Lucrecia

International salsa queen Lucrecia has made it to Miami quite a few times during her long and prolific musical career. She has consistently shown equal adeptness at calming the crowd via soothing serenades like the romantic “Declaración de Amor” and livening up shows with thumping numbers like “Despiste.” One particular…

Quintron and Miss Pussycat

These past few years, the term garage rock has been bandied about in the mainstream press and on music channels in a way that could make one think there’s some sort of revival going on. You know the names and the videos, but if you think a couple of Stooges…

The Wallace Roney Group

The talents of trumpeter Wallace Roney, an alumnus of the latter-day Miles Davis group, have sometimes been obscured by the shadow of that venerable jazz giant. The three-time Grammy winner’s gifts include the fine lyricism and sensitive dynamics he brought to Me’Shell NdegéOcello’s intermittently bombastic opus “Al Falaq 113” from…

The Wagon Wheel Gang

The Wagon Wheel Gang is an ever-growing, eclectic group of artists from diverse musical backgrounds with the common goal of spreading joy through re-creating their country, roots, and bluegrass originals. Six members of the Lutton family provide vocals for the Gang, which is led by Miami’s eccentric drummer and banjo…

Wendy Pedersen

Since its resurrection four years ago, the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Miami’s jazz series has attracted some of South Florida’s most renowned jazz artists. Somewhat breaking the mold, the church has invited Miami-based singer Wendy Pedersen to perform for the third time. An award-winning jazz vocalist, she is equally at…

Sasha

Over at Space, a Digweed-less Sasha will light up his Mac for the up-all-nighters, hoping to wipe the been-there off of their faces via an ever-changing mix of mantle-deep house and experimental downloads fresh off the boat. Constantly barraged by new MP3s from electro-tweaking hopefuls around the world, the superstar…

Super Battle of the Bands

Remember that scene from Freaky Friday in which Lindsay Lohan wins the battle of the bands and her family becomes reunited and everything is great and grand? No? If you don’t know that movie, maybe you are familiar with the concept of a battle of the bands. Several groups compete…

Azalia Snail

The early 1990s belong to the silver age of the American do-it-yourself music scene. By the time the new decade dawned, the ability to record, print, and distribute a record or CD was well within the reach of practically anyone in the States, and the amount of product in stores…

Surf, Reggae, Roll

Ana Vega, mother of the lead singer and guitarist for Miami-based rock and reggae band Kayak Man, sits at a pub in her son Leonardo “Tato” Seoane Vega’s native Rosario, Argentina, wringing her hands in distress as she sips her drink and recalls Tato’s tumultuous political childhood. “My poor son,”…

Pop Quiz

1. Match the erstwhile retiree, i.e. Jigga and Stallone, to his middle name: A. Corey B. Gardenzio 2. To which upcoming project did Coldplay’s Chris Martin make the biggest contribution? A. Jay-Z’s Kingdom Come (out November 21), for which he adds vocals on the foreboding “Beach Chair.” B. Sly Stallone’s…

Velvet Gold Mine

After how many permutations in lineup and how many trips around the nostalgia circuit does a band remain, well, itself? The Rolling Stones, of course, are the Jurassic exception; not only do they continue to record new material, but they do so with a shocking member-retention rate. More typical of…

Ready and Able

It’s been awhile since Olivia Newton-John won a Grammy — 1984 actually — but crusading spirits do prevail. At age 58, she is prevailing her way across the States, promoting breast health and singing the standards that brought her international fame. She’s all about health nowadays, after surviving breast cancer…

Mountain High

San Francisco’s Kaskade seems to drop a new album of original material every other month. But that perception exists merely because most electronic musicians rarely release any of their own music, instead making compilations ad nauseam. Kaskade has never been one of those artists; he is all about the original…

Tom Waits

You know things have gotten bad when Tom Waits is singing songs about the Arab-Israeli conflict. Waits, who earned his stripes in this world as the songwriter from another, will soon release a three-disc set called Orphans: Brawlers, Bawlers and Bastards. The music will be accompanied by a 94-page book…

Pitbull

Pitbull’s newest CD, El Mariel, includes lines like “Welcome to the real Dade County/ Where we’re soldiers from birth to the hearse/That’s why my childhood included a bulletproof vest,” and “Welcome to the real Miami/Where we live to die.” Typical rapper throwdown boasts, yes, but that’s the only thing typical…

My Chemical Romance

Ever get the feeling that modern rock is now all about one-upmanship? The Killers are reaching for Springsteen’s lofty heights. Panic! at the Disco is augmenting its stage show with a veritable burlesque troupe. And emo heroes such as Taking Back Sunday are slapping on enough production gloss to kill…

Leaps and Bounds

On a steamy Saturday night at Wynwood bar Bullfrog Eatz, a band prepared to perform. The members of Secret Identity stood patiently, respective instruments in tow. An announcer, reading from an archaic-looking book, introduced the main act: “Look up in the sky. It’s a bird. It’s a plane. It’s a…

Mammal Matters

The singer/guitarist/bass player for punk-rock band Animals of the Arctic, Ricardo Guerrero, is stripping onstage at the Pawn Shop Lounge. As drummer Rhodaine Wallace pounds away and bassist/guitarist/singer Alex Puentes wails out a backup, Guerrero loses his shirt and pants. By the end of the fourth song, he’s singing in…

Royal Pain

Every couple of years there’s a new buzzword for urban underground music from the United Kingdom. In the Nineties, it was drum ‘n’ bass, trip-hop, and basically everything originating in Bristol. When those two genres reached their peak, then came UK garage, based on hardcore breakbeats and featuring some MCing,…

The Moroder the Merrier

The great cultural seesaw between New York and Miami tilts southward, sending one of the Big Apple’s icons sliding into Twilo, fittingly enough. The transplanted superclub, nixed during Rudy Giuliani’s near-thorough cleansing of high-end places that tend to dump heaps of bloody MDMA casualties at emergency room doors, will be…

Formula for a Reggaeton Video

Some misled souls out there are trying to do something “creative” with their reggaeton videos. They’re shooting them in locales outside Puerto Rico (Tito El Bambino) and getting artsy via grainy montages of Latin culture (Don Omar). What a shame, after they had the perfect reggaeton video down to a…

Paul Van Dyk

For all the disaffection you might feel over being spoiled with another Paul Van Dyk performance in Miami, one look at his roots is enough to see he has had quite the struggle getting here. “At one time I only earned one deutsche mark a day,” he reminisces of the…