
Articles
-
2 months ago |
louderthanwar.com | Richard Foster |Robert Davidson
The Punk Rock Birdwatching ClubBy Richard FosterPublished by Orca Press 14th February 2025Reading Richard Foster’s latest novel The Punk Rock Birdwatching Club, a collection of stories located in the Duin-en Bollenstreek (Dunes and Bulb Region) in the west of The Netherlands, it’s difficult to ignore the host of Bruegelesque animations and set-pieces he breathes to life.
-
2 months ago |
uspharmacist.com | Robert Davidson
US Pharm. 2025;50(2):1. Researchers at Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) have uncovered how specialized cells surrounding small blood vessels, known as perivascular cells, contribute to blood vessel dysfunction in chronic diseases such as cancer, diabetes, and fibrosis. The findings, published recently in Science Advances, could change how these diseases are treated.
-
May 23, 2024 |
yahoo.com | Robert Davidson
Re: "Morgan Wallen is reckless, but Nashville should’ve approved his honky-tonk sign," by The Tennessean Opinion and Engagement Director David Plazas, May 22. To David Plazas:I regularly read your opinion articles and agree with you almost every time. But this is the most “reckless” and inconsistent opinion piece written by you that I have ever read. This opinion is unlike you and makes no sense. The that No.1 his business partners, No. 2 his friends, No. 3 his fans, and No. 4 Plazas refuse to do.
-
May 23, 2024 |
tennessean.com | Robert Davidson
Re: "Morgan Wallen is reckless, but Nashville should’ve approved his honky-tonk sign," by The Tennessean Opinion and Engagement Director David Plazas, May 22. To David Plazas:I regularly read your opinion articles and agree with you almost every time. But this is the most “reckless” and inconsistent opinion piece written by you that I have ever read. This opinion is unlike you and makes no sense. The that No.1 his business partners, No. 2 his friends, No. 3 his fans, and No. 4 Plazas refuse to do.
-
Jan 14, 2024 |
loudandquiet.com | Robert Davidson
Seasoned American trumpeter Keyon Harrold cut his teeth with Chicago rapper Common at the turn of the century, joining him for his tour supporting acclaimed record Like Water For Chocolate. Performing those songs would expose Harrold to the genius of the Soulquarians, the collective comprising D’Angelo, Questlove, Erykah Badu, and J Dilla, who worked with Common on his album.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 319
- Tweets
- 4K
- DMs Open
- No

No one tells you the true allure of Bluesky is going back in time to an ad-free existence. The viral moments here are great, but they're now ingrained with the spectacle. The commodification & gentrification of the once global village is too much to take. See you later twitter

The biggest grower of a record in recent memory. It has me convinced more than ever that COVID times and its immediate aftermath just mollified all emotive receptors, because how did I listen to this EP and shrug? https://t.co/S5LAgH3PY6

"My Chemical Romance cannot be spoken of in any reverential terms within music. Any artist whose half-life exceeds their active existence is always a commentary on society and not on the musicians." MCR came to The Astoria in 2005 & brought a plague: https://t.co/D7iVAMtURi

The first entry in the recently discovered 'London A-Z: A time-shuffled Dictionary of its Sonic Soul' is now live. It is on The London Astoria, London Angels & Immolated Ascendancy: https://t.co/2YQ9NeVWMd