<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<?xml-stylesheet title="XSL_formatting" type="text/xsl" href="http://feeds.rhapsody.com/rss-transform-xslt.xml?bid=-1896253084"?>
<!--These data are only offered for use pursuant to the license agreement
posted at http://webservices.rhapsody.com/rws-license.html.
Any use of these data indicates your agreement to the terms and conditions
set forth therein.-->
<rss version="2.0" xmlns:rhap="http://feeds.rhapsody.com/dtds/">
<channel>
<title>Music Videos by Gutter Twins on Rhapsody Online</title><link>http://www.rhapsody.com/goto?rcid=art.18932449&amp;rws=%2Fgutter-twins%2Fmusic-videos.rss</link><description>More than a decade after individual indie-rock canonization and years into mutual admiration, it was somehow inevitable that Greg Dulli and Mark Lanegan would unite their devilish brands of rock 'n' roll gloom into a single &lt;i&gt;bete noire&lt;/i&gt;. Lanegan's Screaming Trees and Dulli's Afghan Whigs were among the initial graduates of the Sub Pop School of Doomed Guitars, helping define "alternative" and "Seattle" for pop-culture historians. But rather than get stale with the grunge generation, each man pursued a muse of personal choice: Lanegan expanded the scope of his darkness on solo albums and with frequent, disparate musical partners, while Dulli perfected his soul-crooner/bad-attitude persona as leader of the Twilight Singers. The Gutter Twins house both tendencies. Having first collaborated on the Singers' &lt;i&gt;Blackberry Belle&lt;/i&gt; in '03, they spent five on-off years coming up with the dozen numbers included on &lt;i&gt;Saturnalia&lt;/i&gt;. And whereas Dulli's inner rock poet majestically dubbed their sound "satanic Everly Brothers," the truth is that it sounds like the two old souls they've always seemed, making emotional, sweeping rock 'n' roll in the vein of their (in)famous old bands. No more, no less.
- Piotr Orlov</description><category>Alt/Punk</category><language>en</language><ttl>720</ttl><pubDate>Fri, 25 Dec 2009 15:00:56 -0800</pubDate><image>
<url>http://static.realone.com/rotw/images/logo_rhapsody_113x22.gif</url>
<title>Music Videos by Gutter Twins on Rhapsody Online</title>
<link>http://www.rhapsody.com/goto?rcid=art.18932449&amp;rws=%2Fgutter-twins%2Fmusic-videos.rss</link>
<description>More than a decade after individual indie-rock canonization and years into mutual admiration, it was somehow inevitable that Greg Dulli and Mark Lanegan would unite their devilish brands of rock 'n' roll gloom into a single &lt;i&gt;bete noire&lt;/i&gt;. Lanegan's Screaming Trees and Dulli's Afghan Whigs were among the initial graduates of the Sub Pop School of Doomed Guitars, helping define "alternative" and "Seattle" for pop-culture historians. But rather than get stale with the grunge generation, each man pursued a muse of personal choice: Lanegan expanded the scope of his darkness on solo albums and with frequent, disparate musical partners, while Dulli perfected his soul-crooner/bad-attitude persona as leader of the Twilight Singers. The Gutter Twins house both tendencies. Having first collaborated on the Singers' &lt;i&gt;Blackberry Belle&lt;/i&gt; in '03, they spent five on-off years coming up with the dozen numbers included on &lt;i&gt;Saturnalia&lt;/i&gt;. And whereas Dulli's inner rock poet majestically dubbed their sound "satanic Everly Brothers," the truth is that it sounds like the two old souls they've always seemed, making emotional, sweeping rock 'n' roll in the vein of their (in)famous old bands. No more, no less.
- Piotr Orlov</description>
</image></channel>
</rss>