Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds

How do you like your religion served up? Raining blood and lakes of hellfire, or lambs and lions idling side by side in the green grass? Your particular holy bent may determine your taste for the gritty Abattoir Blues and the pastoral The Lyre of Orpheus, two very different offerings…

Molotov

Following their 2002 album Dance and Dense Denso, which included the valiant “Frijolero” (“Beaner”), the four guys in Molotov, Mexico City’s sarcastic answer to Rage Against The Machine, developed a new bomb between studio albums. Con Todo Respeto (With All Due Respect), a covers album reminiscent of Rage’s own Renegades,…

UNKLE

UNKLE is Mo’ Wax tastemaker James Lavelle’s all-star project. He and songwriter Richard File gather a noteworthy group of musicians for Never, Never, Land, and although the grocery list of guests is overwhelming, the duo elicit interesting performances from each participant. Where Psyence Fiction, Lavelle’s inaugural UNKLE collaboration with DJ…

Afrika Bambaataa

It has been 22 years since Afrika Bambaataa and the Soulsonic Force released “Planet Rock,” a seminal hip-hop cut that borrowed its funky electro goodness from the German act Kraftwerk, and Bambaataa is still perfecting the beat, whether it’s in hip-hop, breakbeat, or drum and bass form. After releasing several…

Morgan Geist

On the year’s best officially released DJ mix, Unclassics, Morgan Geist turns water into wine by presenting Italo and Euro disco of the early Eighties as a clean, soulful form. He plays down Italo’s low-rent synth-love and emphasizes its disco roots, peaking with Purple Flash’s “We Can Make It,” a…

Plantlife

Much like Amp Fiddler’s Waltz of a Ghetto Fly, Plantlife’s The Return of Jack Splash is the amoeboid representation of modern funk: ritualistic and improvised. The Return of Jack Splash is a series of riffs cut into nineteen tracks, with the L.A. band’s lead singer Jack Splash and backup singers…

As One

Out of the Darkness is the sixth album from English producer Kirk Degiorgio and, following 2001’s 21st Century Soul, only his second to be released stateside. Initially titled Into the Darkness, a nod to our lives in a post-9/11 world, the Ipswitch-based Degiorgio changed the title to honor the birth…

Infrastructure’s One Year Anniversary

For the past year, resident DJs Danny Bled, Ben Matrix, Miss K, along with emcees Duchess, Nico, and Mad have brought national and regional spinners to Lounge 16, that much-underrated incubator of underground culture, for a weekly celebration of drum and bass called Infrastructure. If not for them, you would…

Pinback

Pinback’s new release, a catchy indie rock affair entitled Summer in Abaddon, could be its best work yet. Intricate vocal harmonies provide an essential component to its sound, which took three years of fine-tuning. “Zach and I are different people,” says multi-instrumentalist/vocalist Rob Crow of his coconspirator, Armistead Burwell “Zach”…

American Music Club

In the early Nineties, American Music Club was hailed for its original sound and singer/guitarist Mark Eitzel’s lyrical talents, which ranged from self-deprecating to astutely perceptive of humanity’s shortcomings. Now, after ten years in limbo, the godfathers of emo have reunited. Far from sounding outdated, however, the San Francisco group’s…

Blowfly’s XXX Halloween Spook-tacular

While Blowfly, the original dirty rapper, is well past the acceptable age for trick-or-treating, that won’t stop him from squeezing into a pair tights and donning his shiny mask and flowing cape one more time. The foul-mouthed “Hole Man” is scheduled to deliver a scary set of triple-X tongue-lashings at…

Creep Show

How’s this for a lineup: Easy Star All-Stars, progenitors of the infamous “Dub Side of the Moon” interpretation of Pink Floyd’s classic album; Bunny from rave stars Rabbit in the Moon; the bizarre cover band Mini Kiss; hard house veteran Junior Sanchez; one-time rapper Princess Superstar and Alexander Technique, the…

Jacki-O

Jacki-O’s debut album, Poe Little Rich Girl, is finally seeing release after her former label, Warner Bros., temporarily shelved it back in February. Now signed to TVT, Jacki-O and her Poe Boy production team have retooled the album, adding key collaborations with rap stars such as Ghostface Killah, and sharpening…

L-Smooth

Fridays, Amika and Privilege With so many hip-hop DJs angling for stardom in the ultracompetitive South Beach nightlife scene, you’ve got to be a hustler. L-Smooth knows how to keep it moving: He often appears on Mun2’s video program The Roof, helps Melissa Giles organize the Soulfrito Urban Latin Music…

Heave Ho

TV on the Radio’s utter distinctiveness has driven critics to scrounge for adjectives and pronouns. The vocal harmonies of Kyp Malone and Tunde Adebimpe have been compared to everything from the Beach Boys and Peter Gabriel to gospel music. But lead singer Adebimpe denies having any religious aspirations beyond “the…

Deep Space

From a strictly visual standpoint, Laurie Anderson is on a simplicity kick these days. For the bulk of her nearly 30-year career, the famed New York City performance artist treated audiences to elaborate multimedia blowouts combining monologues and poetry with experimental film and video, synthetic music, modern dance, still photography,…

Elliott Smith

Around this time last year, police detectives were examining the body of 34-year-old Elliott Smith and scouring the Los Angeles apartment the cherished singer-songwriter shared with his girlfriend, trying to determine whether or not the two mortal knife wounds to his heart were self-inflicted. Although suicide was presumed — given…

Jimmy Eat World

Jimmy Eat World’s hook-happy brand of emo rock has always sounded polished and accessible, yet as their fourth album proves, the Phoenix foursome hasn’t passed through the personality removal machine on their way to mainstream success. Futures features lots of splendid little touches: the delicate psych-pop detour in the middle…

Ted Leo and the Pharmacists

East Coast pub-punk troubadour Ted Leo is a mad pundit in the tradition of Elvis Costello and Billy Bragg, and Shake the Sheets is his tautest album to date. Slithering songs such as “Angels’ Share,” “The One Who Got Us Out,” and “Bleeding Powers” acknowledge the downward spiral of American…

Le Tigre

No woman is an island. But in 1999, New York-based electropunks Le Tigre suggested one could be, since the DIY dance-punks — fronted by Bikini Kill’s socio-politico riot grrrl Kathleen Hanna — sounded equally idiosyncratic and didactic at the time, their sole peer being Germany’s Chicks on Speed. On Le…

Beans

As a soloist in a post-Anti-Pop Consortium career, Beans has attracted mixed reviews from listeners fearful of a lone, enigmatic artist voicing wily and esoteric raps with no one else to distort the static. A true auteur, Beans shuns forced collaborations, and he doesn’t seem to mind the hermetic claustrophobia…

Jin

After a year of unexplained delays, Jin’s debut album has finally dropped, only to sound less like the proverbial next shit than late-Nineties hip-pop with a Chinese face. From the 8 Mile-like anthem “Here Now” and the maraca-shaking Latina ode “Señorita” to the hard Ruff Ryders beats of “Handz Off,”…