The 6ths

After a decade knocking around in relative anonymity with the indie in-crowd, Stephin Merritt lately has joined the ranks of pop music’s who’s who. The superlatives garnered by his band the Magnetic Fields’ one-of-a-kind, three-CD musical revue 69 Love Songs have turned him into something of an alterna-celebrity. For his…

Andre Williams

Andre Williams began his musical career as a novelty-tune R&B crooner in Detroit during the Fifties, penning and singing songs such as “Bacon Fat,” “Jail Bait,” and “The Greasy Chicken.” He went on to more songwriting and producing, working for Berry Gordy at Motown during its heyday, but a fondness…

Double Cross

Launching the first annual Latin Grammys at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on September 13, the Latin Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (LARAS) took no risks. Instead the first-ever predominantly Spanish-language broadcast on a major U.S. television network tailored Latin sounds to prevailing U.S. pop tastes. Nothing ventured;…

Unamerican Music

It’s no longer news to hear the British are coming. It should, however, give pause to American acts to learn that once again those dastardly redcoats have found a way to hand us our lunch on an old-time rock and roll commemorative platter. We may not think much of our…

Three’s a Charm

The variety of blues lined up for this year’s B.B. King Blues and Barbecue Festival makes for an exciting bill. Susan Tedeschi opens the show as an up-and-coming, third-generation blues singer and guitarist from Boston, Massachusetts, about as far out of the Mississippi Delta as she could hail. Yet with…

Sabah Habas Mustapha and the Jugala All Stars

Just ten years ago, riding the leading edge of world beat was a gaggle of guys in fezzes claiming the last name of Mustapha. The 3 Mustaphas 3 deadpanned that they came to London from the Balkan town of Szegerely by smuggling themselves inside a shipment of refrigerators. They celebrated…

Various Artists

This is the fifth release on Sonic Youth’s self-released label, but it also is one of the few on SYR that is not exclusively by the band itself. A collaboration between Youth bassist/vocalist Kim Gordon, “downtown turntable artiste” DJ Olive, and drum programmer Ikue Mori (former drummer for the No-Wave…

Time on His Side

Luis Enrique, one of the most important figures in the late-Eighties romantic salsa movement, is a familiar face on the Miami club scene. The Nicaraguan native, who emigrated to California in the midst of the 1978 Sandinista revolution, has been playing all over town since first following the rhythms of…

Declaration of Independence

Ani DiFranco exists on an entirely other level. She may walk and talk like a regular human being, but she’s different. She does things most of us dream about. And it’s not just the successful performer end of things. She’s turned down every invitation to the corporate picnic and managed…

Three-Minute Hero

Deceptively simple, inherently romantic, and by its very nature obsessed with the past, power pop is a hard thing for most artists to get right. Maybe that’s because the people who helped create it — Buddy Holly, Phil Spector, the Beatles, Brian Wilson — were so damn good at it…

Teddy Thompson/Rickie Lee Jones

He’s the son of Richard and Linda Thompson — hence the no-shit CD review, because Teddy is the heir to more than three decades’ worth of giddy accolades and piss-poor sales — and dear ol’ dad shows up on five of the debut’s ten sing-alongs. But 24-year-old Teddy, who lacks…

The Waco Brothers

His full-time band the Mekons haven’t made a decent album in damn near a decade, but Jon Langford’s punked-out country group the Waco Brothers have been on a hellacious hot streak since their 1995 debut. Inevitably tagged in the rock press as a honky-tonk Clash, the Wacos actually are a…

Local Notions

As a lapsed Catholic and devout agnostic, I have a deep-seated aversion to anything resembling ritual. If I notice a pattern emerging, I try to curb it before it becomes routine. Now the eating, sleeping, breathing thing is inescapable and there are always favorite restaurants to return to. But the…

The End of Innocence

Having sold more than 16 million CDs within weeks of her second release, Britney Spears is on top of the world right now. Which means chances are you love her or hate her. If you love her, you most likely are part of the nine-to-fourteen-year-old “tween” music market that, coupled…

Flexible with Frets

It’s midmorning and guitarist Charlie Hunter sounds surprised as he picks up the phone and cuts off his answering machine, which beat him to the punch. “I didn’t even hear the phone ring; I’m going to have to fire my phone,” he says with a laugh from his Brooklyn apartment…

Porter Wagoner

In honor of his roots in the Missouri Ozarks, Porter Wagoner is known as the Thin Man from West Plains, but just The Man would be sufficient. Country music simply would not be what it is today if it were not for Porter the TV host, the talent scout (He…

Ramblin’ Jack Elliott

Professional geezer, Woody Guthrie imitator, and cowboy song collector Ramblin’ Jack Elliott celebrates the release of his biopic documentary, The Ballad of Ramblin’ Jack, with an accompanying soundtrack that serves as an adequate career summary for the wandering troubadour. It’s a testament to Elliott’s persistence in plugging away at his…

Holy Ghost Music

Much has been made of preacher’s son Michael D’Angelo Archer’s roots in his Richmond, Virginia, Pentecostal church. On his long-awaited sophomore effort, Voodoo, D’Angelo himself makes a great deal of the connections between the charismatics of the church and the ancient channeling arts of West Africa. He even uses this…

Sumner Vacation

I entered the music business when it was much more of a cottage industry and now it is a corporate industry. There are advantages to corporate industry…. That’s just the way it is. It’s not going back.” — Sting, America Online chat, December 7, 1999. Sting has benefited greatly. He…

Lame Old Song

Throw a stick and you’re apt to hit someone who thinks the current pop scene is the worst ever! And who, other than nine-year-old white girls, could argue with that logic? Britney Spears and Celine Dion, to name just two, seem more like actors portraying musicians than the real thing…

Dave Alvin

“They are in the public domain,” Dave Alvin writes in the liner notes to his new collection of old folk-song covers. “They belong to nobody. They belong to us all.” This is a pretty sentiment, but it apparently is not one that helps you turn those old folks tunes into…

Giant Sand

Ah, pot rock and its attendant, spacy pleasures. Chore of Enchantment has been out for a while but it can still probably be referred to as Giant Sand’s new record, since the last official release by this group was almost six years ago. Pot rock takes its time. Anyway Giant…