Most Popular
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Family Court Judge Sheds Light on Unfair Child Support Practices in Texas
Judge David Hanschen lets men challenge whether the kids they support are theirs. And the Texas Attorney General's Office is pissed.
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Dallas Has a Real-Life Dr. Gregory House in Dr. Richard Buch
Some call Dr. Buch a troubled genius. His ex-patients and hospital bosses call him trouble.
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Is the 'Woman Caught in Adultery' Really Part of Scripture?
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Dave Campo Is Back Where His Pro Career Started
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Haggling Over Who Collects Late Child Support Payments Could Leave Some Kids Without
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Family Court Judge Sheds Light on Unfair Child Support Practices in Texas (42)
Judge David Hanschen lets men challenge whether the kids they support are theirs. And the Texas Attorney General's Office is pissed.
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Battle Against Teaching Evolution in Texas Begins (35)
Should creationism win out, textbooks throughout the countrynot just Texaswill challenge the theory of evolution in science curricula
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Dallas Has a Real-Life Dr. Gregory House in Dr. Richard Buch (12)
Some call Dr. Buch a troubled genius. His ex-patients and hospital bosses call him trouble.
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Demanding Answers as the Dallas Convention Center Hotel Moves Forward (10)
As Mayor Tom Leppert pushes for a convention center hotel, critics demand more details and less tax money. At least, those who haven't been silenced do.
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DART Needs to Build a Subway Downtown (10)
If DART backtracks on its subway promise, downtown traffic will be even more congested
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The First Stage
So you want to be a rock superstar, huh? First you've gotta find a home for your sound
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Who Rocks More: Bon Jovi or Daughtry?
Bon Jovi is definitely the winner on sex appeal, but who has more street cred?
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Getting to Know Edgefest Bands Via Haikus
Poetry about the acts on Edgefest 17's bill? It's music to our ears.
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Reliving Last Weekend's Local Music Explosion
Between Good Records' birthday celebration and the Mokah Music showcase we were a little overwhelmedbut in a good way.
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Denton Music Deserves Our Attention
We're ready to prove our appreciation of Denton.
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To Hell with the Mavericks. How 'Bout them Chaparrals?
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The Dallas Mavericks' Official Release Concerning Avery Johnson's Official Release
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The Dork Knight Returns
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Salvia + Roger Waters = Bad Idea, According to Minneapolis City Pages
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Dallas-born Jazz Player Jimmy Giuffre Dead At 86
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Video: Phil Pritchett at Granada
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Recent Articles By Dan Leroy
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Stevie Wonder
Wednesday, December 5, and Thursday, December 6, at Nokia Theatre, Grand Prairie
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T.I. vs. T.I.P
T.I. vs. T.I.P. (Atlantic Records)
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R. Kelly
Double Up (Jive)
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Ne-Yo
Because of You (Def Jam)
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Redman
Red Gone Wild (Def Jam)
National Features
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Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Last Step to Redemption
Drug counselor Richard Entrekin swam a little too easily in a sea of sharks.
By Amy Guthrie -
Village Voice
The Cro-Mag Diaries
Remembering the brutal life and times of John "Bloodclot" Joseph, New York hardcore icon.
By Rob Harvilla -
Miami New Times
Class Warfare
At a Florida school, kids threaten teachers, whose bosses look the other way.
By Francisco Alvarado -
SF Weekly
Party Crashers
If you think Ralph Nader won't screw the Democrats again, you're not paying attention.
By John Geluardi
Name a pop music A-lister, and he or she has either worked with Pharrell Williams or probably wants to. Gwen Stefani, Jay-Z, Britney Spears, Kanye West, Snoop Dogg and Madonna all fall into the first category.
But as he has transformed himself into one of the three or four most important figures in popular music as half of the production team the Neptunes—not to mention his work as a fashion designer, model and single-named icon—Williams has managed to keep an important part of his past with him.
The band N.E.R.D., which Williams formed several years ago with childhood friends Chad Hugo and Shae Haley, is more than just the side project for which it's often mistaken. It's more than merely the outlet for all the songs that don't fit the sleek template the Neptunes have created—a futuristic fusion of skeletal R&B and hip-hop that has launched what seems like a thousand hits, including Britney's "I'm a Slave 4 U," Nelly's "Hot in Herrre," Justin Timberlake's "Rock Your Body" and Kelis' "Milkshake."
"It's simply the way we truly express ourselves," Williams says of N.E.R.D. "I'm pretty sure Chad and Shae feel the same way."
The fact that one of music's busiest men is taking time to do this interview (from the New York offices of his label, Star Trak) says something about his commitment to the project. But as N.E.R.D. prepares to release a third album, N.3.R.D., which the group will support as part of Kanye West's "Glow in the Dark," Williams sounds more than just enthusiastic. He sounds, perhaps, relieved.
"If you get the right copy of the album," Williams says, "you'll hear me say at the beginning, 'It's been awhile since we were able to express ourselves.' That was really important."
Getting Williams to actually describe the sound of N.3.R.D., and how it compares with the mash-up of R&B slink, Steely Dan smarts and alt-rock muscle of the band's first two albums, is a bit more problematic. The phrases Red Bull and a nice, refreshing drink of water come up more than once, as do the words energy and emotion.
"Well, there's no resemblance to anything we've done before," he says. "There's fingerprints of it, but you can't compare it to anything else, and I'm not just saying that to sound hip."
Maybe Williams is just glad to be back in a group setting. After having embarked on a short solo career that produced 2006's In My Mind, which received mixed reviews from critics, Williams sounds apologetic.
"I hadn't thought it out fully," he says with a sigh.
For the time being, Williams sounds at ease just being one-third of N.E.R.D., and he says he looks forward to touring in support of the new album, which is due out "probably in late June." But with "Pharrell" still being something of a household name, one wonders whether it's been difficult for Williams to maintain the same relationship he used to with his old friends and bandmates from his hometown of Virginia Beach, Virginia.
"No, no, it hasn't," he insists. "Because those are my boys, one. And two, Chad and I still do a lot of stuff together."








