Various Artists

Get these motherfucking emo bands off this motherfucking album. No, really — get these motherfucking emo bands off this motherfucking album. The soundtrack accompanying arguably the year’s most anticipated cheese-horror flick is a giant mess — namely because it’s full of pounding, stuttering dance remixes of songs by new-punk kingpins…

Richard Bona

Richard Bona, an enigmatic, Brooklyn-based Cameroonian bass player and singer, explores several musical directions on Tiki. The opening track, “Please Don’t Stop,” grabs attention with its catchy beat, soul-inflected keyboards, and soulful vocals by John Legend. Brazil’s influence is evident throughout the album; for example, Djavan performs a duet on…

Weird Weeds

Austin, Texas trio the Weird Weeds are likely to get their due in another decade or so, when some upstarts stumble upon their catalogue and — in the process of reinterpreting one of their frail, digest-it-and-forget-it songlets — infuse the source material with some much-needed presence and vigor. Yeah, okay:…

Dark Side of the Cop

Years ago Eddie Murphy shone in many quotable comedies before he stopped screening his scripts. But Dark Side of the Cop’s probably weed-addled idea to create an alternate soundtrack for Beverly Hills Cop, inspired by the copious numbers of high school dropouts who spend Saturdays simultaneously watching Wizard of Oz…

Particle

The fact that the new Particle lineup chose Beck’s “E-Pro” to strut its new vocal stuff might not be a forewarning of sweeping changes to come. (It might simply have been a handy excuse to bring in Blackalicious for quite the Hollywood cameo.) But it’s certainly a huge departure from…

Sufjan Stevens

In a nutshell: A glob of autumnal piano dolor inches tentatively forward into a wasp’s nest of teed-off, antsy guitars, bells, and violins, emerging finally into sunlight and a fading, heavenly choir. If Stevens flipped his own script and chose to travel this mouth-agape, modern compositional route more often and…

Diplo

The eclectic and eccentric Diplo seems to defy classification with genre-splicing tracks that lace reggae-styled vocals over Eighties hip-hop beats — not to mention his contrasting work spinning party mixes as half of the Hollertronix collective and his production of an instrumental hip-hop record. Much like his prehistoric namesake (taken…

Matthew Dear

In less than three scant years, Matthew Dear has gone from unknown Texas-born bedroom producer to international techno heartthrob both for his boyishly handsome looks and his otherworldly music (recorded under his own name as well as pseudonyms Audion, Jabberjaw, and False for top labels like Ghostly International, Plus 8,…

Up! Scumbag

Indiana has produced some unusual stars, including the Jackson Family and Axl Rose. Though these music giants share something in common with one of the state’s main crops (they’re corny), Indianapolis’s lesser-known good ol’ boys Up! Scumbag have taken a decidedly less commercial road. The trio has stayed true to…

Kurt Elling

During his ten-year career, jazz singer Kurt Elling has released six albums, and all have been nominated for Grammys. Renowned for his original compositions as well as his modern interpretations of standards, Elling has the unique ability to add meaningful lyrics to already meaningful works by jazz greats such as…

Gustavo Cerati

Nine years ago, Gustavo Cerati was preparing to leave the Argentine pop-rock band that put his name among the more influential singer-songwriters to come out of Latin America — ever. Curiously enough, though the market in the region hasn’t quite found the proper substitute for the sense of controlled adventure…

DJ Rap

Let’s face it: DJ Rap knows she’s smokin’ hot, both on and off the decks. The veteran British drum ‘n’ bass mixologist/producer/actress had her confidence game all set early on in her career, when she named her own independent label Proper Talent Records. But as people have tried to force…

John Hancock ANR

Former Awesome New Republic member Michael John Hancock is back in Miami’s limelight with his new solo act, John Hancock ANR. Describing his latest tunes as dance, folk, rock and roll, and R&B, Hancock isn’t shying away from any genre. “Basically I put it all in a pot and see…

AGHORA

Despite deeming themselves progressive, the members of AGHORA appeal to those of the death-metal old school, those who like their guitar dirges irony- and humor-free. Lead vocalist Diana Serra very seriously suggested the staff at this newspaper wasn’t heavy enough to fathom AGHORA, saying, “Perhaps you should send someone from…

Trilling You Softly

This is the third installment in a four-part series about world-beat women. Read the first two in our online archives. Seconds before one of her Wednesday-night performances with the Spam Allstars at Purdy Lounge, flute player Mercedes Abal rushes over to the bar and gulps down a shot of tequila…

Calle Blowup

Sam Phillips probably began in just such a manner. A room. A knack. An ear. And some unsung talent. Sam’s room, of course, was the Memphis Recording Service; his knack was in knowing the soul of sound, for which he needed an ear. Or to put it how the man…

Easy Star All-Stars

The concept of a track-for-track reggae version of Radiohead’s OK Computer seems like the bong-hit daydreams of a lonesome stoner in a murky dorm room. Thanks to the Easy Star All-Stars (the minds behind 2003’s Dub Side of the Moon), modern rock music’s most experimental and introspective band is paid…

Rhymefest

A cursory listen to Rhymefest’s Blue Collar reveals why it was delayed for nearly a year before finally seeing the light of day. Many of its songs feature unnecessary R&B singers trilling in the background, while Rhymefest spits lower-middle-class aspirations like “If King was alive, this is how he would…

Shapes and Sizes

The best Pacific Northwest album of the year is just a ferry ride away from Seattle, and perhaps the short distance (and free Canadian healthcare) was all it took for British Columbia’s Shapes and Sizes to craft such a captivating love letter to the region. The quartet’s self-titled debut is…

Michael Brook

Guitarist/soundtracker Michael Brook won’t be totally unfamiliar to closet addicts of the films Heat or Affliction, much less his 1992 avant-ambient full-length Cobalt Blue, which cameoed his old homes Brian Eno. With this new one, fans will find themselves in the same boat as the rest of humanity, fumbling in…

Motor

It’s really threatening, this thing Motor has done on Klunk. Producer Bryan Black and drummer Mr. No (who have also recorded under Xlover) follow their singles with a torrent of buzz-saw synth-blasted floor missiles on their debut full-length. Klunk’s industrial-tinged, uniformity-defying techno loads up on monstrous vocalizing and rumbling, unfriendly…

Brian Posehn

To paraphrase Megadeth’s Dave Mustaine: Peace sells, but who’s Brian? Even if Posehn’s name is unfamiliar, you’ll likely recognize the balding, heavyset, bespectacled comedian from Mr. Show and innumerable VH1 I Love the … specials. The pothead pop-culture pundit describes himself as a “stoned, angry-looking heavy-metal geek,” though he surprisingly…