| MarahAngels of Destruction! | Yep Roc January 14,
 2008 12:54:41 PM 
From the banjo picking that opens the album to the jazzy horn section that colors “Can’t Take It with You . . . ” to the barrelhouse pianos, the bluesy harmonicas, and the various bells, shakers, and percussive embellishments woven into the rootsy fabric of Angels of Destruction, Marah often seem on the verge of overdoing it on their sixth album. And that’s before brothers Dave and Serge Bielanko even open their mouths to unburden their souls of the beauty and sadness, horror and hope, despondency and redemption that thread through these 11 tracks. At its heart, Angels is a tribute to the lasting glory of gritty, Stonesy guitars, slashing through the murk of “Coughing Up Blood” or the tension of “Old Time Tickin’ Away,” cutting to the core of the melancholy “Angels on a Passing Train,” or just chugging along with the swing of “Wild West Love Song.” The Bielankos sensed the same darkness on the edge of town that Springsteen discovered in his younger days back when they first emerged as rocking prophets from the streets of Philly. Now firmly settled in Brooklyn, Marah (whose membership changes from album to album) do sound older and wiser. And their songs of experience suggest they spent some time exploring that darkness, only to have found the light on the other side. “Now that we know restlessness, how come we keep finding new ways to smile,” Serge croons on “Blue But Cool.” Or, as the Bielankos nail it on the rousing outro of the title song, “Angels of destruction/The angel of redemption’s got you beat.”
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 Marah + Adam and Dave’s Bloodline + *AM Stereo | Middle East downstairs, 480 Mass Ave, Cambridge | January 19 | 617.864.EAST
 
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							 Never mind its tough-girl alt-porn feminism: SuicideGirls has already moved on to a new generation
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  Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz explains the punishing cost of staying any longer
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  If you want to lose the ‘fright wig,’ try ditching your shampoo
 
				
					
					
							 Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz explains the punishing cost of staying any longer
  Now more than ever, this is Marty Baron’s newspaper
  Julian Kuerti leads the BSO and Leon Fleisher, Stockhausen’s Mantra at Harvard, Emmanuel’s St. John Passion
  Free speech trumps Boston cops
  Al Basile is still groovin’ onThe Tinge
  The Left Bank meets the West Side
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												Spring Arts Preview: R.E.M., B-52’s, Counting Crows, Breeders: what year is it again? 
												Stephen Malkmus, plus Greg Dulli and Mark Lanegan as the Gutter Twins 
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												Downloadable Valentines from Mobius Band 
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												Hot Stove, Cool Music at the Paradise Rock Club, January 5-6 
												Stephin Merritt warms up on Distortion 
												The Joshua Tree: 20th Anniversary | Island
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 | Cornerstone revives Neil Simon’s Biloxi Blues
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