Ivy Queen

On her fourth solo album Real, reggaeton diva Ivy Queen adapts her confident, raspy vocals to a wide range of styles, including the lilting Haitian compas rhythms of “Dile” (“Tell Her”), the bhangra-flavored “Baila Asi” (“Dance Like This”), the acoustic guitar ballad “Angel Caido” (“Fallen Angel”), and “Tocame” (“Caress Me”),…

Billy Sun Ray Trio

The winter season often makes everything better for Floridians who’ve had it with the nine months of summer. Welcome the cool weather with a little class and a little jazz at the Bass Museum with the Billy Sun Ray Trio. Pianist Billy Ray, drummer Howard Moss, and bassist Jim Kessler…

SET LIST

Ari K Sundays, Raleigh Hotel Ari Kuschnir is an advocate and fan of broken beat, that British dance phenomenon that blends elliptical beats, a house sensibility, and all sorts of world beat goodness. From his early sets at Tommy Pooch’s Soiree Sundays party to the Nu Groove, his 11:00 p.m…

Join Our Club

Seven years ago, if you were lucky, you might have caught an awkward scene unfolding in South Beach: five longhaired guys walking down the city’s streets, clad in Che Guevara T-shirts and looking distinctly out of place. “We played a small club in Miami as part of a tour that…

Basshead

Russell Simmons and William “Upski” Wimsatt couldn’t be more different. As the cofounder and principal force behind Def Jam, one of the most recognizable brands in the music industry, the 45-year-old Simmons is part businessman, part celebrity; the Village Voice recently called him “president-for-life of hip-hop America.” The 31-year-old Wimsatt…

Great Unknown

“I’m not sure how much time I have to do an interview,” writes David “Avey Tare” Porter, guitarist for the four-man Brooklyn crew critics are calling the coolest experimental musicians on the scene, in an e-mail. The unofficial guru of the group Animal Collective is sending his message from Iceland,…

MF Doom

Every culture needs a mentor to thrive. For the much-maligned world of independent hip-hop, MF Doom is a beloved father figure, an eccentric who briefly thrived in the early Nineties rap world as a member of KMD, before the duo was banished for featuring a Sambo cartoon in a noose…

Ricardo Villalobos

Sonic alchemist Ricardo Villalobos releases his follow up to last year’s heralded Alcachofa, merging his affinity for danceable jams with the psychedelic tribal dint of Krautrock collectives such as Amon Düül and Neu! This fresh approach blurs the line between improvisation and prerecorded beats. On the opening track, “Hireklon,” flamenco…

Chali 2NA

After scolding Chali 2NA to get a “real job” on Quality Control, her son’s full-length bow as a member of Jurassic 5, Mama 2NA opens this new mix CD by calling him from the fish market, launching this seventeen-cut lead-in to Chali’s solo debut next year. A compilation of previously…

Magic Juan

On U Gotta Believe, the English-language half of the two-disc set Inevitable, it’s clear why ex-Proyecto Uno member Magic Juan hasn’t quite seduced the Anglo masses. On ambitious tracks like “Fresh ta Death” he spits bars hyperactively, but there’s no flow to them. He sounds best when he’s mellow and…

Handsome Boy Modeling School

On So…How’s Your Girl?, the faux-stylish studs in Handsome Boy Modeling School (a.k.a. super producers Prince Paul and Dan “the Automator” Nakamura) emptied their imaginations and Rolodexes, creating an alternate musical universe with room for everyone from Mike D to Father Guido Sarducci. Yet while the follow-up, White People, is…

Glide

Along with singer Ian McCulloch’s morose croon, guitarist Wil Sergeant’s sizzling fretwork helped mold the moody, atmospheric ambiance that nudged Echo and the Bunnymen to Eighties prominence. Sergeant’s latest solo outing under the guise of Glide finds him singlehandedly playing guitars and keyboards while integrating treatments and effects in a…

Neko Case

Unlike other country & western stars, Pacific Northwest chanteuse Neko Case doesn’t traffic in heartache, but comeuppance. “You get what you deserve,” she sings atop twangy noir like a bruised yet not battered Nancy Sinatra-meets-Patsy Cline. Case, for her part, has no regrets as to what she gives, which, on…

Matt Pond PA

Philadelphia musician Matt Pond sings about the topics sensitive souls usually write about in their poetry chapbooks: walking through forests and river streams, suffering through emotional talks, and straining for physical contact. This is a good thing, though, as he and his band, as evinced on the recently released Emblems,…

Desyn Masiello

After opening up for John Digweed at crobar back in August, Bedrock stalwart Desyn Masiello is returning to Miami for a solo showcase of his own. The Londoner will be appearing in support of his new mix CD, OS.O_1, a solid mix that segues from ambient techno-trance to psychedelic progressive…

Lulu Santos

Lulu Santos was partly responsible during Brazil’s Eighties rock explosion for reestablishing the electric guitar in his native Rio after disco had relegated it to a lesser status. Influenced by surf rock and The Beatles (one of his early numbers was a remake of “Get Back” with Portuguese lyrics by…

Coheed and Cambria

There is nothing jokelike or reminiscent of Dungeons & Dragons about Coheed and Cambria’s pummeling meanderings through prog-emo, math rock, low-end skronk, and even hair metal — either onstage or on the band’s sophomore opus, In Keeping Secrets of Silent Earth: 3. The second installment of a planned trilogy, Secrets…

Gonzalo Rubalcaba

Sometime after the success of his Grammy-winning 2001 album, Supernova, the then-39-year-old Cuban pianist Gonzalo Rubalcaba decided to put an end to almost twenty years of nearly frenetic recording activity in order to establish a pace that allows for deeper musical meditations. Now, after a three-year hiatus, he has returned…

Sander Kleinenberg

Has anyone noticed that Space tends to book the same superstar DJs over and over again? To be honest, we’re getting sick of a few of them (Paul Van Dyk again?), but others are always welcome. Sander Kleinenberg, for his part, has one of the most beguiling styles of the…

Murs, Mr. Len, and Seven Star

There’s plenty of hip-hop in Miami; unfortunately, only the thugged-out big dogs get any shine. That leaves little room for thoughtful artists such as Seven Star, whose debut My Mother and Father Were Astronauts has gotten more attention among discerning listeners around the country than in his hometown. Well, rap…

Reggae Tuesdays

Remember the seedy raunchiness of Coconut Grove’s Hungry Sailor and how cool it was to sit in its dark environs and guzzle ice-cold Red Stripes to the sounds of a live reggae band? It took a while, but someone has finally filled the void left by its absence: South Miami’s…

Trick Daddy

Thug Matrimony: Married to the Streets is an appropriate title for Trick Daddy’s sixth album; it’s not only a nod to the Miami thug’s recent marriage, but to the album’s focus on love and sex. On “4 Eva,” Trick pledges, “I have never been a man with manners/But I think…