July 29th, 2010 | 4:50 pm | Heather Phares

Just what we needed: The Cars might be revving up for a reunion, if Facebook is to be believed. A new photo of the band's remaining members Ric Ocasek, Greg Hawkes, David Robinson, and Elliot Easton (original bassist Benjamin Orr died in 2000 after battling pancreatic cancer) working in a recording studio was posted to the band's page on the social networking site. If the band is indeed making a new album, it would be the first since the Cars' 1987 release Door to Door. [Stereogum.com]
The Love Parade's death toll rose to 21 after a 25 year-old German woman died on Wednesday. The public prosecutor's office in Duisberg, Germany said that of the 511 people injured in the electronic music festival's stampede, 283 were treated in hospitals and 43 remain hospitalized. The tragedy occurred when people entered a tunnel on the site from both ends until it became dangerously overcrowded. [CNN.com]
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July 29th, 2010 | 11:40 am | AMG Staff

It was, as they say, a transitional year. It was, in many ways, the year where the hangover set in, as the biggest rock forces of the '90s were in states of decline. Although there were some scuzzy sounds on the margin -- not to mention such distinctive voices as Neutral Milk Hotel -- American alt-rock had gone Hollywood, led by Hole's ode to Southern California, the ultraglossy Celebrity Skin, but this was the year post-grungers like Matchbox 20 and Third Eye Blind ruled U.S. radio. In Britain, the heady years of Britpop collapsed, captured brilliantly on Pulp's This Is Hardcore, but the U.K. had its own version of the slicked-up, straightened-out post-grunge in the form of friendly indie-guitar outfits like Catatonia, whose National Velvet topped Melody Maker's year-end list. As these sounds faded out, new styles bubbled up, notably electronica -- which had a banner year everywhere, with Air's Moon Safari crossing over and garage and big beat sweeping the U.K. -- and neo-soul spearheaded by the smash The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. Then at the end of year came Britney Spears, whose "...Baby One More Time" wound up being Nevermind in reverse, pushing all these adventurous sounds back to the fringes.
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