Rotations

Peter Jefferies/Jono Lonie At Swim 2 Birds (Drunken Fish) Out of print since its 1987 release in New Zealand, an obscurity to even the most fervid Kiwi-noise devotees, At Swim 2 Birds has been the missing link in the long, weird history of Peter Jefferies. Arriving just after the disbanding…

Reverb

This column wasn’t supposed to be an obituary, although it was meant to sound a knell of finality, if not death. This is my last column for New Times; I’ve decided to go back home to Memphis to work on a project that seems too good to pass up. After…

It’s Alright, Ma

Bob Dylan didn’t die. Apparently the state of his condition following his May 25 hospitalization for histoplasmosis was greatly exaggerated by the news media. (“DYLAN COULD BE IN FIGHT FOR LIFE,” wailed the headline from the May 29 edition of the New York Post.) Still, the news of that hospitalization…

Rotations

Various Artists Ultra-Lounge: On the Rocks, Parts One and Two (Capitol) I’ve marveled at the sonic gimmickry and the compositional and arranging genius of Juan Esquivel, I’ve basked in the cheesy tropical splendor of Martin Denny, and I’ve been obsessively passionate about Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra since my mid-teens…

Into the Night

Join owner Digby Leibovitz in saying goodbye to Swirl Shop this Saturday, June 14 (1049 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 534-2060). Leibovitz muses darkly about Swirl’s demise: “People aren’t supporting the small local places. And if they don’t, everything is going to turn corporate.” The blowout begins at 11:00 p.m. with…

Sweet Dreams of Success

The attack is a bit “sweeter” this time around for Matthew Sweet. Instead of the usual jabbing guitars flexing up the straight-forward pop, the singer-songwriter has decided to tone things down. “Up until recently Matthew gave guitar players all the room in the world,” says guitarist Ivan Julian, who has…

Reverb

Despite all the recent press talk about the demise of rock and roll and the glorious advent of electronica, I’ve neither subscribed to the former nor believed for a minute that insipid doodlers like DJ Spooky will become anything close to the Next Big Thing. But then I started thinking:…

What’s Soul Got to Do with It?

Despite her success, Tina Turner has done her best to obscure the fact that she’s a great singer. It doesn’t help that she just launched her latest solo album, Wildest Dreams, and her first U.S. tour in six years at the same time one of her most incendiary early-Seventies performances…

The Joy of Struggle

The musical dynamic of Ed Matus’ Struggle was once described by a fan as “a train coming, then all of a sudden someone pours fudge on top of it.” The Miami quartet — comprising lead guitarist/songwriter Juan Montoya, singer/guitarist Scott Nixon, drummer Robert Lecusay, and recently acquired bassist LeRoy Talcott…

Into the Night

Unfolding under this Thursday evening’s new moon (and every Thursday to follow) is an event that sounds so much like Miami it’s almost cruelly coincidental that it was transplanted from New York: Cafe con Leche at KGB (637 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 534-5420). For years Cafe con Leche was a…

Rotations

The Monks Black Monk Time (Infinite Zero/American) Everything that’s great about the Monks is right there on “Monk Chant,” the lead cut from the group’s 1966 underground classic Black Monk Time, reissued on American’s Infinite Zero imprint after 30 years of obscurity. Over galloping drums, fuzzed-out bass, horror-show organ, trebly…

Reverb

A few words on Pete Moss from some people who knew him. Moss, a fixture on the local music scene for more than ten years, died early last week. No cause of death has been announced. Hal “Boise Bob” Spector, musician: “We met while he was playing in Gay Cowboys…

Into the Night

After seven years at this wonderful newspaper, I’m jumping out of the club parade and into a seminormal job. Unfortunately for me, now I’ll actually have to be up in the morning. This fine piece of work is my last column. My stint as nightlife guru has ended. My replacement,…

Dust to Dust

In the inaugural issue of No Depression — a fanzine out of Seattle that has somehow grown to embody the genre of “insurgent country” — the editors wrote: “We claim Gram Parsons as our unholy ghost, minister of the shotgun wedding of country and rock ‘n’ roll long before the…

The Elements of Style

Take four people from widely varying ethnic and personal backgrounds, put them in a potentially intense situation, then wait for the sparks to fly. It may sound like the formula for some “real life” MTV show or the premise of the next “Must-See TV” program, but it’s actually the secret…

Rotations

Pete Ham 7 Park Avenue (Rykodisc) The mere fact that Badfinger was originally signed to the Beatles’ Apple label unfairly stigmatized the British popsters as a surrogate Fab Four. But unlike their labelmates, Badfinger’s story did not include highlights like soldout shows at Shea Stadium. That story, chronicled in Dan…

Negative Creeps

Oh, sure, nowadays everyone likes Black Sabbath. You know, there used to be rules for this sort of thing. Black Sabbath at one time was viewed as a joke by most folks. The only people who liked them were kids so completely stoned all the time they were mesmerized for…

Everyday People

For someone who considers himself an expressionist, Khadir frontman Lino de la Guardia has had a hard time expressing himself — or rather, he’s found it difficult to get the sounds in his head captured on tape. His frustration is evident when the 32-year-old Miami native talks about all the…

Rotations

Guy Clark Keepers: A Live Recording (Sugar Hill) Keepers is exactly right. The title of Guy Clark’s latest disc suggests that what we have is a collection of a legendary songwriter’s best songs, recorded live. And we do. But what makes this one of the year’s best albums is that…

Into the Night

The party brigade takes charge with yet another benefit as The Undercover Ball rolls into Salvation (1771 West Ave., Miami Beach, 538-4137) tonight (Thursday) for some serious dancing and drinking. It’s all for a good cause, though, as the proceeds go to help the Health Crisis Network. A champagne reception…

Mourn Free

Jay Farrar writes songs from the tangled backwoods of the soul, in a dimly lit recess where what little light shines only illuminates the despair that dogs him. In the seven years since he introduced the first of those songs as one-third of the seminal neo-country band Uncle Tupelo, Farrar,…

She Works Hard for the Love of It

It’s good to be known as the queen of something — especially something widely and wildly influential — even if that something is long gone. Donna Summer doesn’t mind being called the Queen of Disco, but she wants to be known for more than her classic dance-floor anthems of the…