Paul Wall featuring Big Pokey

Tooth griller to the stars, un-plain white rapper Wall literally puts his money where his mouth is by wearing his own innovative and expensive caps. After a notable guest slot on Mike Jones’s smash “Still Tippin’,” the charming rhymes and infectious farty bass line of “Sittin’ Sideways” is this Texan’s…

Nas

Though Nas claims to be “the rebirth of Langston Hughes,” he’s really more like William Blake with a little bling and a whole lot of beef. Nas quotes Old Testament scripture, ponders the meaning of the word ethereal, and threatens to turn 50 Cent into “blue fog.” Too abstract to…

Destiny’s Child

Destiny’s Child’s fast slow-jam “Cater 2 U” might as well be an answer to the Ying Yang Twins’ pussy-beating “Wait.” Except instead of retaliating, the formerly independent women roll over, playing submissive bottoms to the Twins’ enthusiastic tops. Beyoncé even says her life would be “purposeless” without her man. They’re…

Johnny Prez

Familiarity rules: The chorus borrows from El General’s pioneering, eponymous reggaeton hit, and its “Gasolina” likeness is more than passing. But skittering, synthesized brass ‘n’ toms prop Prez’s gritty spitting as he begs la sirena not to slay a man with her wild punane (and mami answers back like, “Whatever!”)…

Finesse and Runway

Have you heard about the franks and beans incident at I/O? Last year the dynamic electro bass duo and avant-garde performance art troupe Finesse and Runway sprayed the crowd with wieners and the like. If you missed out on the antics the first time, this weekend is your chance to…

Carlos Vives

With a degree in publicity and numerous acting roles on his resumé, Carlos Vives could have chosen a route in life that didn’t include sold-out arenas or recording studios. But how else would’ve Vives put all the musical influences he picked up as a kid in Santa Marta, Colombia, to…

Vidavox

Vidavox isn’t a jazz or jam band. Nor is it electronica, though the group does borrow certain strategies from IDM. Vidavox is a swirling amalgamation of exploratory music culled from the recesses of South Florida’s underground. The outfit cranks out boundless, genre-defying sound that captures bits of classical, punk, and…

Güajiro

How do you say punk in Espanglish? In Miami the answer is Güajiro (pronounced war hero in gringo). The Hialeah punks, consisting of Cuban-American and Honduran exilos and a notable ex-Long Beach, California resident, are thrashing their way onto the national stage with a five-song EP on the same label…

The Ballad of an Old Cabaret

Wearing stiletto heels and a tight minidress with a wild Sixties print, Cuban cabaret singer Daya cheerfully trots out from the dimly lit table area and onto the stage of the newly relocated Café Nostalgia. She shakes her massive mane of kinky black hair and nods to the band before…

After the Flood

The Backstreet Boys! Yeah, I know, I should have told the joke before I got to the punch line. In 2005, though, the Backstreet Boys are both. The mere mention of Orlando’s most popular musical export conjures up images of a pop juggernaut crashing under the weight of its own…

Warped World

7:41 a.m. Get a wake-up call from my fourteen-year-old nephew, Jeremy, whom I’m taking to his very first Warped Tour. He asks to borrow my faded old Bad Brains T-shirt because his Bowling for Soup tee makes him “look like a noob.” 10:06 a.m. Traffic slows as we near the…

Various Artists and

Bow Wow

Usually when a music man becomes a businessman (say, by being named an executive at Virgin Records), the music that plays loudest in his head goes cha-ching. And no disrespect to Clive, Quincy, or Jigga, but Jermaine Dupri hears this music clearer than most. Over the past year, J.D. has…

I Self Divine

I Self Divine’s latest album, Self Destruction, sounds like the sonic equivalent of road rage: angry, violent, yet ultimately annoying and pointless. With a self-assured delivery that resembles Brother Ali or Fat Joe, the former MC for Atlanta’s Micranots delivers angst-ridden blasts of slogan-heavy choruses. Meanwhile Destruction’s production is steeped…

The Free Design

The Now Sound Redesigned, a remix tribute to the Sixties soft-psych group the Free Design, is an opportunity lost. The soft vocal harmonies would seem a lush foil for hip-hop’s hard beats and streetwise rhymes, but the album fails to properly negotiate the juxtaposition. Don’t get me wrong; there are…

Natasha Bedingfield

Natasha Bedingfield, sister of Brit pop star Daniel Bedingfield, has already gone triple platinum in the UK with this set of sunny self-empowerment anthems, and no wonder: In an era when an album can move a million units on the strength of only one song, Unwritten delivers virtually an entire…

Zuco 103

From Jamaican dub to European electro, Zuco 103 scours the world for its exceptional new album, Whaa! The European-Brazilian group blends its light electronica with the Latin rhythms of bossa nova legend Roberto Menescal, the dub thump of reggae pioneer Lee “Scratch” Perry, and the quirky, cute vocals of Spanish…

The Domino Kings

The Domino Kings aren’t the only band from Springfield, MO, you’ve never heard of, but they’re probably the best. Their brand of hard-rockin’, honky-tonk swing reverberates like a drunken earthquake. Lead singer, main songwriter, and rhythm guitarist Stevie Newman’s warble is part Hank Snow, part Buck Owens, and part perfect…

Brian Jonestown Massacre

The Website for California-based rock outfit Brian Jonestown Massacre warns visitors about the band’s lineup with this disclaimer: “Subject to change without notice.” The noncommittal stance about who exactly will be taking the stage as the group makes its way across America to promote its latest album, We Are the…

Franco De Vita

Not too many publications are knocking Franco De Vita’s door down for a glossy pictorial. Let’s face it — with a short and stocky build, receding hairline, and prize-fighter’s nose, the Venezuelan singer/songwriter doesn’t rank very high on anybody’s list of potential cover boys. Although he isn’t exactly a heartthrob,…

21st Annual Miami Reggae Fest

Jamaica’s independence from England on August 6, 1944, may have been somewhat of a red herring — the Queen of England’s portrait was not removed from the King’s House — but that year did produce Alton Ellis, also known as Mr. Rock Steady. For those who don’t already know (and…

Tori Amos

It’s easy to blame Tori Amos for inspiring a generation of whiney singer/songwriter types. But those who wallow in her wake are merely pretenders to a throne built on soul-baring ballads that relive painful personal experiences, whether it be a rape, a miscarriage, or a difficult marriage. Although Amos vacillated…

The Lee Boys

For decades the glorious sounds of sacred steel music were confined within the walls of Church of God parishes throughout Florida and the East Coast. The music, a mixture of gospel and blues that centers on the pedal steel guitar, was never intentionally restricted, but the musicians never bothered taking…