Acosta Nation

With his dual Ultra Records releases AM and PM, Miami native and Shadow Lounge resident DJ George Acosta has submitted an impressive résumé for the post of U.S. ambassador to the European kingdom of trance. A regular guest at clubs in Germany and Ibiza for the past five years, Acosta…

Family Filin’

For Marcelino Valdes, the Cuban singer who hopes to release his debut disc on the troubled label RMM, destiny has followed two signs: patience and the musical patrimony carried in the blood of the Valdes family. His Vicentico Valdes, the unforgettable bolero singer whose music was still heard on Havana…

No Cotton Ear Candy

The members of the altrock trio Carnival Waste sit outside a local Starbucks, sipping coffee just before closing time. Cars rush by on darkened U.S. 1 as the musicians try to agree on the cover art for … A Perfect Day, their forthcoming album. The South Florida band’s frontman-keyboardist Robert…

Back in Range

We do this because we love it,” the Crumbs guitarist Johnny B declares over a pint of Guinness in singer-guitarist Raf Classic’s Spartan South Miami apartment. “There sure isn’t any money in it.” In this statement are enough grains of truth to brew a keg of stout. After eight years…

Sharon Shannon & Friends

Over the course of three superb solo albums, a stint with the Waterboys, and celebrity associations with members of U2, Mike Scott, Kirsty MacColl, and others, Irish fiddler and accordionist Sharon Shannon has earned her share of critical kudos. Dubbed Ireland’s Number One Traditional Artist and Folk Artist of the…

Rotations

The phenomenal success of Buena Vista Social Club did much to reawaken interest in Cuban music around the globe, but more remarkable was the effect the album had on the lives of its featured artists. As he approaches his 100th birthday, Compay Segundo probably is the most internationally recognizable of…

Miami vs. Orlando Electronic Dubya

Am I the only person who almost killed herself walking down Washington Avenue during the Winter Music Conference? Didn’t anyone think 37 layers of palm cards and flyers stretching for blocks and blocks just might be a little hard to walk on? Luckily I made it to the show unharmed…

Phoenecia

During the recent World Economic Forum in Cancún, anti-globalization activists took visiting journalists on a tour of what they called the real Cancún: the tin-roofed shantytowns that surround the resorts and nightspots that make up the postcard version of the city. The activists argued that the scrubbed-clean white plaster walls…

Basement Jaxx

Barefoot dancers orbit the DJ booth at Nikki Beach Club, their legs white with sand. Felix Buxton and Simon Ratcliffe, the British duo known as Basement Jaxx, plunge listeners into the wobbly bounce of “Romeo” and the g-funk-inflected swing of “Do Your Thing.” One of the songs (though not one…

Daft Punk

“One More Time” is the ubiquitous and unsurprisingly faceless first single from Daft Punk’s sophomore album, Discovery, but it might as well be an affirmation of the band’s artistic mantra. The track, which throbs on a building 4/4 beat and horns passed down from the gods of disco, seems to…

Old-Skool Cuba

Juan de Marcos Gonzalez, the Havana-based producer behind the Afro-Cuban All Stars and the A&R man and conceptual artist of the now-legendary Buena Vista Social Club, is on the road behind his latest CD, Baila Mi Son, featuring yet another unsung Cuban singer, sonero Felix Baloy. After touring the world…

Experimental Orgy

You expect a smoky room for this music. Not the cigarette swirls that surround a sultry jazz singer. Not a dry-ice machine rolling out fog to electronic dance music. I’m thinking more burnt-toast smoke, anything that might explain the sustained high-pitch alarm-tone coming through the speakers just now and piercing…

All Roads Lead to the Rom

Castanets and tablas may seem an unlikely combination. But a New York City production called Nacho Nacho: Gypsy Storytelling actually combines flamenco traditions with northern Indian kathak dance styles. Samir Chatterjee, one of the foremost Indian tabla drummers in the United States, conceived and directed the project. “Flamenco has a…

Acting Ting

Outside a hangar at Perry Airport in south Broward, grips and gaffers roll out cords and set up lights to a dancehall beat as a DJ teases a captive audience of film extras and celluloid hopefuls. Inside the nearby Maydays Bar and Lounge, a young woman in bandanna, bikini top,…

Arena Plutonium

For U2’s Elevation Tour 2001, kicked off last month with two shows at the National Car Rental Center, Willie Williams designed the most exquisite set in the history of arena rock. So artfully spare that there were no obstructed views from any of the seats surrounding the stage, the production…

Love for Sale

Jerry Rivera has stayed offstage for the past year, taking a turn that may surprise those who have followed his voice since he was the youngest salsa singer in the world. The pupil and undisputed heir of erotic salsa pioneer Lalo Rodriguez, Rivera risks losing the salsa faithful he has…

Various

Artist/director Julian Schnabel may not be immortalized with a monument in Havana à la John Lennon, or even recognized with an Oscar, but Before Night Falls will endure as a requisite portrait of the agony and the ecstasy of the intelligentsia in revolutionary Cuba. Schnabel took poetic license with the…

Sarah Vaughan

Duke Ellington Allegro Sarah Vaughan and Duke Ellington are entries in Allegro’s Cocktail Hour series of double-shot tributes to mid-twentieth-century musical giants. Attractively, if sparsely, packaged musical icebreakers for the novice listener, the two-CD sets are an intoxicating (and, just under $18, affordable) introduction to some of the sweetest sounds…

Still On the Line

Who sent you? Who sent you?” ask the intimidators. Slap! Crack! Pop! Crash! The radio crackles with the sound of a man being beaten. “Who sent you here?” the voice repeats. The terrified captive stutters, his big lips fumbling for the words, “The HATERS!” On January 10, the day former…

The House That Junior Built

Level. 12:01 a.m. After night falls Junior Vasquez rises. His shaved head surfaces like a planet orbiting the turntables twenty feet above the dance floor. His eyes, unobscured tonight by his signature wraparound shades, are intent on the spinning vinyl. Now and then he flashes the grin of a man…

The Jazz Singer

Audiences have known local fixture Raul Midon as soulman, singer/songwriter, and Latin balladeer. Some, in a reverential sense, even say he is “a monster.” Absent from the live scene of late, Midon is back with a different tone. He would prefer to be called, simply, a jazz singer. “I love…

The Silos

Former Florida homeboy Walter Salas-Humara may not have invented Latin alternative, but, to retool an old expression, he certainly was Latino before Latino was cool. Over the course of six critically acclaimed albums with his band the Silos; two solo stabs; a pair with his sometime side band, the Setters;…