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www.ChristianMusicBank.com/ChristianRock/
Brian McCollum's music weekend (Detroit Free Press) This versatile New Orleans synth-pop outfit with one foot in Christian music and another in mainstream rock is poised for a 2007 breakout, thanks to deftly executed songs replete with nods to such '80s greats as the Police and U2. UPDATE: Theater closes after shooting (Daily Press) Granby Theater quickly put up for sale after attack at Club Premiere; Saturday's MTV event needs new location A classic Norfolk theater closed it doors on Wednesday night, less than 24 hours after a man was shot several times at a party. Fanning history's flame (The New Braunfels Herald-Zeitung) In 1918, the first manned fire station in New Braunfels stood at 131 S. Hill Ave. The station, still at that location, has since been turned into the New Braunfels Fire Museum and houses carefully preserved remnants of past fire fighting equipment. A little travelin' music (Poughkeepsie Journal) I have a roughly 40-minute commute by car into work each morning. I am not a morning person, and do not welcome a lot of over-stimulation before noon. Fire victims improve (Montgomery Advertiser) A 6-week-old boy and his mother are recovering from burns they received in an apartment fire that killed the woman's 6-year-old daughter Wednesday night. Three Cheers for The Monotonix and Tetuzi Akiyama (Alibi) If there is a spectrum of care and recklessness in music performances, I saw both ends of it last night. First, Tetuzi Akiyama, renowned Japanese improv guitarist. Picture 30 or so people in Winnings Coffee, silent, eyes fixed on Akiyama sitting on a folding chair. Witness: Flames hot, high (Orange County Register) Expert testifies at arson hearing that Esperanza fire topped 1,200 degrees and towered up to 90 feet. Judge hears preliminary murder-arson evidence in Esperanza wildfire case (Ora... Expert says weather shift stoked fire, which towered up to 90 feet, making it dangerous to fight. Judge hears preliminary murder-arson evidence in Calif wildfire (The San Fran... RIVERSIDE, Calif. - A deadly arson wildfire burned hotter than 1,200 degrees and towered up to 90 feet when it engulfed and killed five firefighters trying to defend a home last fall, a state fire investigator testified Tuesday. Behind the stories (Daily Bulletin) Selected Poll is Unavailable. AP Photo In a file photo Raymond Lee Oyler is escorted into a courtroom Nov. 2, 2006, in Riverside, Calif. Now, five months later, relatives of the victims and the arson suspect, Raymond Lee Oyler, are preparing for the biggest court hearing in the case to date. Newsfeed display by CaRP |