Most Popular
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Cock and Awe
St. Louis pickup artists rule the roost.
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Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor
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John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory.
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The strange and violent world of St. Louis' bail bondsmen
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All In A Name
Did the Post-Dispatch deliberately give its new blog the same title as the competition?
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Unreal puts "Jorts & Mandals Day" initiative on the back burner, weighs in on Saint Louis Fashion Week (13)
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Was it Colonel Mustard or Professor Plum who killed MLK? (4)
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Hot Contender: If looks count, Sarah Steelman may be your next governor (3)
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John Ray used to own a tavern in Benton Park. Now he lives in Quincy and dabbles in conspiracy theory. (3)
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Heat Rises: Pappy's Smokehouse elevates humble barbecue to ethereal heights (3)
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The Monads turn tradition on its tail with a stomping live show and new CD
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Feeling Gravity's Pull: R.E.M. hurtles toward the future on Accelerate
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Slice of Life
John Vanderslice celebrates warmer weather with an exclusive mix of tunes.
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Remaking Michael
Why waste money (or steal) those bogus Thriller remixes when you can get better Michael Jackson reinventions legally — for free? Plus, the history of the classic Harlem Globetrotters song "Sweet Georgia Brown."
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Native-American healing and a Trans-Siberian Orchestra guitarist rejuvenate metal thrashers Testament
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Tips to Market the St. Louis Cardinals this Season, Part 1
09:05AM 04/22/08 -
Cards Blog: Wainwright should have received the 'W'
09:00AM 04/22/08 -
National Record Store Day at Vintage Vinyl: Video from Saturday, April 19
07:10PM 04/21/08 -
Frankie Say Relax
03:57PM 04/21/08 -
Busch's Grove Closing May 24
12:05PM 04/23/08 -
The Morning Brew: Wednesday, 4.23
09:19AM 04/23/08
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Recent Articles By Dan Leroy
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Jill Scott
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March 26. The Fabulous Fox Theatre, 527 North Grand Boulevard.
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Producer nonpareil Pharrell Williams is happy to be just one of the band again
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J. Holiday/Trey Songz
8 p.m. Tuesday, February 26. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard.
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Ohmega Watts
7 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 17. The Pageant, 6161 Delmar Boulevard.
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Chris Brown
7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 31. Scottrade Center, 1401 Clark Avenue.
Recent Articles By Ryan Wasoba
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Van Halen
8 p.m. Saturday, April 26. Scottrade Center, 1401 Clark Avenue
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Rogue Wave
8 p.m. Sunday, April 20. The Gargoyle, on the campus of Washington University, 1 Brookings Drive
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Enon
9 p.m. Wednesday, April 23. Billiken Club, in the Busch Student Center on the campus of Saint Louis University, 20 North Grand Boulevard
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Unwed Sailor
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B-Sides catches up with Lou ex-pat Black Spade and finds out how Black Moutain manages to rock so hard
National Features
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Seattle Weekly
Back from Iraq
Camaraderie is in short supply between today's soldiers and older vets.
By Nina Shapiro -
Village Voice
Scientology 's Celebrity Defector
TV star Jason Beghe reveals secrets of the controversial church.
By Tony Ortega -
The Pitch
Spirited Away
Can't get a Catholic exorcism in Kansas City? James Vivian is here to help.
By Peter Rugg
B-Sides gets personal with Alicia Keys, as she is, and examines the parallels between Metallica-worshippers Apocalyptica and Harptallica
By Dan Leroy and Ryan Wasoba
Published: April 23, 2008
She sings. She acts. She saves the world, or tries to, through her various charity efforts. And even Bob Dylan has noticed, and namechecked her in song.
But take note, Alicia Keys admirers: Even Superwoman is human and needs a break.
"[D]o I get overwhelmed? Absolutely, everybody gets overwhelmed," Keys says via phone from France, while on a break from the European leg of her current As I Am tour. "Are there days when I'm mad? 'I surely should have said no to one of these things, because this is just a bit too much.' Yes. But I try my best to really make choices for things that I truly love from a really pure place, and then it's not like you're angry about it.
"When I do music, I love it. When I'm doing any film I've chosen, it's because I love it. When I'm doing my annual Black Ball for Keep a Child Alive, it's because I love it. When I'm going to Africa on a pilgrimage, it's because I love the way that I can see the changes that have been made and I can see, firsthand, what is going on, so I know personally what needs to be made."
The aforementioned pilgrimage occurred in fall 2006. Keys was feeling burned out. Her grandmother had just passed away, and she was trying to juggle acting commitments with the demand for a new album. It would follow up her first two Grammy-winning efforts —which set a new standard for retro-soul — as well as her chart-topping Unplugged outing in 2005.
"It was a very difficult time that I was dealing with, and it just came to the point where I really needed to — basically, I just needed to run away, honestly," Keys admits.
"I mean, I'll tell you, when it came out I was on the phone with the travel agent and he was like, 'Where do you want to go?' 'Egypt,' it just came out of nowhere. And I was like, 'I want to sail down the Nile, I want to see the temples, the tombs and the pyramids. I want to be moved, I want to see something I've never seen before.' And it turned out to be the best choice that I've ever made."
Inspired to create music as timeless as the wonders she saw on holiday, Keys summoned co-writers like John Mayer and song doctress Linda Perry to create As I Am, an album she's described as "Janis Joplin meets Aretha Franklin."
"I just took all these restrictions off myself and all of these kind of rules and regulations and ways that I was used to creating and all this crap and threw it out the window," she adds of the album, which hit No. 1 on release last November. "And I just allowed myself to be vulnerable and free and open and it created some of the best music I've ever created yet."
Keys, who has had roles in Smokin' Aces and the upcoming The Secret Life of Bees, says she's "so serious" about acting that she feels especially choosy about the roles she takes. But as she also says, "I don't think I have to choose" between music and film.
"I think that they're both very fantastic ways to be creative and tell life's many, many stories," she says, "and I would love to be able to do that for as long as I live."
— Dan LeRoy
7:30 p.m. Sunday, April 26. Scottrade Center, 1401 Clark Avenue. $37 to $97.50. 314-421-4400.
Tributica Bandica
No genre has fans as wildly enthusiastic as metal — and no metal band has a fan base as feverishly devoted to it as Metallica. In the '80s, the quartet perfected the formula for modern metal with the perfect amount of riffs, solos and vocal hooks to appease musicians and non-musicians alike. Almost every teenager who has ever picked up a six-string during his awkward phase has tried to hammer out "Enter Sandman."
This fascination with playing Metallica songs has ocassionally transcended the traditional band format, resulting in tributes whose instrumentation itself shows a level of creativity not seen in Metallica in over a decade. This week B-Sides examines Apocalyptica and Harptallica, two bands that are paying homage to Metallica the best ways they know how.
The shtick: Apocalyptica is a "Finnish cello metal band." Harptallica is a female harp duo. They have both made their names by performing instrumental versions of Metallica songs on their seemingly un-metal instruments.
Most Metallica-tastic album: Apocalyptica's Plays Metallica by Four Cellos is its only album exclusively comprised of Metallica covers. Harptallica has one record to date, 2007's Harp 'Em All.
Strengths: The cellos of Apocalyptica, which are often distorted and accompanied by a drum set, bite just as hard as James Hetfield and Kirk Hammett's guitars. The range of the instrument allows the band to re-create shredding solos as well as driving bass lines, maintaining the energy of the original songs. Harptallica chooses to mellow the BPMs, using its gut strings to create serene, floaty renditions of Metallica's generally thrashy compositions. The slower tempos would probably make Lars Ulrich cringe, but they bring out the harmonic complexity of a song like "Master of Puppets."
Weaknesses: When Apocalyptica plays original material with guest vocalists (specifically their current single, "I'm Not Jesus" with Slipknot's Corey Taylor), its guitar-emulating cello trick works too well, masking the band's charm (in case you didn't know, it has cellos) and resulting in a nü-metal disaster. The slow, dramatic harps of Harptallica also tend to work too well, occasionally turning Metallica into Muzak. The band's rendition of "The Unforgiven" could easily be background music for a dinner party or a hotel lobby.








