Tracy’s Tempest

It’s Memorial Day weekend and Miami is partying. With no alarm clocks set for Monday’s workday world, South Beach sidewalks and nightclubs have turned into a rocking planet hip-hop. But a few miles away and across Biscayne Bay on NE Eleventh Street another huge (if not overlooked) scene is building…

X Spots the Mark

Something magical was in the air back then. Maybe not everyone knew it, but there would be change a-comin’. The year: 1976. Hippies dominated fashion, forcing kids in L.A. and San Francisco to peg their jeans, rip their shirts, and spike their hair as a big middle finger to all…

Grumpy Old Men

Metallica needs an image overhaul the way frontman James Hetfield needed to dry out. It has been almost six years since the band bestowed an album of original studio material upon the world, and in the interim, Metallica has dropped dud after dud. Since 1997’s lukewarm Reload, there’s been a…

He Said, He Said

“I’m a laid-back guy,” remarks Edgar “Push Button Objects” Farinas as he pulls a long drag of his cigarette. He and Basshead are sitting on the patio of his family’s Westchester home, where he’s currently staying while in between apartments: We watch torrents of rain sweep onto the lawn, onto…

Imaginary Places

Like tumbling down a rabbit hole and finding yourself wandering dizzily through a strange, surreal new world, attending an Of Montreal show necessitates a wholesale abandonment of reality. Led by the ever-fanciful Kevin Barnes, the Athens, Georgia band dwells at the intersection where Sgt. Pepper, Lewis Carroll, Dr. Seuss, and…

Happy Hands

When Sammy Figueroa smiles, it’s one of those mile-wide smiles that starts at the bottom of his feet and spreads to his entire face, then fills up the room. It’s a grin that Tito Puente and Mongo Santamaria used to flash and Francisco Aguabella still does. There’s something about congueros…

Pure Hearted

On a recent Friday night Snowhite, working mother and one of Miami’s most enduring and popular turntablists (she’s this year’s Miami New Times Readers’ Choice for Best Club DJ), is feeding her maternal recipe for a balanced aural diet to an urbane crowd during an afterparty at Kiss Steakhouse and…

Frankie J

Singer/songwriter Frankie J was one of the more rico members of the very suave A.B. Quintanilla y Los Kumbia Kings, a group put together by Quintanilla in 1999 as a sort of Latin Backstreet Boys (all eight members were between ages sixteen and twenty-four). If you don’t recognize the name…

Maraca

Following a long-held (and arguably outdated) Cuban recording tradition, Cuban flute player Orlando “Maraca” Valle and his orchestra’s previous albums have included a potpourri of styles from free-flowing Afro-jazz to traditional danzón as well as the energetic dance club son that is the band’s true domain. Maraca may be partial…

The Cramps

The Cramps debuted in 1978 with the album Lucky 13, and 25 years later their rockabilly-fed and horror movie-suckled swamp circus continues through a thirteenth studio album. Few peers can rival the Cramps for sheer dedication to a singular audio-visual aesthetic with themes and content (aliens, babes, drugs) that may…

Ex Models

If you can imagine being straitjacketed and locked for a few days in a tiny white room illuminated by the harshest of fluorescent lighting while being deprived of your schizophrenia medication, then you’re on your way to understanding the Ex Models’ second album, Zoo Psychology. Like the Jesus Lizard but…

Sleepless in Seattle

Though they’re named after a Smiths song (which in turn was named after a quote from Jack Kerouac’s The Dharma Bums), Pretty Girls Make Graves has precious little to do with English fop-pop. The loud-rawkin’, female-fronted, energetic Seattle quintet is well-versed with life on the road, though, having toured incessantly…

Where the B-Boys Are

It’s a sweltering poolside afternoon in Miami Beach at the Ramada Inn. The tiki bar with its dry, weathered, and sunburned wood speaks subtly of days gone by. Its hardened, discolored fissures, once witness to an ethnic and cultural evolution on South Beach, now give shelter from the heat to…

Against All Odds

In Dead Prez’s world, politics and activism usually take precedence over the music or, to be more precise, motivate the music and give it a reason for being. Every song is another opportunity to talk about issues, whether it’s the gentrification of “Hip-Hop,” the transformation of urban America into a…

God’s Work

Some of the best bands in the Seventies were the ugliest-looking dudes,” says Dave Gimenez, lead singer and songwriter for the North Carolinian band Mae. “It used to be if your music was killer, that’s all that mattered … I was looking through Boston’s CD — if these guys looked…

Mirage

The Miami Beach Convention Center parking lot is an odd place to film a video. Certainly, walking along Meridian Avenue, you would never notice that amid an encirclement of big rig trucks and mobile homes sit iced-out rappers, dressed down in jeans shorts and sports jerseys, and scantily clad models…

Roy Hargrove presents the RH Factor

Texas-born Roy Hargrove, part of the second wave of Young Lions to emerge in recent years, has made his name as a reliable trumpeter, a distinctive player, and imaginative soloist. He has released a dozen albums since 1989, including a pair of notable concept discs: He teamed with Christian McBride…

Cherrywine

Over a decade ago, Ishmael Butler was Butterfly in Digable Planets, the fleetingly famous, jazz-influenced, sampladelic softie trio who released two albums and one breakout single, 1992’s “Rebirth of Slick (cool like dat).” Now he adopts a starkly different persona as Cherrywine, a parody of pimp culture, the polar opposite…

J. Boogie’s Dubtronic Science

Justin “J. Boogie” Boland first gained fame as a co-founder of Beatsauce, the weekly underground hip-hop radio show broadcast on San Francisco college station KUSF-FM, so it’s no surprise that his first full-length effort as J. Boogie’s Dubtronic Science is a cool, sensual trip that mixes beat elements with various…

Ready to Rumble

The last time Anthony Rother was here, during this year’s WMC, he had a packed Soho Lounge lit to the gills from his low-frequency bass riffs and synthesized vocals. While the atmosphere was more back-in-the-day — all hand-raising reminiscent of rock concerts — the electro-funk Rother threw down on his…

Ain’t Nobody

Everyone knows Chaka Khan from her “glory days,” an era that, by most standards, began in 1973 with a hit-laden five-year run as the frontwoman for Rufus and slowly faded away after her vital 1984 cover of Prince’s “I Feel For You.” She’s had an unassuming career ever since while…

Sergio Sigala

SERGIO SIGALA CASA TUA, 1700 James Avenue, Miami Beach, 305-673-1010 In the few months it’s been operating, Casa Tua in Miami Beach has cultivated a mystique that has made a weekend dinner reservation the most sought-after ticket in town. The understated refinement of its home (a former private residence) and…