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Looking for something to do this holiday weekend? See our picks for some fun local events.

CD reviews we couldn’t fit into Saturday’s paper

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DROPKICK MURPHYS

“Signed and Sealed in Blood” (Born & Bred)

An early contender for 2013’s finest Christmas song arrives halfway through the new Dropkick Murphys album in “The Season’s Upon Us.” It’s a rowdy Celtic-punk number in which singer Ken Casey runs down the charms of his extended family, member by miserable member: “My nephew’s a horrible, wise little twit,” he barks, “He once gave me a nice gift-wrapped box full of” — well, you can imagine the rest.

As in its obvious predecessor, “Fairytale of New York” by the Pogues, affection accompanies spite in “The Season’s Upon Us”; but warmth is all you hear by the time the song’s brandy-soaked chorus hits. And so it goes throughout “Signed and Sealed in Blood,” which demonstrates that for this long-running Boston band, loving and fighting aren’t opposites but rather complementary manifestations of the only thing that matters: passion.

In “The Boys Are Back” they exit Interstate 93 “looking for trouble,” yet pause to buy roses from “a bum at the light”; in “Burn” they resolve to “kiss the finest girl” before going down in a blaze tonight. With cranked guitars and breakneck tempos, the music gallops forcefully but shimmers with beauty too, as in the bagpipes-enriched “Out of Our Heads” and “Rose Tattoo,” which features banjo from Winston Marshall of Mumford & Sons. “We’re gonna cause a riot / We’re gonna rip it up,” they joyfully threaten in “Out of Our Heads,” and it’s wiser to join them than to resist.

— Mikael Wood, Los Angeles Times

VARIOUS ARTISTS

“Girls Soundtrack Volume 1: Music From the HBO Original Series” (Fueled by Ramen)

Lena Dunham’s “Girls” is a cult TV phenomenon, so it’s only right that the soundtrack matches the quirkiness of the on-screen action.

The soundtrack is littered with indie anthems, opening with the dance floor smash “Dancing on My Own” by Robyn, which accompanies a standout moment in the HBO sitcom where Dunham’s character gets caught dancing on her own. Other highlights include The Vaccines’ bellowing “Wreckin’ Bar” and “I Don’t Love Anyone,” a twinkling, whimsical ditty from Belle & Sebastian.

A weaker moment surprisingly comes from pop-rock trio fun., whose lyrics on “Sight of the Sun” seem disjointed and inconsequential. However, the soundtrack stands alone as a great collection of tunes, and as we wait for Sunday’s premiere of season two, we can enjoy the soundtrack to season one.

— Sian Watson, Associated Press

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Sunday, May 26, 2013

Weather Journal

Summerlike warmth next week

Sun, 26 May 2013 01:28:40 +0000

About this blog

cutNscratch is The Roanoke Times music blog. Music reporter Tad Dickens enjoys pickin' and grinnin' and drummin', and he likes to write about music, too. He'll post plenty about local, regional and national music, but it won't be any fun at all if you don't jump in and have your say. So do it!

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