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Issue 48: Baltimore’s Baddest Brain

In this week's feature, Baynard Woods walks the streets with the charismatic and controversial singer of the legendary Bad Brains, H.R.

Photo: Josh Sisk, License: N/A

Josh Sisk

Photograph of H.R., To see more of Josh's work visit joshsisk.com


In this week's feature, Baynard Woods walks the streets of SOWEBO with the charismatic and controversial singer of the legendary Bad Brains, H.R., who has been quietly living in Charm City for the last five years and recently reunited with the band to record its best album in decades.

In Mobtown Beat, Van Smith details the labyrinthine legal struggles of convicted patricide William Bond, while Edward Ericson Jr. looks at the rift a closed corner store has created in a West Baltimore neighborhood, plus Hit & Runs about new city council bills.

In City Folk, Rafael Alvarez goes all in with Mary Carol Reilly, a high-stakes gambler whom you'd better never call 'granny.'

In the arts, Baynard Woods contemplates Bill Miller's astounding collages made of antique linoleum. Bret McCabe reopens the question "Who killed Laura Palmer," with a review of David Lynch's Twin Peaks movie Fire Walk with Me, and explores two shows at School 33 that defy representation. Evan Serpick looks to the Dave Eggers-edited Best American Nonrequired Reading for signs of the times, and Geoffrey Himes ponders poet-rockers in light of upcoming gigs by Patti Smith and the X's John Doe and Exene Cervenka, and a new book about Leonard Cohen.

In Eats and Drinks John Houser III reviews Fells Point's Willow and Clinton McSherry makes manhattans while maintaining his hatred of the Yankees.

Speaking of sports, Jim Meyer's Spitballin' has the best possible breakdown of Ray Rice's amazing play against the Chargers in last Sunday's game.

As always, check out Baltimore City Power Rankings to see who is up and who is down in Baltimore this week; read the Mail to see what the readers are writing; and check in Dec. 19 to see the winners of our annual poetry and fiction contest.

  • Issue 21: Charm Offensive In this week's cover story, Violet LeVoit writes about the Baltimore Charm of the Legends (formerly Lingerie) Football League, which opens its season this weekend in Jacksonville. | 5/22/2013
  • Issue 19: Film Fest Frenzy Kick off the Maryland Film Festival with stories, short reviews, listings, and a complete schedule. | 5/8/2013
  • Issue 18: Ten Years of Transmodern Baynard Woods compiles an oral history of the Transmodern Festival, Baltimore's celebration of the experimental and avant garde | 5/1/2013
  • Issue 17: The Retirement of Double Dagger Double Dagger figuratively move out to the burbs to sip iced tea and rake leaves. | 4/24/2013
  • Issue 16: Aquageddon In this week’s cover story, Van Smith’s return to a disappearing James Island shows what rising sea levels mean for the Chesapeake Bay. | 4/17/2013
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