of the recent uncovering of Sean Combs’ abusive, and illegal actions during his entire time in the spotlight. Secret Life of Diddy: A Special Edition of 20/20 (Hulu) covers the exact same ground with many of the same talking heads journalists and individuals. On the positive side of hip hop, Tale of the Tape (Tubi) explores the world of mixtapes, the skill involved in making them, their impact on the culture and the legends of that scene. While the homemade quality of this short but deep unpacking is charming, it only speaks to people in that space and doesn’t go far in educating the uninitiated.

A brave director with a strong grasp on storytelling can create a compelling product that draws you in, whether or not you are interested in the artist or topic. But it feels like there is a positive correlation between the number of music documentaries released and how many of them aren’t worth pressing play on. Here are seven from the second half of 2024 that are worth watching and three not so much.—By Lily Moayeri

Blog

Get 30% Off Subscriptions to the Last Great Indie Rock Print Magazine

Get 30% Off Subscriptions to the Last Great Indie Rock Print Magazine

Feb 21, 2025 By Mark Redfern

Subscribe to the last great American indie rock print magazine! We’re aiming to sign up 600 new or renewed subscribers in the next three months, and to help make that happen, we’re offering 30% off all print subscriptions.