American Music Club

Before parting ways ten years ago, American Music Club forged a multihued, angst-induced sound. After reconvening earlier this year, the group articulates the disenfranchisement and alienation of the new millennium with the ironically titled Love Songs for Patriots. It’s a series of confessional encounters, from the male stripper of “Patriot’s…

John Legend

John Legend’s Get Lifted is a breath of fresh air in the sea of monotony that is R&B. With his Stevie Wonder meets Jay-Z sound, Legend distinguishes himself with writing that vividly captures the nuances of love, commitment, and struggle. On the unapologetic cheating song “She Don’t Have to Know,”…

Devin the Dude

You’ve no doubt heard of wine, women, and song. Devin the Dude, the funniest of Houston’s rappers, has, too. But what really gets him going is weed, women, and bongs. Almost every one of To Tha X-Treme’s seventeen songs concerns either smoke or hotties. He likes to get “higher than…

Shemekia Copeland

Often compared to the great Koko Taylor, twentysomething Shemekia Copeland is a powerhouse singer who blends aspects of funk blues, R&B, and Memphis soul in the proud tradition of belted-from-the-gut vocalists. Reared by her father, the late Texas bluesman Johnny “Clyde” Copeland in his final performance days, she is no…

Stone Love Sound System

Stone Love Sound System, the trendsetting selector crew who pioneered the practice of pulling Jamaica’s top deejays and singers into the studio to whip up exclusive verses for their sets, will be mashing it up in South Florida this New Year’s Eve. But don’t be fooled. There is a group…

Scandal Miami

Yes, New Year’s Eve is a great time to get wasted, make promises you won’t keep, et cetera. Why not get down to some great dance music while you’re at it? After her high-water mark as an R&B/pop princess in the mid-Nineties, Deborah Cox has remade herself as a house…

Farah Juste

Miami resident Farah Juste is one of Haitian music’s premier singer/songwriters. For nearly 30 years, Juste has written provocative political songs championing the rights of Haitians at home, in South Florida and those scattered throughout the Diaspora. Her lyrics embody a rapturous love of country and profound pain for the…

Sofla Kingz

Barrio brothers Tropyco and Bombillo, better known as the Sofla Kingz, have released a CD just in time to capitalize on the current Latin explosion in hip-hop and the rising popularity of reggaeton. The Sofla Kingz have previously distributed their mixtapes all over South Florida for free, but this is…

Set List

Saturdays and Sundays, Fat Tuesdays The better-than-cool DJ Iceberg is a rookie on the rise. He’s the Saturday night resident at Fat Tuesdays on South Beach and the official DJ for the rap duo Sofla Kingz, even though he just started spinning professionally this year. Originally from Martinique, the 25-year-old…

Revolution Soul

When I moved from Madrid to Miami two years ago, I was lost in a sea of poppy salsa and merengue. It was a far cry from the cosmopolitan mix of artistic expression among Spaniards and immigrants in my former, centuries-old Malasaña neighborhood (praised by Manu Chao in “Me Gustas…

Basshead

Miami hip-hop used to be exotic and wild, our town known around the world as the land of bass. Today it’s not so unique, closely resembling regional flavors such as Atlanta crunk and New Orleans bounce (though one could convincingly argue that Miami bass influenced both of these sounds). But…

Busting Loose

If 2004 proved anything to anyone, it is that this damn city can still rock. And we’re talking rock in its many forms. Some young kids picked up guitars, but it was the old guys who came out on top. Decade-plus-strong quartet The Crumbs opened the year with a pair…

Videocy

Music videos weren’t particularly groundbreaking in 2004, nor did most genres stray from their conventions — rockers still favored live performance shots while rappers opted for traditional money shots. Still, there were plenty of entertaining videos this year, ones that elicited either delighted awe or gossipy ridicule — what marketing…

The Year in Caribbean Music

Although no single dancehall artist or CD dominated 2004 as Sean Paul did 2003, the music remained a presence on the crossover charts. Beenie Man’s “Dude” and Baby Cham’s “Vitamin S” (recorded on Dave Kelly’s joyous Fiesta riddim) spent several weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 while producer Scatta Burell’s…

Best of 2004

Our second annual survey of the best music of the year is marked by a tie between Björk’s Medulla and Kanye West’s College Dropout in the top albums category. They couldn’t be more different: Medulla is perplexing and occasionally beguiling avant pop, while College Dropout is classic, radio-friendly hip-hop. Other…

Still In Love

It has been more than a year since The Stills were introduced to America with a splash of interviews, rave reviews, and glossy magazine covers. And, like so many postpunk, astral pop, and mope-rock bands of the same ilk, any sign of a lengthy musical career is hanging on their…

Basshead

I admit it. I fucked up. Last year, the inaugural Miami Awards were held at the now-defunct Bar Code in South Beach, and yours truly was the only mainstream journalist to cover it (“Triumph of the Will,” August 28, 2003). It was the calm before the storm: Jacki-O was riding…

Booty Mover

A vixen in a halter top and low-rider hot pants catwalks in front of the DJ booth in Coconut Grove’s Oxygen Lounge. She bends over the carpeted partition and, in the one ear Armand Pena has that isn’t covered by his headphones, asks as seductively as she can yell, “Are…

Lambchop

From the beginning, Lambchop — a fluid amalgamation of more musicians than you can count with your fingers (but slightly fewer if you use your toes) — has painted its aural canvas with the broadest brush in the Americana can. And with the simultaneous release of its seventh and eighth…

Orbital

After sharing a fruitful musical partnership that yielded electronic music with a sci-fi twist for nearly fifteen years, brothers Phil and Paul Hartnoll conclude their Orbital project with Blue Album, their best album to date. We’re not talking Jay-Z pseudoretirement here, either — they’re probably done. “Transient” starts off with…

Ellen Allien

Too often, parades amount to a whole lot of waiting around and not very much action. Unfortunately, Ellen Allien’s My Parade is no different. At first, it seems like anything goes on her second official DJ mix. The Berlinette opens with Midi Rain’s “Always,” an early Nineties house number with…

The Go! Team

Brighton, U.K. band The Go! Team offers eleven deep, custom-carved grooves of retrofitted breakbeat soul and new millennial mashup. Like the Avalanches, this band knows how to layer samples into pumpin’ pastiche while pairing them with scratchy live funk, and the resulting widescreen palate of rhythms ranges from harmonica wailing…