State of the Art

Live hip-hop music — MCs performing alongside an actual band — is rare these days, unless you count VH1’s annual attempt with Hip-Hop Honors and the ever-present Roots crew. However, in Miami this dearth of live hip-hop is not a problem. Trailblazers such as Mayday! are paving the way for…

The Trachtenburg Family Slideshow Players

The Trapp Family Singers had the sound of music. The Partridges, well, they just wanted everyone to get happy. The Carpenters? More sunshiny stuff about mountains and the weather. Yep, whether real or fictional, family bands have mostly stuck in the mind for their sheer cringe-inducing factor. Still, over the…

Arturo Sandoval

Miami’s favorite Cuban émigré, Latin jazz luminary, professor, and Dizzy Gillespie acolyte Arturo Sandoval will lay down his scorching Cubop trumpet lines on his own time at his own place. Billed as “The Trumpet’s Journey Through Cuban Rhythms,” this show appropriately features Afro-Cuban big band and bebop but also highlights…

Phil Weeks

Journeyman French DJ Phil Weeks will be inspiring the soiling and subsequent washing of your dirty laundry at Laundry Bar when he brings it for a one-off on December 15. It’s true, too — the washing machines are available at 7:00 a.m., so if you’ve been really, really rotten, you…

Jive Collective

In case we didn’t get you to break down and check out Jive Collective at its last Jazid show, luck is with you, because the band will be there again December 11. Bar-goers weary of the house/trance same-sameness everywhere in the city might find Jazid something of a sanctuary, even…

Sylvain Sylvain and Sam Yaffa

A year ago the New York Dolls performed at Art Loves Music, the free concert on the sand that’s part of the official opening-night festivities for Art Basel Miami Beach. They must have liked it here, because this year they’re back. Sort of. Two members of the pioneering American glam…

Lucrecia

International salsa queen Lucrecia has made it to Miami quite a few times during her long and prolific musical career. She has consistently shown equal adeptness at calming the crowd via soothing serenades like the romantic “Declaración de Amor” and livening up shows with thumping numbers like “Despiste.” One particular…

Quintron and Miss Pussycat

These past few years, the term garage rock has been bandied about in the mainstream press and on music channels in a way that could make one think there’s some sort of revival going on. You know the names and the videos, but if you think a couple of Stooges…

The Wallace Roney Group

The talents of trumpeter Wallace Roney, an alumnus of the latter-day Miles Davis group, have sometimes been obscured by the shadow of that venerable jazz giant. The three-time Grammy winner’s gifts include the fine lyricism and sensitive dynamics he brought to Me’Shell NdegéOcello’s intermittently bombastic opus “Al Falaq 113” from…

The Wagon Wheel Gang

The Wagon Wheel Gang is an ever-growing, eclectic group of artists from diverse musical backgrounds with the common goal of spreading joy through re-creating their country, roots, and bluegrass originals. Six members of the Lutton family provide vocals for the Gang, which is led by Miami’s eccentric drummer and banjo…

Wendy Pedersen

Since its resurrection four years ago, the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Miami’s jazz series has attracted some of South Florida’s most renowned jazz artists. Somewhat breaking the mold, the church has invited Miami-based singer Wendy Pedersen to perform for the third time. An award-winning jazz vocalist, she is equally at…

Sasha

Over at Space, a Digweed-less Sasha will light up his Mac for the up-all-nighters, hoping to wipe the been-there off of their faces via an ever-changing mix of mantle-deep house and experimental downloads fresh off the boat. Constantly barraged by new MP3s from electro-tweaking hopefuls around the world, the superstar…

Super Battle of the Bands

Remember that scene from Freaky Friday in which Lindsay Lohan wins the battle of the bands and her family becomes reunited and everything is great and grand? No? If you don’t know that movie, maybe you are familiar with the concept of a battle of the bands. Several groups compete…

Azalia Snail

The early 1990s belong to the silver age of the American do-it-yourself music scene. By the time the new decade dawned, the ability to record, print, and distribute a record or CD was well within the reach of practically anyone in the States, and the amount of product in stores…

Paul Van Dyk

For all the disaffection you might feel over being spoiled with another Paul Van Dyk performance in Miami, one look at his roots is enough to see he has had quite the struggle getting here. “At one time I only earned one deutsche mark a day,” he reminisces of the…

Disposable Thumbs

Zach Lewis has experienced the intense scrutiny that accompanies performing a one-man show. With a laptop and an electric guitar as his only companions onstage, he is solo act Disposable Thumbs. Auditory deception strikes listeners who have not seen Lewis strum his guitar and tap his MIDI pedal, for Disposable…

The Beddy Ford Band

November 24 will be a busy day for the Beddy Ford Band, because the quartet will be headlining two shows in Miami. Beddy Ford employs the most phenomenal, state-of-the-art sound equipment to create its original sound, reminiscent of Nirvana-era Seattle. Though the band’s hardware is expensive, the boys dress casually,…

La Oreja de Van Gogh

Known as the formal successor of the legendary Eighties Spanish pop group Mecano, La Oreja de Van Gogh has a way of taking the genre to new frontiers. Deeply manifested in the bandmates’ music is a prodigious ability to spill their hearts out through solid keyboard strings and bass lines,…

Peter Rauhofer

Peter Rauhofer was raised in the angular and restricted channels of the Viennese music scene. But alas, deviancy would come in the form of the progressive Radio Luxembourg and young Rauhofer’s cassette deck, with which he’d waste hours taping the sweet new jams floating across the airwaves. So now, twenty…

Genitorturers

Way back, Marilyn Manson and the Spooky Kids would rent a van from Crease and cruise down from Broward to play what became known as the “chocolate cow” shows (don’t ask, don’t tell) at the perfect rock and roll club, Washington Square in South Beach. And even then, clueful rock…

Young Love

Linkin Park and Evanescence achieved massive success in the earlier half of this decade for two reasons: inflated, therapy-session-worthy you’ve-got-your-stadium-rock-in-my-techno hooks and angst-ridden, anthemic sentiments universalized to the point where listeners could locate themselves and their own unique problems therein. Young Love, an NYC band fronted by singer/songwriter Dan Keyes,…

DJ Rolando

Born in the 1970s in southwest Detroit, Rolando grew up heavily influenced by his Latin rhythms and percussion. When he heard DJ Jeff Mills mix as “The Wizard,” he discovered the sounds of techno. Through a mutual friend, he was introduced to “Mad” Mike Banks and promptly became a member…