Orange Peels

Circling the Sun, the Orange Peels’ third album, is a sensuous delight, a rich, vibrant ten-song set that finds primary Peel Allen Clapp singing with a lilt and clarity that could hasten wider recognition. Titles such as “How Green the Grass” and “Long Cold Summer” evoke imagery as vivid as…

Colette

Contrary to many fairer-sex DJs who misguidedly decide they are singers, Colette has had years of vocal training, which pays off with her debut, Hypnotized. It boasts distinct shadings of Shannon’s “Let the Music Play” on “What Will She Do for Love,” a unique cover of Cherrelle’s “I Didn’t Mean…

Kelly Osbourne

Even with heavy-metal genes, electronically enhanced vocals, and a fashion-punk backing band, Kelly Osbourne couldn’t rock. Her debut disc, Shut Up, filled with powerless ballads and mild outbursts, stocks more bargain bins than Tony Martin-era Black Sabbath. Like Pink, another artist who turned in a stylistically unflattering inaugural release, Osbourne…

Gaby Gabriel

For nearly two decades the man with the ever-present tan, a closetful of ruffled carnival shirts, and lightning-quick conga-beating hands has served as the opening act for countless international performers inside one of Miami Beach’s most famed ballrooms. But Gaby Gabriel’s task goes beyond warming up the stage for the…

Calibe

If you’ve been to a Beenie Man or Kevin Lyttle concert, then chances are you’ve heard Calibe. A talented Caribbean singer who splits her time between her native Jamaica and Miami, she has made her mark in the industry as a back-up singer. But if her two EPs, 2003’s First…

CRAP Festival

Country! Rock! Alternative! Pop! Reduce them to an acronym and you get CRAP — that is to say, the CRAP Festival, an annual compendium of Southern bands. The 18 Wheelers specialize in the back catalogue of big-beat honky-tonk and rockabilly. Will Thomas perpetuates the recurrent yet somewhat underappreciated rockin’-country-boy-drenched-in-Southern-R&B subgenre,…

Magical Maydaze

Magical Maydaze has become a tradition as familiar as Black Beach Week, a throwback to the candy raves of yore and a rare opportunity (outside of Winter Music Conference) to partake of a host of electronic sounds and ideas. But why is it being held in June instead of the…

DJ Craze

DJ Craze has had two musical identities since he began peppering his hip-hop sets with drum and bass tracks in the late Nineties. Unlike those heady bygone days of turntablism, now he usually keeps his personas separate. And, save for a fleeting track or two, he serves up mostly mainstream…

No Borders

That Los Lobos’ sound has had a distinctive impact on Americana music is pretty much a given. Until they came along, most roots rockers found their sources in places such as Bakersfield, Memphis, and Nashville and in groups such as the Byrds, the Band, Creedence Clearwater Revival, and ensembles who…

Jump, Jive, and Wail

It’s Saturday night, and Jimmy Cavallo is doing what he has done nearly every weekend for the past decade. The 78-year-old singer and sax man is playing to a full house at Doogie’s, a jazz supper club in Deerfield Beach. Between Sinatra standards, Louis Prima hits, and big-band-era favorites, the…

Coldplay

Why does a song sound better when someone is pining for love than when someone is singing about being in love? Is it because the listener is envious of the artist’s romance? Or does the listener simply find it cloying? It has been said that in order to make genuinely…

The White Stripes

For those worried by recent photos showing Jack White becoming Michael Jackson, the cover shot of Get Behind Me Satan should come as a relief: He has turned Goth mariachi instead, offsetting Meg White’s proffered white apple. Better news is the highly compressed opener, “Blue Orchid,” on which Jack sounds…

Jaguares

Crónicas de un Laberinto (Chronicles of a Labyrinth) is a glorious mess. Saul Hernandez (a veteran of Caifanes with Jaguares drummer Alfonso André), Cesar “Vampiro” Lopez, and coproducer Adrian Belew form a three-guitar attack, but they’re more interested in moods than in solos. The first single, “Hay Amores Que Matan”…

Corey Harris

On his previous albums, Corey Harris seemed more archivist than entertainer, one who found inspiration in blues traditions and their link to African culture. He hasn’t abandoned his quest with Daily Bread; it’s imbued with a variety of idioms, including the blues, reggae, folk, jazz, gospel, and zydeco. This time,…

The Black Eyed Peas

Since their promising 1998 debut, Behind the Front, the Black Eyed Peas have become the group you love to hate, an unabashedly pop act who would have earned the epithet “sellout” if everyone else wasn’t selling out too. Monkey Business is shallow and corny, an overproduced and derivative simulacrum of…

Annie

Norwegian pop extraordinaire Annie Lilia Berge Strand’s blog-darling status means the U.S. release of her debut, Anniemal, is virtually irrelevant; it’s been out in Europe since last fall, so you probably downloaded it already. But that’s okay, since Anniemal revels in the past. Annie, along with producers such as Richard…

Ellen Allien

If German goddess Ellen Allien set out to dissolve techno’s rigid edifice on her third full-length album, Thrills, she more than accomplished her goal. While highly danceable head-bobbing beats abound, dissolute tracks such as “Cloudy City” float in an oceanic haze of electronic atmospherics. Throughout the standout track “The Brain…

Strange Days Festival

More than 35 years, an entire generational divide, have passed since the Sixties faded from view, so any bill boasting an archetype from that era might arouse suspicion. The remnants and recasts starring in the Strange Days Festival are anchored by secondary members covering signature songs with varying degrees of…

Masta Ace

Since first appearing (and being overshadowed by Big Daddy Kane and Craig G) on the posse classic “The Symphony” way back in 1988, Masta Ace has been one of the most underrated artists in the hip-hop genre. Perhaps because his consistency has yielded plenty of underground hits — his G-funk-era…

Keane

At this point, Keane falls short of fascinating, but bandmates Tom Chaplin, Richard Hughes, and Tim Rice-Oxley could be headed in the right direction. After all, Radiohead, one of the group’s principal role models, wasn’t considered terribly innovative when it emerged during the first half of the Nineties, but that…

Shakira

Not too many, if any, of Shakira’s contemporaries could go into hibernation for more than two years and still draw considerable attention when they resurface. The last time anybody heard from this Colombian pop diva was in 2002 when, owing to her trademark rock riffs and animated singing delivery, she…

Classical Hip-Hop

Yes, this is another story about a local hip-hop act. In case you didn’t know, Miami-Dade County has become a way station for American rappers, whether it’s Houston producer Paul Wall roaming around South Beach (and skipping interviews!), Twista camping it up at Marlin Bar, or Juvenile camping out in…