From Japan with Loud

After seeing Melt-Banana sonically demolish Soho Lounge last November, I struggled to come to grips with what I had just heard. The balanced assault of Yasuko O’s hiccup/sneeze/scream vocals, Agata’s indescribable guitar violation, Rika’s pummeling bass, and Dave Witte’s tighter-than-a-duck’s-ass drumming unearthed something akin to the feeling of sticking a…

Kelly’s Klassics

Kelly Massing gets pissed every time he opens the phone book. After more than 15 years in the Yellow Pages, he can’t believe what they did to the listing for his Wilton Manors record store, Kelly’s Klassics. After all that time, the phone number is still there, correct and unchanged…

Lisa Germano

Artists who evoke darker moods and emotions have a tough time of it in the United States. Whereas overseas listeners can place such music into a broader artistic context (after all, the movie 24 Hour Party People made the connection between Joy Division and the Happy Mondays), people here struggle…

Arab Strap

Few bands have captured the feeling of love turning from sugar to shit as succinctly as Scotland’s Arab Strap. In the past, Aidan Moffat’s swaggered rants about cheating, jealousy, and other ways relationships go wrong have maintained a brutal honesty. But that has changed (or at least been put on…

Xiu Xiu

In early 2002, Northern California’s Xiu Xiu released one of the most ridiculously challenging and morosely honest avant-garde pieces of indie electronic pop to date, borrowing elements of British post-punk, noisy electronic techno, and, most interestingly, the Gamelan Orchestra. Knife Play was hailed by some and cast aside by even…

Radiohead

Strike up the hype machine: Here come those pasty boys from Oxford, readying another assault on the foundations of rock ‘n’ roll. Whereas on the group’s last two albums — 2000’s Kid A and 2001’s Amnesiac, recorded during the same sessions — Radiohead seemed determined to please only itself, on…

The Toughest

Since his brutal killing during a home-invasion robbery in 1987, what remains of the Peter Tosh legacy? His pro-ganja anthem “Legalize It” is again a potent anthem among young reggae fans. As one third of the original Wailers, alongside Bunny Wailer and Bob Marley, Tosh (born Hubert Winston McIntosh in…

Pure Phaser

Phaser frontman Siayko Skalsky recently had a daughter. “The first thing I did when I brought her home was put her on the stereo,” he says. “I played her the new Wilco record. I played her some Grandaddy, some David Bowie, some Beatles. A little bit of the new Queens…

Ian McCulloch

Anyone tuning in to Ian McCulloch’s latest solo album expecting to hear another Echo & the Bunnymen release will likely be disappointed. Though McCulloch, that group’s singer, is only in his mid-40s, Slideling could be seen as his counterpart to Frank Sinatra’s September of My Years, made when Ol’ Blue…

Stripes Hype

Sometimes hype is a good thing. Sure, you get stray Vines. Or you may get stuck with one-trick Strokes. But the retro “Return to Rock” frenzy of 2002 brought the White Stripes to the forefront of pop culture, and for that, we should be forever grateful. In every record store…

Street of Dreams

Locating the source of Clematis Street’s troubles is harder than finding the headwaters of the Amazon. Several suspected causes of this West Palm Beach malaise: Wild packs of black kids. The post 9/11 economy. The demonic, overcommercialized CityPlace. Or maybe former WPB Mayor Joel Daves, a downtown resident fond of…

Sidestepper

For about a decade, European electronica artists like Jazzanova and Les Gammas have mined Latin American records for punchy rhythms and melodies to heat up their tunes. Under the alias Sidestepper, British producer Richard Blair comes straight from the source — the music of his adopted hometown of Bogota, Colombia…

Liz Phair

Do not be fooled by the lyric “Give me your hot white cum.” This isn’t the edgy, clever Liz Phair of Exile in Guyville but rather a bland, barely recognizable avatar. And the song, abbreviated “H.W.C.” encapsulates everything that’s wrong with this album: trite lyrics and empty stabs at shock…

Miles Davis

In 1961, long after John Coltrane had left Miles Davis’ band for good, Davis remained the undisputed titan of the non-“new thing” cocktails ‘n’ cuff links set. Perhaps his finest hour was the stint he did in April of that year at San Francisco’s Blackhawk club. These sides have been…

Various Artists

In the tradition of politically and socially conscious artists such as Public Enemy and Dead Prez, the talented group of vocalists, producers, and rhyme-sayers — F.I.S.K., WhizM, Taughfeek, Pirahana Jones, Nafia, Shiek, and Clymaxx — on this compilation affiliates itself with the Seerz Movement. Put together by DJ F.I.S.K. and…

Flip the Bird

For the unsuspecting yuppies who regularly overrun downtown Fort Lauderdale, a Sunday-night trip to Tavern 213 can be a scary proposition. For starters, patrons must battle for a place at the bar with the legion of drunken punks who make a habit of 213’s free shows. Then they need to…

The Isley Brothers

Which lucky lady gets to be wined and dined by Mr. Biggs? Mack Daddy is large. Mack Daddy aims to take you shopping, girl. Buy you everything. Take you away in a convertible under cherry rain. After a glass of Beaujoulais and a Tic Tac, he’ll draw your bath. There…

Gabriel Grows Up and Out

Since his extravagant Secret World tour back in 1994, Peter Gabriel appears to have aged 20 years and added 20 pounds. That’s of little concern to his fans, one imagines. Undeterred by their hero’s taking ten years to release his last album, 2002’s Up, Gabriel’s core audience remains deeply loyal…

Dulci de Leche

“I hunt, therefore I am.” These are the words inked (in Latin, no less) on the skin of John Blosser, Boca-based National Enquirer articles editor and dulcimer devotee. “I hunt people and information for a living,” explains the man whose investigative skills have also been honed in learning about a…

Ray’s of Light

Three years and several scores ago, I piloted a Subaru from Colorado’s Queen City of the Plains through Texas and the Redneck Riviera to rain-soaked South Florida. Upon my arrival back in early March of 2000, the folks here at New Times held my tiny hand as I squealed with…

Marilyn Manson

Marilyn Manson has an appetite for destruction. After ten years of singing fight songs in fishnets, Manson has been advocating the end of everything for so long that he’s in danger of negating even himself. The shock-rocker’s last disc, 2000’s half-baked Holy Wood, was dismissed by critics and passed over…

Gold Chains

As we all know, the “blond MC” issue in hip-hop has gotten a little ponderous. So, an announcement: To all you indie boys who disown Eminem’s objectionable (or objectionably lousy) lyrical themes but defend his supposed “skills,” you now have an out with whom you can identify: San Francisco-based rhymer…