Coheed and Cambria

There is nothing jokelike or reminiscent of Dungeons & Dragons about Coheed and Cambria’s pummeling meanderings through prog-emo, math rock, low-end skronk, and even hair metal — either onstage or on the band’s sophomore opus, In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3. The second installment of a planned trilogy, Secrets…

Gonzalo Rubalcaba

Sometime after the success of his Grammy-winning 2001 album, Supernova, the then-39-year-old Cuban pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba decided to put an end to almost twenty years of nearly frenetic recording activity in order to establish a pace that allows for deeper musical meditations. Now, after a three-year hiatus, he has returned…

Sander Kleinenberg

Has anyone noticed that Space tends to book the same superstar DJs over and over again? To be honest, we’re getting sick of a few of them (Paul Van Dyk again?), but others are always welcome. Sander Kleinenberg, for his part, has one of the most beguiling styles of the…

Murs, Mr. Len, and Seven Star

There’s plenty of hip-hop in Miami; unfortunately, only the thugged-out big dogs get any shine. That leaves little room for thoughtful artists such as Seven Star, whose debut My Mother and Father Were Astronauts has gotten more attention among discerning listeners around the country than in his hometown. Well, rap…

Reggae Tuesdays

Remember the seedy raunchiness of Coconut Grove’s Hungry Sailor and how cool it was to sit in its dark environs and guzzle ice-cold Red Stripes to the sounds of a live reggae band? It took a while, but someone has finally filled the void left by its absence: South Miami’s…

Trick Daddy

Thug Matrimony: Married to the Streets is an appropriate title for Trick Daddy’s sixth album; it’s not only a nod to the Miami thug’s recent marriage, but to the album’s focus on love and sex. On “4 Eva,” Trick pledges, “I have never been a man with manners/But I think…

Brighten the Corners

Indian summer can be lovely in New York City, but for Ed Hale there was little time to savor the sights. He and his band Transcendence were in town for the annual CMJ Music Marathon. And that found Hale talking up more record industry players than a Jehovah’s Witness who’s…

Basshead

When Genius/GZA, Inspectah Deck, and Masta Killa pass the mike between them on “Silverback,” one of the best cuts on Masta Killa’s No Said Date, lyrically working themselves into a frenzy, it just sounds right. It makes you feel as if it’s 1995 all over again, back when Wu-Tang Clan…

Hook Up

It seemed only yesterday that Friendster (www.friendster.com) was the destination for young, hip Americans to build their own personalized Websites and participate in a worldwide online network. But Friendster is so, like, two years ago. These days everyone is heading over to MySpace (www.myspace.com). Since the Los Angeles-based portal launched…

Latin or American?

Given the fact that about half the videos in rotation on MTV Latin America are in English, it’s not surprising that artists such as Black Eyed Peas, Lenny Kravitz, and Beastie Boys performed at the network’s third annual Video Music Awards Latin America on October 21. The event opened with…

Various Artists

Nearly a year after the release of DFA Records Presents: Compilation #1, the New York label continues to compile its output with the aptly titled DFA Compilation #2. Bursting out of the new disco punk scene, Tim Goldsworthy and James Murphy made DFA (which stands for Death From Above) as…

Ursula 1000

Ursadelica, the second official DJ mix from Alex Gimeno (a.k.a. Ursula 1000), could have just as accurately been called Breaksula, since he runs so rampantly through genres. This makes for consistently surprising bedfellows, like when he rubs Skeewiff’s swingin’ contemporary lounge number “Nitty Gritty” against the neo-garage rock of the…

The Only Children

The Anniversary, a well-known emo outfit from Lawrence, Kansas, has morphed into the dark, bluesy The Only Children. Lead singer Josh Berwanger has a pleasing indie-rock warble that lets him sing his tales of heartbreak, homelessness, and murder with candor, and the band plays everything from ragged Americana stomps to…

Psapp

Psapp’s Galia Durant and Carim Clasmann don’t wanna grow up, but they’re more like garage-sale kids than Toys ‘R Us brats. The London-based duo’s debut album, Tiger, My Friend, is full of toy keyboards, and squeaks and rattles sound off as Durant sings tales of separation anxiety, ponies, and zoos…

Woven Hand

After plowing the dark fields of gothic Americana with his band 16 Horsepower, David Eugene Edwards unveils a third album under his solo moniker Woven Hand. With Edwards’s sinister growl underscored by seething atmospherics, Consider the Birds’ ten songs convey a rumbling sense of peril and foreboding. You can actually…

Wrangler Brutes

Wrangler Brutes is a thrash supergroup that makes a racket reminiscent of Japanese hypercore/power violence acts such as Slight Slappers and Assfort. Their street cred is legit. Vocalist Sam McPheeters and drummer Brooks Headley made their bones in the great hardcore band Born Against; and bass player Cundo Si Murad…

Roni Size

Roni Size After coming up on Bryan Gee and Jumping Jack Frost’s V Recordings, the Mercury Prize-winning, Bristol-based Roni Size then built his own Full Cycle label and released intelligent drum and bass from the Reprazent/Breakbeat Era collectives, including the seminal New Forms and In the Mode. With Return to…

Jacques Chirock

Tired of paying an $8 cover charge to get into a nightclub and drink $6 beers? One cool alternative is Jacques Chirock Fridays, a new party over at Paco’s Tavern in North Miami Beach. Operating on the principle of free parties and fairly priced drinks, this is rapidly becoming a…

Latin Funk Music Festival

Trying to get out of a bland funk? From the land of chimichurri, mojo, and mole comes the flavorful second annual Latin Funk Music Festival, which should get your chops drooling and your cola wagging. Take a hit of Grammy-nominated Afro-Cuban soul group Yerba Buena, and let Suenalo wash it…

Never Mind Mariel, Here’s The Eat

On September 21, 1996, I turned nineteen years old. The night was hot and muggy. The streets of Little Haiti still glowed from the light afternoon rain, and Churchill’s Pub was in full swing, packed with all kinds of people armed with alcoholic drinks. In those days, one could hang…

Basshead

The warehouse belonging to Not Just Hype sits at the edge of Little Haiti on NE 59th Street. Leo Beletsky, who helped found the hip-hop political group, noted that they only procured the warehouse a few weeks ago, thanks to his own money and some key donations. Now, this modest…

The Goods Fella

If Jim Camacho, ex-singer, bassist, and architect of Nineties rock and roll prospects The Goods, is bitter about his missed chances at national stardom, he isn’t letting on. Sitting at a table outside a Kendall strip mall and nursing a coffee on a steamy September night, the unceasingly affable musician…