Photos: Craze and Dave Nada at Money Shot

Justin Namon Asses were shakin’ as local turnable master Craze and Baltimore DJ Dave Nada put The Vagabond’s bass to the test. Thursday night party Money Shot brought the duo’s Borrachos Locos tour to the Downtown Miami venue, along with resident DJs Contra, Mike Deuce and DS. Click here to…

Former Avenue D Singer Bikes Across America

Courtesy of Girls Gone Wildlife You love this ass! Debbie Attias takes a cross country bike ride to raise money for the World Wildlife Fund. Does she look like a slut? No, Debbie Attias, half of the now-defunct, Brooklyn-based, MIA born-and-raised Avenue D, looks like a cyclist. She and friend…

Last Night: Rodrigo y Gabriela at the Fillmore Miami Beach

Rodrigo y Gabriela Wednesday, August 13 The Fillmore Miami Beach Better Than: The smooth-jazz pap often foisted upon “world music” fans. The Review: “Feel free to do crazy shit, encouraged Gabriela, of the Mexican acoustic guitar duo Rodrigo y Gabriela, to the fawning crowd assembled at the Fillmore Miami Beach…

Photos: YO! BBQ Pool Party at PS14

Justin Namon In order to beat the heat, PS14’s Wednesday night party YO! BBQ had a pool party — er, except there is one problem, PS14 doesn’t have a pool. That’s why kiddie pools were brought in and downtown night crawlers were encouraged to come in swimwear. Check out the…

Tonight in Live Music: Thursday, August 14

*Not live, per se, but a special DJ event: check out B-more’s Dave Nada at tonight’s edition of Money$hot at the Vagabond. Click here to read more about him, and click here to check out a Pitbull remix by him. *Something a little more high-brow: Ellis Marsalis (yep, like Wynton)…

Sacha Nairobi Is Hot

It’s totally normal to envy up-and-coming Latin alternative pop diva Sacha Nairobi. Her vibrant voice explodes melodically from her chest when she sings her catchy, ironic lyrics to the song “Princesa,” which recently appeared nationally on Putumayo’s Radio Latino compilation. She comes from a family of well-known Venezuelan musicians and…

Dr. Geek Is Lincoln Road’s King Wordologist

Around 2 p.m. on a recent Sunday afternoon, the South Florida sky beating down on Lincoln Road has not yet taken up its mean-spirited game of scorch-drench-scorch-drench-scorch. And the pleasant weather has put the pedestrian mall’s self-proclaimed “wordologist” and MC, Dr. Geek, in a good mood. Setting up an aluminum…

Head Spins: Ross One

Mokai, on any given Tuesday: Models and bottles. Kingpins and princesses. The odd cougar and her cub. Money. Power. Sex. And every player worth his game. Everybody’s in, everybody’s on, and everybody’s moving and shaking, swooning and swaying, to the wow now sound of DJ Ross One. See, this is…

Matthew Dear: Spectral Shapeshifter

Matthew Dear is one of the electronic music scene’s most chameleonic, now-you-see-him-now-you-don’t figures. Much like the namesake phantoms of the labels on which he releases most of his music (Ghostly International and Spectral Sound), he materializes often, but unexpectedly, shapeshifting as his mood suits him. It’s no surprise, then, that…

Dave Nada and DJ Craze

Money $hot, the neon-and-shades-heavy Thursday-night throwdown at The Vagabond, continues its romance with all things Baltimore this week by bringing down that town’s latest rising DJ star, Dave Nada. A favorite on blogs such as Discobelle, Nada has a style that’s a rapid-fire cut-and-paste, moving from bass bump to electro…

Ellis Marsalis

Jazz pianist Ellis Marsalis is more than an iconic performer and critically lauded composer; he’s a New Orleans jazz father figure. Anyone even vaguely familiar with the shape of contemporary jazz should immediately recognize his as the surname common to trumpeter Wynton, saxophonist Branford, drummer Jason, and trombonist Delfeayo. Still,…

New World Beat

Popularized by Lionel Hampton, the vibraphone is from the same family as the marimba and xylophone. Over the past couple of decades, the instrument has found its place among both the Latin and jazz music scenes thanks to the likes of Tito Puente, Gary Burton (who introduced the four-mallet technique),…

The Frustrations

Times are tough in Detroit. The auto industry is a popcorn-movie train wreck again, thus the city’s legs are wobblier than Lindsay Lohan’s after an all-nighter. But the Motor City music scene is something that simply can’t be squashed, what with its rich history as a — perhaps the —…

Candlebox

Let’s be frank: During Candlebox’s original run in the Nineties, the Seattle quartet was absolutely hammered by critics and some music fans for being grunge lite. The main accusation: The group had co-opted the riffs, moods, and flannel — yet excised most of the nihilism and self-hatred — of that…

Stone Temple Pilots

Hey, Scott Weiland: Look, I’m gonna be honest with you — I really don’t care whether Slash took his stinky leather boot, planted it on your scrawny behind, and gave you the heave-ho from Velvet Revolver, or you went all “You can’t fire me cuz I quit!” on ’em. You…

Lady Tigra

When Lady Tigra was 18 years old, she and best friend Bunny D formed the charismatic Miami Bass duo L’Trimm. Their spunky energy and a Top 40 hit “Cars That Go Boom” forever endeared them to fans of fun club music and vibrating subwoofers. Now, 20 years later, Tigra sounds…

Conor Oberst

Usually Conor Oberst’s lyrics elicit something of a collective groan from the apparently small but steadfast contingent of music listeners who just can’t swallow the Bob Dylan comparisons. Oberst certainly has the tendency to be heavy-handed with metaphor, and with language in general, often reading like a hipper, more literate…

Journey

It’s unlikely any band has as thoroughly modern and convoluted a resurgence story as these AOR mainstays pulled back into public consciousness by HBO and YouTube. Since former lead singer Steve Perry’s 1996 departure, Journey has gone through two frontmen, plucking current vocalist Arnel Pineda off the Internet via the…

Eljuri

It’s fitting that the classic Jamaican powerhouse of Sly & Robbie provides the backing for “El Aire,” the first track on Eljuri’s solid American debut album. The song shows that this Guayaquil, Ecuador-born multi-instrumentalist is comfortable playing different styles, going from reggae to Brazilian-inflected ballads to rock and Latin pop…

Sol Ruiz Does Some Soul Searching

On a recent evening on the deck of The Standard Hotel, singer-songwriter Sol Ruiz wears a sophisticated black-and-white polka-dot dress and slowly nurses a vodka and cranberry. Her conversation is laced with self-reflective commentary. It’s a big change in aesthetics and attitude from two summers ago, when New Times last…

Q&A: Rodrigo y Gabriela, Live Tonight at the Fillmore Miami Beach

Rodrigo y Gabriela’s video for “Diablo Rojo” Can acoustic guitars sound heavy? Five minutes of the Mexican duo Rodrigo y Gabriela will prove that the answer is, definitely. Ex-thrash-metallers turned Dublin street buskers turned global critical darlings, on their breakout 2006 self-titled album they pulled off an astounding feat: They…

Baltimore DJ Dave Nada Remixes Pitbull, Trina

When Baltimore DJ Dave Nada stops by The Vagabond’s Money Shot party tomorrow along with DJ Craze, expect to give your ass a thorough workout. The grooves will be plenty heavy, but that’s to be expected since Baltimore has emerged as one of the more promising DJ scenes in United…