Muggs

Muggs gets off on dirty, grimy, sexy beats. He loves its unmistakable whiffs of grit and cool. While he was producing the early trailblazing work of Cypress Hill, Tricky and trip-hop were exploding across the pond, creating an even more swampy mix of dark tones and moods. On his third…

Post-Carnival Whimsy

It remains to be seen if Moreno Veloso +2 will be accompanied onstage this Saturday with a cardboard cutout of Peter Rabbit and “indulge in falsetto banter like Brazilian Monty Python characters,” as The Guardian reported at one of their London gigs last year. But we can expect Veloso, Domenico…

(R)evolution

In dancehall reggae, the term “background instrumental” is an oxymoron: It’s the vocals that are secondary. Instrumentals or “riddims” get their own names, compilations (on which a variety of vocalists use the same riddim), and presumably their own backstage dressing rooms. This, combined with the fact that the worldwide massive…

Murga Pop

“I don’t like to rush it when I’m cooking,” says the 49-year-old Jaime Roos, a hugely influential Uruguayan musician who hasn’t released an album of originals since 1996. His most recent album, Contraseña (Password), is a collection of covers of Uruguayan classics by Alfredo Zitarrosa, Eduardo Mateo (Roos’s aesthetic role…

Paid and Played

In 2002 the face of reggae was irrevocably changed. America was introduced to undiluted dancehall reggae via Sean Paul’s hit song “Gimme the Light.” The song helped shed light on a slice of Jamaican dance culture called the “riddims,” a beat created and then used as a backing track for…

Win Factor

On a breezy Wednesday evening at the South Beach nightspot Tantra, DanceStar USA, the upstart Miami-based production company whose second annual American Dance Music Awards should be a highlight of this year’s eighteenth annual Winter Music Conference, was giving away so many free mojitos that you could literally walk around…

Various Artists

The Honest Jon’s label — launched by the U.K. record shop of the same name and co-owned by none other than Blur’s Damon Albarn — has built an eclectic roster over the course of its initial three releases. First came Albarn’s Mali Music project, a set of rootsy collaborations with…

Shedding Skin

What do you get when you put together a band whose guitar and bass players either don’t play their instruments or are just learning them? While a lot of noise may seem like the obvious answer, it afforded the members of Rainer Maria an opportunity to follow their own instincts…

Various Artists

As everyone could use a little break from terror alerts and talk of looming nuclear and biological fallout, the timing couldn’t be better for a fresh dose of dub narcotic. Enter Nutone’s latest, Sunset Nights: A Collection of Deep Jazzy Beats. The compilation of acid jazz (or nu jazz, jazzy…

Willie Nelson

In 1960 a broke Willie Nelson left a steady gig at Houston’s Esquire Club for Nashville. Despite finding instant success as a hit songwriter for premier Nashville talents like Faron Young, Patsy Cline, Ray Price, and Billy Walker, a frustrated Nelson returned to Texas in 1973 having recorded fourteen albums…

The Long and Winding Bar

Most locals living in Miami know that the party is always on at Mac’s Club Deuce — even when slow nights in Miami Beach leave its streets eerily barren. At the pink, nearly 40-year-old landmark between Washington and Collins, there is no VIP and the liquor is so cheap, Clubbed…

Breathe Easy

Télépopmusik is further proof of the staying power of French dance music, which has commanded the world electronic stage since the late 1990s. The trio — Stephan Haeri, Christophe Hétier, and Fabrice Dumont — joins the likes of Air and Daft Punk in permeating the mainstream through movie soundtracks and…

Ready for Lust

Finding yourself operating in an over-it-all mode you are once again struck with the need to embark on an effort to create something of a memorable night out. You are no longer satisfied with dipping into the same watering holes filled with scenes inspired by rap videos or Doug Liman’s…

City Slackers

In an open-air club in the hills above Kingston, the half-dozen members of the Turbo Force sound system huddle behind a sculptural citadel of equipment, sifting through a mountain of 45s. Working two turntables, one of the Turbo Force DJs jaggedly switches selections like the stations on a transistor radio,…

Subterranean Diversions

March is a busy month for music fans in South Florida. There’s the Calliope Fest at the end of the month, and the brand-new Langerado Music Festival at the beginning. And of course there’s that little gathering of DJs called the Winter Music Conference in the middle. Then there’s the…

Little Brother

In the early Nineties, the rising cost of funk and soul samples chased producers right into the arms of digital instrumentation. Thus the “golden age” of Pete Rock’s and DJ Premier’s horn-laden sample tapestries ultimately yielded to the Neptunes’ vacuum-sealed bleeps and robo-claps. While cheap MIDI technology brought about innovative…

Cat Power

Chan Marshall, known to the rock and roll world as Cat Power, is a painfully shy woman with a lot to say. You Are Free, her new album and first since 2001’s bleak The Covers Record, is the least self-assured-sounding self-assured record in ages. “Don’t be in love with the…

Tiga

When the media decided to adopt electro music as its new “next big thing,” it caused a rift in the small community that had supported machine music for years. Many were appalled at the media’s coverage of so-called “electroclash” (named after a series of club nights hosted by New York’s…

Funk Junkie

Somewhere between the Lone Star State and the nation’s capital, Citizen Cope (Clarence Greenwood’s nom de plume) learned to mold rhythm and blues and Sixties folk into arrangements that recall everything from Bob Marley and Stevie Wonder to Arrested Development. Sure, he’s white, but Greenwood has soul. Last year’s self-titled…

Code Orange

Peace in the world seems lost as mounting tensions abroad hint that we are on the brink of war. Airports, subways, nuclear plants, hotels, the Versace store on Washington Avenue, and nearly every other public institution in between received new attention after the federal government upgraded the terror alert color…

Hot and Cold Ferrer

You can’t blame Ry Cooder for wanting to try something new. It’s been six years since the original Buena Vista Social Club sessions and almost 50 years since prerevolutionary Cuban music had its heyday. Ibrahim Ferrer’s first solo CD, Buena Vista Social Club Presents Ibrahim Ferrer, referenced the classic Cuban…

Money for Nothing

When Eminem was asked by XXL magazine last month why he signed Queensbridge rapper 50 Cent to his Shady Records, the hip-hop Elvis replied, “His life story sold me.” Admittedly, in an industry that values street credibility and hard-luck tales, 50 Cent has an impressive pedigree. His mother, a drug…