Best New Band

We like ’em young. Especially when a gang of whippersnappers exudes so much raw talent that within months of their band’s formation, they are being booked to record at Criteria under the aegis of local supermanager Rich Ulloa, releasing a subsequent EP produced by Rose Guilot, playing showcases at top…

Best Concert Series

A coffeehouse without a screeching espresso machine? Sans cigarette smoke and incessant chatter? Could it be? It is, in a suburban Kendall neighborhood where a house doubles as Temple Beth Or, the main sanctuary of which is transformed every other month into the concert venue Sacred Grounds Coffeehouse. Launched in…

Best New Music Trend

A boisterous crowd gathered outside the Miami Beach Convention Center in August to protest a performance by Cuban musicians invited to the MIDEM music conference. Inside a more joyful noise was heard as the show went on right in the face of bomb threats. Since April acts from the island…

Best Haitian Band

Some years ago Magnum Band was part of a spirited Little Haiti scene, when there were clubs and cafés dotting the neighborhood and attracting dancers and partiers of the most festive sort. Now the lights in Little Haiti have dimmed, and some local musicians have forlornly returned to their homeland…

Best Band To Break Up In Past Twelve Months

Is it really the end? We fear it is. On a Saturday in February, guitarist Rob Coe and producer Jeremy DuBois are in the upstairs room of North Miami’s Tapeworm studio, mixing songs for a new Fay Wray album. The following Thursday the fiery, clever, and (this description is becoming…

Best Hell Raisers

With song titles such as “1 Horse Town” and “Cowboy Ways,” the Holy Rollin’ Hellfires are a little bit country, but a bootload of rock. After a series of rhythm-section changes, the Beach-based Hellfires solidified, released an eponymous CD, and can now be found detonating their yee-haw ya-yas from Fort…

Best Rap Group

After five years of kicking it locally and fathering some considerable buzz, The Artist Formerly Known as Trick Daddy Dollars has ridden his easy-swinging beats and hard rhymes into the Billboard Top 10. His first LP, Based on a True Story, cracked the R&B Top 100; his followup, www.thug.com, has…

Best Piano Man

Some local musicians pitch a fit about the lack of a live music scene. After arriving from Los Angeles last year, pianist Arthur Hanlon set out to create a scene. Hanlon’s monthly gig at The Globe in Coral Gables, where he jams with a quintet of outstanding local Latin players,…

Best Rock Band

It’s after midnight and, three songs in, the ButterClub has mesmerized the outdoor crowd at a local music festival. Before the next selection, singer Rhett O’Neil asks the technical crew to turn off the stage lights. “We’re all friends here,” he says. For the next 90 minutes a couple of…

Best Cover Band

Rob Elba has distinguished himself as an incisive songwriter and riveting performer both with his former group the Holy Terrors and as a solo artist. This outfit, which also includes members of Radio Baghdad, is something else altogether. In typically ferocious style, Elba and company tear up classic (ahem) tunes…

Best Electronica Release

“The tyranny of the beat” is an apt description of Miami’s club culture, a world where creativity, envelope pushing, and soulfulness are increasingly being shoved aside in favor of generic four-on-the-floorisms. Phoenecia stands as one of a handful of local electronic acts bucking that trend, and Odd Job is an…

Best Caribbean Band

The reggae cover bands of Miami probably don’t like getting up there and grinding out “No Woman No Cry” for the eight-millionth time. Alas, that’s what the mainstream market demands. This is a tough town for an original reggae band, particularly one with a political consciousness, but Benaiah continues to…

The King of Rub-a-Dub

Decades before the sampling-based, cut-and-paste genre of hip-hop took hold, Jamaican dub was recycling recorded riffs like crazy. And “crazy” is the appropriate word. Extrapolating from reggae’s repetitious, hypnotic intensity, beginning in the early Seventies the Jamaican granddaddy of dub, King Tubby, was not only assembling the most psychedelic pop…

Kulchur

Miami’s beat-maestro extraordinaire DJ Craze is everywhere these days, winning the International Turntablist Federation’s scratching competition in Amsterdam, jetting off to Calgary, Canada, for a club date, and receiving accolades from the New York Times. His full-length debut Crazeë Musick is set for release later this month on San Francisco’s…

Best Male Rock Vocalist

It’s fascinating to watch a high-quality band mature, especially when it’s fronted by a talent like Demetrius Brown. As Manchild’s singer-lyricist-guitarist, Brown has proved himself a prolific artist, penning more than 100 songs and performing countless gigs since 1992. Because he is best known for his phenomenal guitar incantations, his…

Turn to the Left and Cough

Combining techno and organic music is not exactly a revolutionary idea anymore. Plenty of groups, from Dubtribe Sound System to Medeski, Martin & Wood, have successfully merged the dance-driven grooves of the turntable underground with the in-the-moment excitement of an improvisational live performance. But few artists can mix the two…

Kulchur

The population of accordion players in South Florida nearly triples this weekend when the Cajun/Zydeco Crawfish Festival 1999 arrives at the Fort Lauderdale Stadium. Don’t be put off by the goofy ads for the event, which focus on the multitude of food and beer vendors, neglecting to mention even one…

Punklitical Aspirations

South Florida’s youth isn’t known for its radical political activism, especially when it comes to creating art. So how’s life in Miami for the politically conscious ska-flavor punk band Against All Authority? Just fine, especially because they’re not here very often. But even when the Miami septet is in town,…

Rotations

Lester Bowie Brass Fantasy The Odyssey of Funk & Popular Music (Atlantic) William Hooker The Distance Between Us (Knitting Factory) Delightfully audacious in both concept and execution, the new albums by revered jazz avant-gardists Lester Bowie and William Hooker are just the kind of screwball longplayers that are anathema for…

Rotations

The Beta Band The Three E.P.s (Astralwerks) It struck me as odd to discover that Britain’s hottest new “techno” act, the Beta Band (in the States they’re on Astralwerks, a label shared by the Chemical Brothers, Air, and many other hip Euro-techno acts), actually sounds more like an older British…

Havana Comes to the Heartland

Cuban bands have been touring the United States with such frequency these days that their appearances in American concert halls, at festivals, and in clubs almost seem commonplace, even in the politically charged environs of Miami. After all it was only a year ago that singer Issac Delgado and his…

The Bones Are Still Rockin’

They’ve been in self-parody mode for so long it’s safe to write them off these days, but give credit to the Cramps for this: They’ve steered numerous punk kids and hipsters toward some of the greatest lost classics in the pantheon of trashy rock, bizarro rockabilly, and fuzzy garage stomps…