The Changes

There’s only so much mileage the Changes will get out of the outraged buzz about how they were the only unsigned act at this year’s Lollapalooza, a fact that, to be realistic, bespeaks a travesty not of Iraq-invasion proportion but certainly pushing undisclosed-European-torture-chambers levels. Picture the Association — the evildoers…

Danity Kane

We have seen Danity Kane sing, dance, and run three miles in Central Park. We have watched it become a cohesive harmonizing singing group. Now it’s time to see if all of that hard work and P. Diddy wax can make this self-titled debut a platinum-selling success. The album’s dozen…

Lloyd Cole

After Lloyd Cole’s twentysomething years of making music, first with his band the Commotions and then solo, his career had become somewhat rote — an album every couple of years, but nothing that seemed especially inspired. His latest disc changes that perception; it’s a stirring set of songs. The title…

Seven Star

Another rising star from the Botanica del Jibaro collective, Seven Star gives a taste of his upcoming full-length with this rallying cry for authenticity in hip-hop and culture in general. Seven’s flow is cool, calm, and collected, effortlessly riding producer Deviant’s arresting beat, a truly soulful funk wah-wah punctuated by…

Ensemble feat. Lou Barlow

Olivier Alary — a.k.a. Ensemble — cobbles a Rotoscoping four-poster bed for lover-boy schlub Lou to project from, all digitized trap-door clicks and shifts, acoustic guitar, creamy keyboards, and imaginary string sections shuddering into a thrilling crescendo. Barlow is usually on such unimpeachable solid ground in folksy-confessional and angry electric-rock…

The Rare Birds

Gregg Foreman, the mastermind behind the shifting musical lineup that performs as the Rare Birds, is indeed an exotic specimen in Miami. Under the moniker “Mr. Pharmacist” (cribbed from a song by the Fall), Foreman is one of the most prolific rock DJs around town. But even in his native…

Jive Collective

The Miami jazz fusion circuit has become somewhat of a phenomenon. Although the genre has existed since the Sixties, a noticeable surge in horns and keyboards has taken over local bands and nightclubs. Suddenly every band is a jazz-funk-rock-R&B crossover. From Brazilian to Afro-Cuban, avant-garde to acid, jazz is quickly…

Agent Sparks

Grunge as it could only be interpreted on the Sunset Strip, Red Rover is perhaps the ultimate set piece. On Agent Sparks’ debut album, these Angelinos recast mid-Nineties Northwest sludge as artful noise, full of thick, rolling bass lines and sculpted squalls of feedback. The band’s parallel universe imagines Cobain…

Tribute to Dizzy Gillespie

Slide Hampton, longtime friend and associate of jazz legend John Birks “Dizzy” Gillespie, will be leading the moving tribute to this fallen hero at the Frost School of Music. Nine years after his death, Gillespie’s memory lives on in the minds of all jazz fiends. A major player in the…

Feel the Beat! Brazilian Music for Percussion Ensemble

Brazilian percussion musicians Ney Rosauro, Oscar Lorenzo Fernandez, and Heitor Villa-Lobos will be honored during this concert at the Frost School of Music. The University of Miami Percussion Ensemble will jam along with guests Esther Jane Hardenbergh, Wan Chun Liao, Shannon Wood, and Ney Rosauro himself during a special evening…

Diane Schuur

Sporting her trademark diamond-encrusted sunglasses and boasting a vocal range that rivals Mariah Carey’s, Diane Schuur knows how to work a stage. This is the first stop on a year-long international tour. Grab a tissue and prepare to be blown away when she croons songs like “Send Me Someone to…

Marking Time

Baby Calendar is a textbook example of how an indie band makes it. Sort of. The trio — Tom Gorrio, Jackie Biver, and Arik Dayan — just issued its first nationally distributed album, Gingerbread Dog, and went on its first Southeast tour this past summer. This month the group plays…

Family First

Since Garcia dropped his independently released debut album, Anti-Social, in the summer of 2004 to the tune of more than 25,000 units, the man has been busier than Larry Coker during Hurricanes season. With appearances on MTV ‘s My Block and TLC’s Miami Ink; mixtapes with DJ Drama, EFN, and…

Lord Jamar

Members of Nation of Islam offshoot the Nation of Gods and Earths (a.k.a. the Five Percent Nation) often point out that their movement is a social one, not a religious one. But you’d be hard-pressed to find a current album that’s preachier than the solo debut from Brand Nubian’s Lord…

Miami Lighthouse for the Blind presents

Henry Stone gets it right with a benefit CD for Miami Lighthouse for the Blind, a charity that provides rehabilitation services for visually impaired South Floridians. Saxophonist Jeff Zavac honors Ray Charles, Stevie Wonder, and José Feliciano with renditions of their greatest hits. Perfect to soothe the senses in the…

Gigantour

The two-disc Gigantour DVD documents a 2005 heavy-metal tour that was, in the words of visionary/headliner Dave Mustaine, “for people who love the guitar solo.” In the documentary half, Dream Theater drummer Mike Portnoy describes his technical-ecstasy band as “the Grateful Dead of heavy metal.” He’s right, though it shoulda…

The Vibrators

What constitutes punk rock? Is it a squad of Beach Boys fans donning leather jackets and crooning about drugs and fascists? A bunch of shabbily dressed sods cribbing their poorly executed licks from the New York Dolls catalogue? Sound? Attitude? Timing? What is that indefinable property of punk rock that…

The Steelband Panorama Jamboree and J’Ouvert Parade

J’Ouvert, a traditional sunrise party that takes place in Caribbean islands during Carnival season, has made its way to Miami Carnival. This celebration, which will go strong until the early morning, will feature the Exodus Steel Orchestra (Trinidad and Tobago), Pepper Pot Steel Orchestra (Daytona Beach), Tamboo Bamboo Steel Orchestra…

Skatebård

Bergen, Norway, offers little shelter from the Northeast winters in the United States; its cold and rainy climate probably soaks wee folkster native Sondre Lerche down to his skivvies. But Norway’s Baard Ldemel, a.k.a. Skatebård, allows none of the grim daily weather outlook to filter into his melodic electronica on…

Courting Controversy

They play incredibly wonderful music that crosses over genre boundaries, and they play it with an incredibly infectious fervor. The drummer, tambourine in hand, wades out into the crowd, leading an impromptu sing-along. The people respond by joining in. Isn’t this supposed to be Miami? Isn’t that guy with the…

Allow Me to Reintroduce Myself

What is it with groups/MCs from hip-hop’s late-Eighties/early-Nineties era trying to resurrect their careers of late? Both Boot Camp Clik and Wu-Tang members are churning out new material, CL Smooth has just dropped a solo album, and even EPMD and A Tribe Called Quest are again doing shows, the latter…

Various Artists

Gothic music’s sibling, industrial, can be tricky to key. Is Nine Inch Nails’s Trent Reznor just a guy who backed conventional rock guitars with a drum-and-synth track? Did Ministry skip industrial altogether, bouncing from synth-pop straight to metal? Are Cabaret Voltaire, Einstürzende Neubauten, Psychic TV, and My Life with the…