Francisco Aguabella

From the Latin jazz imprint of San Francisco-based groove merchant Ubiquity Records comes the latest in a reputable catalog of CDs guaranteed to satisfy. Ochimini is Latin percussion legend Francisco Aguabella’s fifth release on the label. Despite decades of professional performances and a rangy discography that includes dates and recordings…

Sigmatropic

Relying on a cheap pun isn’t the best way to start a review. But given Sigmatropic’s origins, as well as its strange mix of sounds, the oft-quoted expression “it’s all Greek to me” somehow seems appropriate. Taken literally, Sigmatropic refers to Greek producer/multi-instrumentalist Akis Boyatzis, who recruited several musicians to…

Firewater

The title of Firewater’s fifth album, Songs We Should Have Written, would suggest that this New York-based bunch is falling back on a pop music primer. In fact it’s more an affirmation of their own musical stance, a heady art-punk mix that blends such disparate elements as klezmer, Indian wedding…

Badawi

Was it so long ago that hip music prognosticators proclaimed electronica as the new musical form that was going to render rock and roll, jazz, etc. irrelevant? Still, although it never caught on in America like it did in England, the genre has refused to crumple in the trend-end of…

Alien Nation

While most South Bitch DJs are resolutely earthbound in their advocacy of the good thug life, Richard “Q-Bert” Quitevis is from planet Mars, a UFO with lightning-quick hands. Since emerging from the Bay Area’s potent hip-hop scene in the early Nineties, Q-Bert has evolved from a dominant hip-hop DJ with…

Disturbing the Dead

Most revelers at an Art Miami Wreck 2 party in the now-infamous Rectangle ArtSpace on January 10 were completely unaware that a grisly scene was found there the week before. The decomposing body of an artist was discovered in a loft on the same floor that now housed 70 or…

Rogue State

On this breezy January afternoon, the Doubletree Surfcomber Hotel hardly looks like the future home of the inaugural Miami Music Multimedia Summit. The hotel entrance leads to a long outside corridor that is infamous around South Beach for being confusing and difficult to navigate; it leads to a pool area…

Paparazzi Propaganda

An anonymous e-mail that was sent out to dozens of clubs and publications last week is causing quite a stir. Apparently somebody has it in for high-profile celebrity photographer Seth Browarnik and the way he treats his picture-taking peers. Whoever is behind the campaign prefers to “remain anonymous,” hiding under…

Attack of the Apes

“We are proud to be a Miami band,” says drummer Toto González after taking part in a round of spoken dreams, wishes, and resolutions for the new season with his band, Sóniko. The Latin altrock quartet is about to celebrate its third anniversary in February; as a graduation party of…

Blood, Bites, and Brazil

In the photo gallery on the Mosquitos Website, www.mosquitosnycom a single picture footnotes the raison d’être for the group’s self-titled debut, a bossa nova/indie-pop love child that’s earning praise from imbibers of cool drinks and stirring hipsters’ hips. From above, we see singer Juju Stulbach, a slight young woman in…

Tego Calderón

With his supersized Afro, just-woke-up-after-a-late-night voice, and I-can’t-believe-I’m-a-star humility, Tego Calderón might be the most lovable thug of all time. Certainly he’s the most loved rapper in reggaetón. His 2002 debut album El Abayarde finally dragged the genre out of the underground, where young Boricuas had been toasting in Spanish…

Alicia Keys; Kelis

Self-contained female performers have always been a rarity in R&B, so when one comes along, overreaction is perhaps inevitable. In 2001 plenty of those who heard Alicia Keys were so knocked out by the preternaturally poised nineteen-year-old pianist that they failed to notice that much of the music from her…

Immortal Technique

Like their punk-rock brethren, “conscious” rappers are fond of making flat-earth statements about overthrowing the government and obtaining some form of abstract justice for the people. But it’s not Harlem rapper Immortal Technique’s ability to spew well-written calls to kill the pigs that makes him so deadly; instead it’s allegations…

Mu

Quite possibly the weirdest album yet from nomadic house music hero Maurice Fulton, Afro Finger and Gel was born out of his relationship with Japanese frontwoman Mutsumi Kanamori. The two met at the infamous Electric Chair party in Sheffield, England, and apparently it was love at first sight. He had…

Joël Virgel

Recently Joël Virgel’s sexy, throaty voice resonated throughout the house music world on the Latin Project’s “Lei Lo Lai,” which soared to near-anthem status last year thanks to a prescient remix by New York house mainstays Masters at Work. But the debut album for this French-Caribbean artist, who was raised…

Standard Bearer

Back in the Sixties, at a time when the only male jazz singers on the scene seemed to be the swingers of Rat Pack notoriety and lounge lizard fame — Frankie and Sammy and Deano — Mark Murphy was keeping the true flame alive with his post-bop renditions of standards…

Snow Bunnies

Michael Robbins, Justin Levine, and Perry Sasson (still the smoothest name in nightlife) of Empire Events — or, as other nightlifers know them, the J Crew — have been hosting a Sno party at Pearl, the elegant restaurant/lounge atop Nikki Beach, on Saturday nights. The plush surroundings make a perfect…

After Shock

In the past four years, the music business has experienced a near-meltdown, hemorrhaging billions of dollars and sending shock waves that have reverberated all the way to South Florida’s dance music industry. Slow CD sales, a lukewarm U.S. economy, and peer-to-peer downloading of copyrighted music have continued to hammer away…

Sites and Sounds

Anyone who admits to an obsession for music knows by now that there are too few stores in South Florida to effectively feed a collector’s habit. With the limited selection found at major retail outlets like Spec’s, Circuit City, Best Buy, and the prohibitively expensive Virgin Megastore, only a smattering…

The Nightingale

The first time I spun at a reggae house party, I brought two armfuls of records with me. One was full of roots, ska, and rocksteady, for warming things up. The other was filled with dancehall — mostly single riddim compilations that were easy to mix — for when the…

On the Come Up

When Ted Lucas, founder and impresario behind local rap giant Slip-N-Slide, wanted to announce his new distribution deal with Capitol Records after four platinum-studded years with Atlantic Records, he didn’t reach out to the Miami Herald or New Times. Instead he posted a statement on www.305hiphop.com, the year-old online magazine…

Jeff Bradshaw

On his contemporary jazz debut, Bone Deep, trombonist Jeff Bradshaw attempts to elevate his instrument from a dispensable novelty to a featured attraction. Guest singer Jill Scott’s presence on the lead single, “Slide,” helps tremendously: Supplying her usual brand of creamy vocals to an organ-and-bass-driven track produced by Junius Bervine,…