Receive Weekly Email and Text Message Updates:
Sign up for latest info on concerts, dining, promotions and more!
Go!

Related Stories ...

Reader's Picks

Top Recommendations

A short list of Kansas City's most popular hot spots.
user content provided by: LikeMe.net & The Pitch

National Features >

  • Village Voice

    The Great Walls of Chinatown

    With the exception of the electric rice cookers, this Bowery tenement could have come straight from the Nineteenth Century.

    By Elizabeth Dwoskin

  • Houston Press

    Getting Off

    DUI attorney Tyler Flood wins 80 percent of his trials--even if his clients were 100 percent drunk.

    By Mike Giglio

  • Miami New Times

    Park or Die Tryin'

    From the homeless parking mafia to the meter fairy, finding a spot in Miami has taken a turn toward the surreal.

    By Gus Garcia-Roberts

  • City Pages

    The Baddest Men on the Planet

    Straight from the Sam's Club tire shop, Brett Rogers prepares to meet Fedor Emelianenko in mortal combat.

    By Bradley Campbell

Choad

It's All Over Now (Independent)

Share

  • rss

By Nathan Dinsdale

Published on May 06, 2004

You have to be an absolute genius or a complete idiot to name your band Choad. Depending on where you went to junior high, choad generally refers either to a penis that is wider than it is long or to the anatomical no man's land located between, shall we say, your pee-pee and your poo-poo. Either way, it's hardly the handle of a troupe of serious artistes. Throw in song titles like "Lobsters, Cocaine & Whores" and "My New VCR," and all you can really expect from an album called It's All Over Now is some fun, disposable rock. Choad doesn't exactly disappoint, but these really are serious musicians cloaked in juvenile humor. Tunes such as "Who Got Ripped Off" and "Kill It" are adequate distillations of poppy garage rock, but it's difficult to say if the album's garage feel is a debt to the band's raw sound or to the fact that the album was probably actually recorded in a garage. As it is, "Lobsters, Cocaine & Whores" is too polished to be raw, "It's All Over Now" is too rough to be polished, and It's All Over Now is too pedestrian to be more memorable than the fact that three guys from Lawrence thought it would be a good idea to call their band Choad.