
The Dream Syndicate
The Dream Syndicate show at the Bowery Ballroom this past Saturday was an alt-rock guitar lover’s dream. Continue reading The Dream Syndicate
The Dream Syndicate show at the Bowery Ballroom this past Saturday was an alt-rock guitar lover’s dream. Continue reading The Dream Syndicate
One of the greatest albums of the ’80s, the Dream Syndicate’s debut album, The Days of Wine and Roses, is back in print once again. Continue reading The Dream Syndicate to Reissue ‘The Days of Wine and Roses’
Originally published in Spinner, September 25, 2012 Even though ’80s band the Dream Syndicate have been dormant for nearly 25 … Continue reading The Dream Syndicate Reunite for 30 Years of ‘Wine and Roses,’ Praise Japandroids
NewBeats turns 11 this month. So from our archives, here is an interview with former Dream Syndicate singer circa 2003:
Steve Wynn: Music for Troubled Souls
By David Chiu
“I wanted to have written a novel more than I want to write a novel,” said veteran singer/songwriter Steve Wynn. “I think I will someday. It’s a whole different discipline.” Given his knack for writing introspective moody songs in a journalistic fashion, it would only make sense that he would write a book. If he ever decides to do that, Wynn certainly would have enough material given his 20-plus years of experiences in music career.
In fact, any survey of alternative music in the last two decades would be incomplete without mentioning Steve Wynn. He had established his name in modern rock as the founder of the Dream Syndicate, the Los Angeles band that was synonymous with the Paisley Underground movement of the early ’80s. The band that was heavily influenced by the Velvet Underground in time would inspire another generation of garage rockers in the ’90s. While the Dream Syndicate has been somewhat of a distant memory since its break up in 1990, Wynn continued to plug away, first with the super group Gutterball, and later as a solo artist. Continue reading “Features: An interview with Steve Wynn”