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Nashville Scene is an alternative newsweekly in Nashville, Tennessee. It was founded in 1989, became a part of Village Voice Media in 1999, and later joined the ranks of sixteen other publications after a merger of Village Voice Media with New Times Media early in 2006.
The Nashville Scene called Revelation "a searing, musically delightful portrait that includes everything that makes Piper & the Hard Times special. They come across as a contemporary group steeped in and fortified by the blues, yet easily able to incorporate elements of rock, jazz, soul, pop and gospel into their blend."
[18] The Nashville Scene called the band a "bottom-heavy amalgam of VU whisper-drone, Young-ian twang, and Jeffersonian head trips". [19] The Orange County Register considered York Blvd. "organic chill music, a calmative with no synthetic aftertaste."
Nashville’s first full omakase sushi restaurant opened on July 18. Tucked behind a speakeasy-style entrance in the Gulch, Sushi Bar contains two dining rooms with 12 seats each centered around ...
No, Nashville's No. 1 Yelp-reviewed restaurant isn't the world-renowned Locust in trendy 12 South, nor is it the iconic biscuit slinging Loveless Cafe. And no, it's not Prince's Hot Chicken Shack ...
Welcome (back) to The Pick, The Tennessean Music Staff's weekly email conversation about all things you need to know — hot insider takes from Music City's legendary creative community, plus the ...
SouthComm Communications was a media company that owned a number of alternative newspapers and other news sources in the United States such as the Nashville Scene [1] and the Washington City Paper. [2] It was based in Nashville, Tennessee. In 2018, the trade magazines owned by SouthComm were sold to Endeavor Business Media.
Halestorm moves to Nashville. Fans think they're going country. The band ended up relocating to Nashville in 2013 for several reasons. The first being the band member's parents (who were all ...