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DISD In the Hole
Teachers get axed and parents fret as Dallas' school leaders scramble to cover a budget hole
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Polygamy and Me
Seven months have passed since the polygamist raid in Eldorado, but for one mainstream Mormon, the effects linger
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Beer Is Good
Texas law stifles state's craft brewers
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How To Piss Off A Member Of Weezer
Brian Bell isn't so hot on comparisons between past Weezer records and the latest
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DISD's Confederacy of Jerks
Extremely pushy parents—Latino, black and Anglo—must rise up to save DISD from itself
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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Sarah Hepola
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Descended Like Vultures (Sub Pop)
Monday, October 31, at Gypsy Tea Room
Kenny Loggins and Jimmy Messina saw the '80s differently. On their reunion tour, the duo finally meets halfway.
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By Randall Patterson
Tree Wave
March 17
Published on March 11, 2004
Among the instruments in Tree Wave's arsenal are: an old beige Commodore computer, a 1985 Epson dot matrix printer and an Atari console that hasn't been in fashion since Knots Landing ruled prime time. Tree Wave makes music with these clunky ancients and--believe it or not--it's good. This isn't a cacophony of tedious bleeps and bloops; Dallas' Paul Slocum coaxes melody out of the equipment's familiar stuttering, using some hard-core techno-wizardry we can't hope to understand, far less convey. All we know is that it's damn cool. Singer Lauren Gray adds a cool, breathy alto, but the music is central here--the soundtrack to games like Pitfall and Pac-Man transposed and reinvented. Live shows also have the added visual element of color patterns programmed on the Atari and Commodore. (Again: Don't ask how. We can't even balance our checkbook, for Christ's sake.) After recent shows at SXSW Interactive and the New York Underground Film Festival, Tree Wave has landed this high-profile gig, opening for some band called the Polyphonic Spree. We figure it's only a matter of time before Tree Wave catches on, and everyone starts replacing their Fenders with dusty Mac II's and Wang monitors from the basement. Now that's garage rock.