Ween

With its ninth release, Quebec, Ween has obliterated any doubt that it’s the greatest drug band in the history of drugs and bands. The album spans the cosmos of aural artificial bliss, from the metal scorcher “It’s Gonna Be a Long Night” (“You bring the razor blade/I’ll bring the speed”)…

A Bad-Ass Ride

Trans Am sure threw its fans for a loop with TA, last year’s self-described “party album.” Especially since the band began as an auspicious instrumental unit, its evolution, which has gradually allowed singing to take center stage, was unforeseen. The ironic edge of ’80s hair-metal and cheesy synth-pop has always…

Lost in Beck’s Space with Dr. Smith

Selling jazz albums in mass quantities usually involves some sort of trickery: Diana Krall’s blue jeans, for instance. Back in the late ’60s and early ’70s, a common ploy was to include a contemporary pop standard, reinterpreted instrumentally. Sometimes the end would transcend the means and the result would wind…

Matthew Herbert Big Band

Skittish, high-energy dance anthems have not met the nuanced dynamic ear of English electronic music producer Matthew Herbert. Truly one of the world’s last great romantics, Herbert’s ongoing project has been to continue the tradition of the experimental music proferred by Glass, Cage, and even Ellington in the context of…

De La Soul

De La Soul’s legacy is impressive: The trio essentially invented the alternative hip-hop genre on its first album, 1988’s 3 Feet High and Rising, expanding the parameters of rap music’s aspirations. Produced by Prince Paul, the album introduced humorous between-song skits, sampled sources as diverse as Serge Gainsbourg and Steely…

Kraftwerk

In a nutshell, Kraftwerk drafted the late ’70s blueprint that Detroit’s Derrick May, Juan Atkins, et al. erected into techno’s gleaming new metropolis and that electro-popsters Depeche Mode and Gary Numan took to the bank in the early ’80s. Oh, and Kraftwerk invented electro too on 1981’s Computer World (ask…

Spearhead

Spearhead’s fourth album of beats and socially conscious lyrics accomplishes two rare things: Its moments of protest are eloquent without being preachy; and its elaborate range of styles neither comes up short nor sounds contrived. A band that has remained a staunch supporter of the San Francisco Bay Area music…

Sample This Café

Nearly a century ago, Ezra Pound, perhaps the most Modern of the Modern poets, tore up everything that came before him with the battle cry, “Make it new!” Everything that had gone before was just a piss down the drain — n ot just the poets of yesteryear, but all…

Biting Pandas

It’s 6 p.m. at Dungeon Studios in North Miami, and, as Wire once said, there’s something strange going on here tonight. A shock wave of catchy, heavier-than-lead, industrial guitar is blasting from one cinderblock bunker. It’s the kind of thrash-core that’s allowed sloppy punk rockers to drink for free all…

Boyd Tinsley

Dave Matthews Band violinist Boyd Tinsley probably could have sold a helluva lot of records had he simply released an instrumental album of virtuosic fiddle-dee-dee jams. In fact, when the annoyingly redundant-yet-undeniably-talented band’s legions of frattooed fans first caught wind of the dreadlocked 39-year-old’s debut release, that is probably what…

Stop the invasion!

Dear Drive-Thru Records, We in Broward County are best-known as a mullet-friendly, white-flight, overgrown suburb. And you, Drive-Thru co-owners, are from New Jersey. Hell, you took your love of Bon Jovi and applied it to mall-punk cuties. We should be simpatico. Why are you invading us? Broward gave you New…

The Brite Side

www.britesidemusic.com Someone needs to find the template they use to make this omnipresent, post-adolescent, Broward County alt-rock, then smash it — or at least abduct and reprogram it. This Pompano Beach boy band includes Jason Knapfel, who pens a column on the local music scene for the Sun-Sentinel. Brite Side’s…

Very Impotent People

The days of underground, grungy, basement-like minimalist clubs are long gone. In the mid- to late ’90s, Miami Beach pioneered the high-profile über-clubs that soon became standard South Florida fare. Shortly after the much-hyped opening of Amnesia (now Opium Garden), preferred customer passes fetched about $400, unless you knew someone…

Back Side of the Dial

Bandwidth is the first to admit that a bout with vertebral subluxation is like being vexed by the devil. And nothing can make those pinched nerves happy like a good face-down adjustment on a leather table. But what is it with West Indians and chiropractic care? The preponderance of chiropractors’…

Train

O.A.R. Guster. Hootie & the Blowfish. God Street Wine. Lisa Loeb. The Spin Doctors. Edwin McCain. The Wallflowers. Soulhat. The Cranberries. Jack Johnson. Toad the Wet Sprocket. The Dave Matthews Band. Vigilantes of Love. Shawn Mullins. Counting Crows. Tonic. Jewel. Jars of Clay. Rusted Root. Better than Ezra. The Freddy…

Pole

When it comes to his own recordings, Stefan Betke, a veteran sound engineer for respected techno musicians like Basic Channel and Maurizio, has an obsession with the tinniest sounds, including those accidentally created by faulty equipment. His delicate sparse take on production has often been recognized as an extension of…

Nappy Roots

The Nappy Roots’ sophomore release, Wooden Leather, stomps into retail stores with the clap-inducing “Roun’ the Globe,” a midtempo number with twangy guitar chords and snare drums. Inspired by their travels, it’s a celebration of humanity via a good ol’-fashioned country hoedown. Boasting a wide range of producers, Wooden Leather…

The Dandy Warhols

It’s been said that amateurs borrow and pros steal. Very few bands prove this adage as well as professional music thieves the Dandy Warhols, who simultaneously possess one of the stupidest names in rock and an amazing knack for copping a riff and making it their own. The Dandys’ albums…

Argentina Rocks!

Argentineans weren’t always this active in South Florida’s music scene. But bands like Tereso, Prole, and the Gardis have been playing around for a while now, getting themselves mixed up in jams with visiting Argentine rock celebrities like Los Piojos or simply trying to make a buck. Although different circumstances…

In Triplicate

When the Cure completed its last album, 2000’s Bloodflowers, bandleader Robert Smith knew it lacked focus. Eager to give the troubled project some cachet, he said the record was the final installment of a trilogy. Of course, it helped that he chose a pair of the British band’s best-loved works…

Afro-American-Italian Rasta Hippie Chick

“I was driving through the Redwood Forest in Mendocino, California, and saw a ray of sun peeking through the trees. It was then that I saw my name in three syllables: ‘Ma-Ri-Jah. ‘” ‘The tie-dyed dreadlocked Marijah was raised an Afro-Italian-American Rasta girl in a New Jersey ghetto, beating imaginary…

Beyoncé

The cover shot of this CD includes the image of Ms. Knowles wearing a bejeweled variation of the beads people hang across open doorways. Sure, it’s capable of inspiring impure thoughts among impressionable youths. That’s fine. But “Naughty Girl” is an awfully blunt attempt to raise heartbeats and so on,…